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The interview with Deloitte Canada’s indirect tax partner highlights the significant impact of recent tariff escalations between Canada and the United States on trade and supply chains. It discusses Canada’s reciprocal tariff measures, the repeal of certain countermeasures, and the scheduled comprehensive review of CUSMA in 2026, underscoring the need for businesses to adapt to a rapidly evolving trade environment.
The Canadian federal housing minister’s office retracted earlier claims that the government would cut GST on new homes for a year. The correction follows the introduction of Bill C‑26, which authorises a one‑time payment to provinces and includes a tax‑relief measure that removed the full 13% HST on new homes in Ontario up to $1 million. The measure took effect on 1 April 2026 and expires on 31 March 2027.
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British Columbia will broaden its Provincial Sales Tax (PST) to include a range of professional services from 1 October 2026, maintaining a 7% rate that, combined with the federal 5% GST, brings the total tax on most supplies to 12%. For architectural, engineering and geoscience services, PST will apply to only 30% of the purchase price. Service providers in the new scope must register for PST and prepare to charge, collect and remit the tax, with further administrative guidance to follow.
Canada’s federal government has announced a one‑time top‑up to the GST credit, rebranded as the Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit, which will increase payments by 25 % for five years starting in July 2026. The benefit will extend to 500,000 new families, potentially helping up to 12.6 million Canadians, but eligibility thresholds are low, excluding many low‑income households. The article argues that these tweaks are insufficient and calls for a larger increase in the basic personal amount to provide broader relief.
Canada’s federal government fast‑tracked Bill C‑19 on 14 February 2026, adding a one‑time spring top‑up equal to 50 % of the annual GST credit and raising the base credit by 25 % for five years. More than 12 million low‑income Canadians will receive the payment automatically via the CRA, with a family of four eligible for up to C$1,890 in 2026.
Canada Revenue Agency has confirmed that independent financial advisors will now need to collect and remit GST/HST on trailing commissions from mutual fund dealers, effective July 1, 2026. The rule applies to advisors whose taxable revenue from trailing commissions exceeds $30,000, while dealer employees remain exempt. The CRA’s notice clarifies that trailing commissions are no longer considered financial services for GST purposes.
Canada’s Parliament fast‑tracked legislation to boost the GST credit over six years at a cost of $12.4 billion, targeting low‑ and moderate‑income households. The credit will rise 50 % in 2024 and then increase by 25 % each year from July 2025, with a family of four eligible for up to $1,890 in 2026. The editorial critiques the lack of funding plans and the long‑term impact on the deficit.
This commentary highlights five significant Canadian GST/HST court decisions from 2025, covering topics from tobacco sales to insurance, medical services, optional term extensions, and Airbnb-listed condo sales. The rulings clarify exemption status, input tax credit eligibility, and the treatment of new supplies, providing guidance for tax planning and compliance in 2026.
Canada Revenue Agency has reversed its 35‑year position, treating mutual fund trailer commissions as subject to GST/HST. The change will take effect on July 1, 2026, requiring dealers to collect and remit the tax, while managers can recover it as input tax credits. Industry groups argue the implementation deadline is unrealistic and the change adds costs without revenue benefits.
The article discusses Canada’s new Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit, a top‑up to the GST credit announced by Prime Minister Mark Carney on January 26, 2026. The benefit totals $11.7 billion over six years, covering 12 million people, and recipients can spend the money on any goods or services. The benefit does not affect grocery GST, which remains exempt except for snacks.
Canada has increased the maximum GST credit from $700 to $900 to help low‑income families cope with high food inflation. A family of four could receive up to $1,890 this year and about $1,400 annually for the next four years. Eligibility is based on filing a tax return, and the change comes amid a 6.2% food inflation rate in December 2025.
The Canada Revenue Agency has reversed its long‑standing position, declaring that trailing commissions paid by fund managers to dealers are taxable under GST/HST, effective July 1. Dealers and advisors may need to register for GST/HST if their taxable revenues exceed $30,000 over four consecutive quarters, and will have to adjust accounting systems to collect and remit the tax. The CRA will publish a formal technical interpretation in the coming weeks, clarifying the taxable status of trailing commissions and confirming that upfront commissions remain exempt.
KPMG Canada outlines new GST/HST and QST obligations for employers and pension plans. Employers offering registered pension plans must remit by January 31, 2026, while pension entities and master pension entities must file annual returns by June 30, 2026. The guidance also advises reviewing SLFI status and claiming eligible rebates.