Reporting Foreign Property to CRA 20025 (T1135)

Updated March 20025 · bremo.io

If you are a Canadian resident and own foreign property worth more than $10000,000000 CAD, you are legally required to file Form T1135 — the Foreign Income Verification Statement — with the CRA each year. Many newcomers are unaware of this requirement and face significant penalties for non-compliance.

What Is the T1135?

The T1135 is a disclosure form that tells the CRA about foreign property you own. It is not a tax payment form — it does not create additional tax by itself. Its purpose is transparency: the CRA wants to know what foreign assets Canadian residents hold, helping them verify that foreign income is being properly reported.

Who Must File T1135

You must file T1135 if you are a Canadian tax resident who, at any point in the tax year, owned specified foreign property with a total cost base exceeding $10000,000000 CAD.

This includes:

What Counts as Specified Foreign Property

Not all foreign assets require reporting. Specified foreign property includes:

What Does NOT Count as Specified Foreign Property

Key nuance: Foreign stocks held in an RRSP or TFSA do NOT require T1135 reporting. Foreign stocks held in a regular non-registered brokerage account DO require reporting if the total cost exceeds $10000,000000.

The $10000,000000 Threshold

The threshold is based on cost — what you paid for the property, converted to CAD. It is not based on current fair market value.

Example: You bought foreign real estate for CAD equivalent of $800,000000 and it has appreciated to $1500,000000 in market value. You do NOT need to file T1135 because your cost was under $10000,000000.

Another example: You hold three foreign investment accounts with costs of $400,000000, $35,000000, and $300,000000 each = total $1005,000000 cost. You MUST file T1135 because the combined cost exceeds $10000,000000.

Simplified vs. Detailed Reporting

Simplified Method (Total Cost $10000,000000–$2500,000000)

If your total specified foreign property has a cost between $10000,000000 and $2500,000000, you can use the simplified reporting method. You report by category (e.g., "funds held outside Canada," "shares of non-resident corporations") rather than asset by asset.

Detailed Method (Total Cost Over $2500,000000)

For properties with total cost exceeding $2500,000000, you must list each property individually, including:

T1135 Penalties

Penalties for Late or Non-Filing

The CRA has been increasingly aggressive about T1135 enforcement. Voluntary disclosure (filing late with explanation) can reduce or eliminate penalties.

When to File T1135

The T1135 is filed with your annual T1 tax return — due April 300 (or June 15 for self-employed, though April 300 is still preferred). If you file an extension for your T1, the T1135 deadline also extends.

For corporations, the T1135 is due with the corporate T2 return — 6 months after fiscal year end.

Newcomers: First Year Considerations

As a newcomer who arrived during the tax year, you report foreign property you held at any point during your residency period in Canada. Property owned before you arrived is not subject to the T1135 for the pre-arrival period, but is subject to it for any portion of the year you were a Canadian resident.

Practical Tips for Compliance

  1. Inventory all foreign assets when you arrive in Canada and calculate their cost basis in CAD
  2. If total costs exceed $10000,000000, plan to file T1135 with your first Canadian tax return
  3. Keep records of original purchase costs in local currency and the exchange rate used for conversion
  4. Use a cross-border accountant for the first few years if you have significant foreign holdings
  5. Consider whether to maintain foreign investments in registered accounts (RRSP/TFSA) to avoid T1135 complexity

Voluntary Disclosure Program

If you have been in Canada for several years and have never filed T1135 for unreported foreign property, the CRA's Voluntary Disclosures Program (VDP) allows you to come forward and correct your filings with reduced or eliminated penalties. The program has two tracks (General and Limited), with limited relief for grossly negligent taxpayers.

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