Moving to another province is one of the most impactful financial decisions you can make in Canada. Not only does your tax rate change permanently, but the year you move requires careful planning to maximize your tax position. Here's everything you need to know about interprovincial moves and Canadian taxes.
Canada's Income Tax Act uses a simple bright-line rule: you are taxed as a resident of whichever province you live in on December 31 of the tax year. There is no proration of provincial tax based on time spent in each province during the year.
This has important implications:
If you move to start a new job, run a business, or attend a post-secondary institution in your new location, you can deduct eligible moving expenses from your income. Key rules:
When you move provinces, you lose access to your former province's tax credits and gain access to new ones. This can be significant:
| If You Move FROM | Credits You Lose |
|---|---|
| Ontario | Ontario Trillium Benefit, CARE Credit, Ontario Senior Homeowners' Grant |
| Quebec | Subsidized childcare access, Work Premium, Quebec Child Assistance, Solidarity Credit |
| BC | BC Climate Action Tax Credit, BC Child Opportunity Benefit |
| Alberta | Alberta Child and Family Benefit |
Some federal benefits (like the Canada Child Benefit) are adjusted based on your province of residence when payments are calculated. For provincial benefits specifically, you generally only receive the benefit if you're a resident of that province at the relevant date.
Your RRSP, TFSA, and investment accounts are federally registered and move with you. There are no provincial restrictions on these accounts. Your contribution room follows you regardless of which province you live in.
Note: moving between provinces does NOT trigger a deemed disposition of assets. Only leaving Canada entirely triggers a deemed disposition. Interprovincial moves have no capital gains consequences on your investment portfolio.
If you're moving from a high-tax province to a low-tax province, move as early in the year as possible to maximize the low-tax year. If moving from a low-tax to high-tax province, delay until January 1 of the following year if possible — you'll pay the low provincial rate for the full current year.
For someone moving from Quebec to Alberta (one of the largest possible tax savings), moving January 1 vs December 31 can differ by $100–$20,000 in provincial tax on the year's income.
Canada has no mechanism for paying tax to two provinces in the same year. You pay only to the province where you reside on December 31. There is no risk of being taxed twice on the same income by two provinces in the same tax year.
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