Worker classification, T4A slips, deductions, HST/GST obligations, and filing your taxes
Working as an independent contractor in Canada gives you freedom and flexibility — but it also means navigating a more complex tax situation than salaried employees face. You're responsible for your own income tax, CPP contributions, and HST/GST compliance. This guide covers everything Canadian independent contractors need to know in 2025.
The CRA uses several tests to determine whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor. This classification has major tax implications for both the worker and the payer.
| Factor | Employee | Independent Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Control over work | Employer directs how work is done | Worker controls methods and schedule |
| Tools and equipment | Employer provides | Worker provides own tools |
| Financial risk | No risk of loss | Can profit or lose on contracts |
| Integration | Integral to business operations | Operates independently |
| Multiple clients | Typically one employer | Multiple clients common |
| Tax source deductions | Employer withholds CPP, EI, income tax | Worker pays own taxes |
| EI eligible | Yes | Generally no (some exceptions) |
If a business pays you more than $500 as a contractor in a calendar year, they must issue you a T4A (Statement of Pension, Retirement, Annuity, and Other Income) slip by the last day of February. Box 20 of the T4A shows "self-employment commissions" and Box 48 shows "fees for services." You report this income on your T2125.
Contractor income is taxed at your personal marginal tax rates after deducting eligible business expenses. Federal rates range from 15% to 33%; combined with provincial rates, top marginal rates reach 47–54% depending on province. Unlike employees, no tax is withheld from your contracts — you must pay it yourself via instalments or on filing.
Self-employed contractors pay both the employee and employer share of CPP — approximately 11.9% of net self-employment income between $3,500 and $71,300. Maximum combined contribution in 2025 is approximately $8,068. This is calculated on Schedule 8 of your T1 return.
Once your contractor revenue exceeds $30,000 in any 12-month period, you must register for and collect HST/GST. You add the applicable rate (5–15% depending on province) to your invoices, collect it from clients, and remit it to the CRA minus any Input Tax Credits on your business expenses.
If your net tax owing exceeds $3,000 in the current year and either of the two prior years, you must make quarterly instalment payments (March 15, June 15, September 15, December 15). Instalment interest is charged at the prescribed rate on amounts not paid.
Many contractors incorporate to access the lower CCPC tax rate (9% federal on first $500K active business income). However, the CRA's Personal Services Business (PSB) rules can eliminate this benefit if:
PSB status means no Small Business Deduction, no deduction of most business expenses, and a 5% tax penalty — effective federal rate of 20%. If you're incorporated and primarily working for one client long-term, get advice from a tax accountant on whether your arrangement qualifies as a PSB.
| Obligation | Deadline |
|---|---|
| T1 personal return (self-employed) | June 15; taxes owing due April 30 |
| T2 corporate return (if incorporated) | 6 months after fiscal year end |
| HST/GST return (annual) | June 15 for self-employed; 3 months after year end for corporations |
| Quarterly instalments | Mar 15, Jun 15, Sep 15, Dec 15 |
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