 Canada/US Tax Treaty To resolve some of the complications its citizens create in moving
back and forth, Canada and the US negotiated a Tax Treaty to prevent
the double taxation of their citizens on the same income.
As a result, the " Convention between the United States of America
and Canada " (simply the Canada/US Tax Treaty) was negotiated
and originally signed on September 26, 1980 . Since then,
the Treaty has been revised four times - June 14, 1983 , March 28,
1984 , March 17, 1995 and July 29, 1997.
The Canada/US Tax Treaty "overrides" certain areas of the tax code
in both Canada and the US to afford protection from, among other
things, double taxation in both countries. An example may
help. If you are residing in the US and you generate C$100 in Canadian
interest from a bank account, Canada retains the right to tax this
income as "Canadian source" income. However, as a US resident,
you are required to declare your worldwide income on your US return,
including the C$100 from Canada . Per the Canada/US Tax Treaty,
the Revenue Agency takes a 10% withholding tax on the interest and
the US taxes the interest at your ordinary income tax rate (assume
25% or U$25). In sum total, you have now paid more than C$35 (because
of the US exchange rate on U$25) on C$100 of income (see detailed
example in Foreign Tax Credit Planning section of this website).
This is one of the issues the Canada/US Tax Treaty attempts to resolve.
This requires a thorough understanding of the Treaty coupled with
the experience in knowing how to apply it optimally to your unique
situation.
The key provisions of the Treaty include: Sharing Information - To catch those
who might evade taxation on income from one country while resident
of the other, Canada and the US agreed to share their information
with each other. In fact, the Treaty allows either taxing
authority to ask for your complete tax file from the other country
(electronic and otherwise). This means if you have income
in Canada and you don't report it on your US return, your chance
of getting caught has increased significantly. Based on our
experience, it appears that real estate transactions, dividends,
interest and in particular, government pension payments are exchanged
electronically on a regular basis. Further, the two countries
have agreed to allow Canada to use the "long arm of the law" in
the US to collect its taxes and vice versa. This means that
the Revenue Agency can use the authority of the IRS in the pursuit
of its tax collection in the US . As you can see, your chances
of getting caught evading income or tripping up on a compliance
issue are high. When this happens, nasty notices will begin
filling your mailbox.
Foreign Tax Credits - The IRS allows
taxes paid to Canada as a foreign tax credit against that same income
on the US return to avoid double taxation. For example, using
our scenario above, you would take the C$10 you paid to Canada ,
convert it at the prevailing exchange rate and use it as a dollar-for-dollar
tax credit on the US return. The Treaty allows you to take
the taxes paid to Canada and use them against any tax liability
that same income generates on the US return. See the Foreign
Tax Credit Planning section of this website for more details.
Exempt Certain Income - The Treaty
sorts out what income is taxed in which country as well as exempting
certain income altogether. For example, it provides direction
on where capital gains are taxed and exempts wages earned in Canada
on the US return. Withholding Taxes
- The Treaty specifies the various withholding rates for the
various types of income sourced out of that country. For Canadian
source income accruing to those in the US , the current Treaty withholding
rates are:
Interest - 10% Dividends - 15% Government Interest - 0% Canada Pension Plan - 0% Old Age Security - 0% Company Pension - 15% Periodic RRIF/LIF Withdrawals - 15% Rental Income - 25% Click here for the full text of the Canada/US
Tax Treaty and all the revisions to date. |