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How to File Taxes in Canada for the First Time as a Newcomer (2026)

Updated

If this is your first Canadian filing year, pair this newcomer guide with how to file taxes in Canada and first time filing taxes in Canada. Complete account setup in how to use CRA My Account, then submit through NETFILE vs paper filing.

Your Residency Start Date — Why It Matters

ConceptDetail
Residency start dateThe date you established Canadian tax residency — typically your arrival date
Effect on incomeOnly income earned ON or AFTER this date is taxed in Canada
Effect on benefitsBenefit eligibility (CCB, GST/HST credit) starts in the year you file
Disclosed pre-arrival incomeForeign income before arrival is reported for benefit-testing but is not taxed in Canada
Where to enter itT1 federal tax return — “Date you became a resident of Canada”

What Income to Report on Your First Canadian Return

Income TypeTaxable in Canada?Where to Report
Canadian employment income (T4)Yes — from arrival dateLine 10100
Canadian self-employment incomeYes — from arrival dateT2125, Line 13500
Foreign employment income (after arrival)Yes — all worldwide income after arrivalLine 10400
Foreign employment income (before arrival)No — disclosed onlySchedule A (part-year resident)
Foreign investment income (after arrival)YesT1 (Lines 12100, 12000)
Canadian interest, dividendsYesT5 slip, Lines 12100, 12000
Canadian rental incomeYesT776
Home country pension (after arrival)Yes — with possible treaty reliefLine 11500
Canadian government benefits (EI, CCB)Yes (EI taxable; CCB not taxable)Line 11900

Documents and Information You Need

ItemWhy You Need ItWhere to Get It
SIN or ITNRequired to fileService Canada office; ITN via CRA Form T1261
Arrival date (exact)Residency start date on T1Your passport entry stamp or Landing Record (IMM 1000/5292)
T4 slipsCanadian employment incomeYour employer by February 28
T4A, T4E slipsOther Canadian incomePayers by February 28
Foreign income recordsWorld income disclosurePay stubs, foreign tax returns, bank records
Foreign bank account infoT1135 if foreign assets exceeded $100K CAD at any pointYour foreign bank
Bank account for direct depositCRA refunds and benefit paymentsYour Canadian bank
SpouseÕs SIN and incomeRequired even if spouse did not file Canadian taxesTheir SIN card; estimated global income

Step-by-Step: Filing Your First Canadian Tax Return

StepActionNotes
1Get your SIN from Service CanadaApply on arrival if you haven’t already
2Register for My CRA AccountRequires your SIN and last year’s return (or a confirmation number for first-timers)
3Collect all T4, T4A, T4E slipsAvailable by February 28; import via CRA Auto-fill if already in CRA
4Choose tax softwareWealthsimple Tax is free with Auto-fill; TurboTax, UFile, CloudTax also work
5Enter your residency start dateIn the personal information section of the return
6Report worldwide incomeEnter Canadian income normally; enter pre-arrival foreign income for disclosure
7Claim foreign tax credits (if applicable)Form T2209 if you paid tax abroad on income after arrival that is also taxed in Canada
8File via NETFILESubmit electronically; keep a copy of your return and all slips for 6 years
9Apply for CCB separately if applicableForm RC66 for families with children
10Watch for benefits paymentsCCB and GST/HST credit begin after CRA processes your return

Part-Year Resident Rules

SituationTax Treatment
You arrived April 15, 2025Report Canadian income April 15–December 31 on T1
You earned employment income Jan–April 15 in your home countryDisclose but not taxed in Canada
You have a foreign bank account with over $100,000 CADMust file T1135 Foreign Income Verification Statement
You own foreign property worth over $100,000 CADMust file T1135
You received income from a foreign employer after arrivingFully taxable in Canada; may qualify for foreign tax credit
You have a tax treaty between Canada and your home countryMay reduce or eliminate double taxation; consult a tax professional

Which Benefits You Unlock by Filing

BenefitEligibilityAmount (Approx. 2026)
GST/HST creditSingle adults; based on incomeUp to $519/year
Canada Child Benefit (CCB)Children under 18Up to $7,787/year per child under 6
Ontario Trillium BenefitOntario residentsUp to $1,248/year
Canada Workers Benefit (CWB)Working income under thresholdUp to $2,616/year
Climate Action IncentiveMost provinces except BC, QC$250–$450/year per adult
RRSP contribution room18% of earned income (accrues from year 1)Up to $32,490 in 2026
TFSA room$7,000/year from January 1 you turn 18 as Canadian residentAccrues only from year of residency

Common First-Year Filing Mistakes

MistakeHow to Avoid It
Not disclosing pre-arrival foreign incomeEven if not taxable, it affects benefit calculations — always disclose
Forgetting TFSA room only starts accruing from the year of residency arrivalDo not assume full lifetime room from 2009 — check My CRA Account
Missing T1135 for foreign assets over $100,000 CADPenalties are severe — $25/day up to $2,500 for late filing
Not filing at all because income was lowAlways file — it triggers benefits and starts your contribution room
Using the wrong residency start dateUse landing record, not passport renewal date or permit issue date

Tax Treaties — Does Canada Have One with Your Country?

Canada has tax treaties with over 90 countries that can reduce withholding tax on foreign income and prevent double taxation. Check the CRA’s full list at canada.ca.

Common Home CountriesTreaty with CanadaKey Benefits
IndiaYesReduced withholding on pensions; foreign tax credits
PhilippinesYesWithholding rate limits on dividends, interest
ChinaYesTreaty prevents double taxation on employment income
NigeriaNoForeign income fully subject to CRA rules; foreign tax credit available
PakistanYesPension and employment income protections
UKYesStrong provisions; split-year relief may apply
USAYesComprehensive; RRSP and TFSA recognition
MexicoYesDividends, interest, royalties covered