Foreign Income Tax Canada 2025 — Complete Guide

As a Canadian tax resident, you are taxed on your worldwide income — regardless of where it is earned. This includes foreign employment income, rental income, dividends, interest, and capital gains from abroad. However, Canada has tax treaties with over 90 countries and provides a Foreign Tax Credit to prevent double taxation.

Foreign Tax Credit Calculator

Worldwide Taxation — Canada's Approach

Canada taxes its residents on global income. Whether you work remotely for a US employer, receive dividends from European stocks, or own rental property in Mexico — all of it goes on your Canadian return. This is different from a territorial tax system where only domestic income is taxed.

Common Types of Foreign Income

Income TypeWhere ReportedNotes
Foreign employment incomeLine 10400Convert to CAD, may need T2209 credit
Foreign interest incomeLine 12100100% taxable, no DTC
Foreign dividendsLine 12100No dividend tax credit, withholding may apply
Foreign rental incomeT776Net income after foreign expenses
Foreign capital gainsSchedule 350% inclusion, FTC may apply
Foreign pensionLine 11500Treaty may reduce/eliminate tax

Foreign Tax Credit (FTC)

The Foreign Tax Credit prevents you from paying tax twice on the same income. You can claim a credit for foreign income taxes paid, up to the amount of Canadian tax on that same income:

US/Canada Tax Treaty

Canada and the US have one of the most comprehensive tax treaties in the world. Key benefits for Canadians holding US investments:

TFSA Warning: Holding US dividend-paying stocks (e.g., S&P 500 ETFs with Canadian domicile) in your TFSA means you pay 15% US withholding tax on dividends with no ability to recover it. Consider holding US equities in your RRSP instead.

Foreign Asset Reporting — T1135

If you own foreign property with a total cost exceeding $100,000 CAD, you must file Form T1135 (Foreign Income Verification Statement) with your tax return. Foreign property includes:

Penalties for failure to file T1135 are severe: $25/day for late filing (up to $2,500), plus $500/month for failure to file after demand. Deliberate non-disclosure carries additional penalties.

Departure Tax

When you leave Canada and become a non-resident, there is a deemed disposition of most of your property — you are treated as having sold everything at fair market value on the date of departure. This departure tax must be planned for in advance, especially if you have large unrealized capital gains.

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