Expat Taxes for Canadians Living Abroad 2025
Millions of Canadians live outside Canada — working abroad, pursuing international careers, or choosing to retire or semi-retire in warmer climates. The Canadian tax rules for those living abroad are nuanced and depend critically on one key question: are you still a Canadian tax resident, or have you become a non-resident? The answer determines everything about what you owe the CRA.
Canadian Tax Residency: The Core Question
Canada taxes based on residency, not citizenship. If you are a Canadian tax resident, you pay Canadian tax on worldwide income. If you are a Canadian non-resident, you only pay Canadian tax on Canadian-source income.
Residency is determined by the CRA based on residential ties to Canada, primarily:
- Significant ties: Dwelling place in Canada (owned or rented), spouse or common-law partner in Canada, dependants in Canada
- Secondary ties: Canadian bank accounts, credit cards, driver's licence, OHIP/provincial health card, club memberships, professional memberships, Canadian investment accounts
There is no automatic rule based solely on days absent — the CRA looks at the totality of ties. However, generally:
- If you maintain a home in Canada and a spouse/family in Canada, you are almost certainly a Canadian tax resident regardless of time abroad
- If you leave with family, sell your home, and establish clear ties in another country, you are likely a non-resident
Taxes for Canadians Who Remain Tax Residents While Living Abroad
Many Canadians live and work abroad while remaining Canadian tax residents — for example, expats on short-term assignments, Canadian spouses of foreign workers who maintain Canadian home and family, or Canadians who live part-time abroad but keep their primary home in Canada.
If you remain a Canadian tax resident while living abroad:
- File a Canadian T1 tax return every year
- Report worldwide income (employment, business, investment, rental, pension — all sources from all countries)
- Claim foreign tax credits for taxes paid to other countries on income also subject to Canadian tax
- Continue contributing to CPP if self-employed or on certain foreign assignments
- Continue to be entitled to OAS, RRSP, TFSA contribution room accumulation, and CCB (if Canadian-resident child)
Foreign Income Tax Credits
The foreign tax credit system prevents double taxation. If you earn income in a foreign country and pay tax there, you can claim a credit on your Canadian return equal to the lesser of:
- The foreign tax paid on the income, or
- The Canadian tax that would be payable on that same income
Form T2209 (Federal Foreign Tax Credits) is used to calculate and claim these credits. Many high-tax countries (UK, Germany, Australia, France) will result in full or near-full credit elimination of Canadian tax on the same income.
Form T1161: Foreign Property Reporting
Canadians who own foreign property worth more than CAD $100,000 must report it annually using T1135 (Foreign Income Verification Statement). This includes:
- Foreign bank accounts
- Foreign investment accounts
- Foreign real estate not used personally
- Shares in foreign corporations
Penalties are severe: Failure to file T1135 can result in penalties of $25/day up to $2,500 per year the form is not filed, plus additional penalties for deliberate non-compliance. This is separate from any tax owed.
Taxes for Canadian Non-Residents
Once you become a Canadian non-resident (by severing significant ties to Canada and establishing residency elsewhere), your Canadian tax obligations change:
- Canadian-source income only: Employment income earned in Canada, business income from Canadian sources, capital gains on certain Canadian property (taxable Canadian property), and rental income from Canadian real estate
- Withholding tax: Canadian payers (employers, banks, investment managers) are required to withhold Canadian non-resident withholding tax on passive income paid to non-residents (dividends, interest, rent, pensions). Standard rate is 25%, reduced by tax treaty (often to 15% for dividends and interest, 25% for rent under Canada-US treaty)
- No filing required in many cases: If all Canadian income is subject to final withholding tax, you may not need to file a Canadian T1 return — though filing may sometimes be advantageous
Working Abroad as a Canadian Resident
If you are on a work assignment abroad but remain a Canadian tax resident:
- Foreign employment income must still be reported in Canada
- Employers may be required to deduct CPP contributions depending on social security treaties
- The overseas employment tax credit (OETC) was eliminated in 2016 — it no longer provides a shelter for foreign employment income
- Foreign tax credits on your T1 will generally eliminate most or all Canadian tax on foreign employment income taxed by a treaty country
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Tax Treaties
Canada has tax treaties with over 90 countries that reduce withholding taxes on cross-border income and provide mechanisms to resolve residency disputes. Key treaty partners for Canadian expats: USA, UK, Australia, UAE (no treaty — important!), France, Germany, Mexico, and most major developed economies. The UAE notably lacks a tax treaty with Canada, which can create complications for Canadians working in Dubai.
RRSP and TFSA for Expats
Your RRSP can be maintained as a Canadian non-resident but withdrawals face 25% withholding tax (reduced by treaty). Your TFSA is a trap — contributions made while you are a non-resident incur a 1% per month penalty tax. Ideally, cash out or stop contributing to your TFSA before becoming a non-resident.
Getting Professional Help
Expat tax situations are genuinely complex. Professional advice is worthwhile if you:
- Are leaving Canada to work or live abroad long-term
- Have significant Canadian assets (real estate, investment accounts, RRSPs)
- Receive income from multiple countries
- Are uncertain about your residency status
Specialists in Canadian expat taxes include firms like Andersen Tax, MNP Cross-Border Tax, and various international CPA firms with Canadian practices.