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Your first Canadian tax year is complex — pre-arrival income, post-arrival foreign income, and tax treaties all interact. Here is exactly how CRA treats foreign income for new residents.
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Open KOHO Free — Code BREMO2026In your first year as a Canadian tax resident, your tax year is divided by your arrival date. Income earned before your arrival date — while you were not yet a Canadian resident — is generally not subject to Canadian tax. Income earned on or after your arrival date, from any source worldwide, is generally subject to Canadian tax.
Example: If you arrived in Canada on July 1, 2024:
Income earned before you became a Canadian resident is not included on your T1 return. This means:
Important: Even though this income is not taxed by Canada, it may still need to be disclosed to CRA in certain circumstances. A tax professional can help ensure you are reporting correctly without overpaying.
Once you are a Canadian resident, Canada taxes your worldwide income. Post-arrival foreign income that must be reported includes:
Report this income in Canadian dollars, converted at the Bank of Canada exchange rate on the date the income was received (or the average annual rate for regular income).
Canada has tax treaties with over 90 countries designed to prevent double taxation — being taxed on the same income by both Canada and your home country. Under these treaties:
To claim the foreign tax credit, file Form T2209 (Federal Foreign Tax Credits) with your T1 return.
When you become a Canadian tax resident, CRA treats you as having sold — and immediately repurchased — all your non-Canadian assets at their fair market value on your arrival date. This "deemed disposition" establishes your Canadian cost base for future capital gains calculations. It means:
If you hold foreign assets with a total cost exceeding $100,000 CAD at any point during the year, you must file Form T1135 (Foreign Income Verification Statement). This applies from your arrival date — if you had $150,000 in a foreign bank account when you arrived, you need to file T1135 for that tax year. Penalties for non-filing are significant: $25/day up to $2,500, plus potential 5% of unreported assets for gross negligence.
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