News Room

Changes to Paper Filing Disempowering

Last tax season, only 7% of all Canadian tax filers filed on paper. The CRA is pushing for zero. It continues to steer the holdouts to digitized filing by adding lots of obstacles. Most recently, it is removing almost all the schedules from the tax return package it mails. This seems unfair to people who paper file because they can’t afford a computer and internet, distrust the security of online filing and those who are neither tax or computer literate. Here’s what they are up against:

Evelyn Jacks: Gathering Documents a Pain, But It Sure Pays Off!

I was so glad to hear from Russ, in response to last week’s blog. He shared that he had read my book; realized he missed claiming moving expenses and then adjusted his prior filed returns. To his delight, he received a $6600 refund – found money!  Good for you Russ!

Grad Spotlight - Andre Tells Us Why the DFA-Tax Services Specialist Designation Has Been Valuable

Andre Yong Tit Kow successfully achieved his DFA-Tax Services Specialist designation from Knowledge Bureau in 2013. We are pleased to have Andre as one of our distinguished grads.

Claiming Refundable Tax Credits

No income? File a tax return anyway. You’ll need to do that to receive income supplements from the government, often paid monthly or quarterly, including federal tax credits like the Canada Child Tax Benefit, GST/HST credit or the Universal Child Care Benefit.

The Ideal RRSP Contribution

How do I calculate my ideal RRSP contribution?

2014 Knowledge Bureau Educational Calendar

Start your educational path towards designation today and earn your MFA™ or Distinguished Financial Advisor™ designation by the end of 2014!

Our Apologies

We intended to give credit to Roy A. Berg JD, LLM of the law firm of Moodys Gartner as the source of the article posted on border crossing rules in our last issue, but we neglected to do so. We wish to sincerely apologize for this oversight.
 
 
 
Knowledge Bureau Poll Question

It costs a lot more to go to work these days. Should the Canada Employment Credit of $1501 for 2026 be raised higher to account for this?

  • Yes
    53 votes
    85.48%
  • No
    9 votes
    14.52%