Canada's tax system applies to both residents and non-residents, but in fundamentally different ways. Canadian residents pay tax on worldwide income. Non-residents pay Canadian tax only on income from Canadian sources. This income is typically subject to withholding tax under Part XIII of the Income Tax Act, collected at the source before any payment leaves Canada.

Who Is a Canadian Non-Resident for Tax Purposes?

You are a non-resident of Canada for tax purposes if:

See our related guide on deemed residency rules and departure tax when leaving Canada.

Part XIII Withholding Tax — The Basics

Part XIII withholding tax applies to payments made from Canada to non-residents. The payer in Canada must withhold and remit the tax to CRA. The non-resident never receives the gross amount — the tax is deducted before payment.

Type of IncomeStandard RateTreaty Rate (US, UK, most OECD)
Dividends from Canadian corporations25%15% (or 5% if 10%+ shareholding)
Interest (arm's-length)0% (exempt)0%
Interest (non-arm's-length)25%10–15%
Rental income25% of gross rentSame (Section 216 election may reduce)
RRSP/RRIF withdrawals25%15–25% depending on treaty
OAS, CPP, pension25%15% (some treaties allow lower)
Management fees25%0% (treaty exempt in many cases)
Royalties25%0–10%

The NR4 Slip

When a Canadian payer makes a payment to a non-resident that is subject to Part XIII withholding, they issue an NR4 slip. This slip shows:

Non-residents receiving NR4 slips may be able to apply for a reduction in withholding or claim a refund by filing an NR7-R form if excess tax was withheld.

Section 216 Election — Rental Income

Non-residents with Canadian rental income are normally subject to 25% withholding on gross rents. This is often more tax than they would owe on net rental income. The Section 216 election allows you to file a Canadian income tax return and pay tax on net rental income instead.

To use Section 216:

Section 217 Election — Pension and Other Periodic Income

Non-residents receiving certain types of Canadian income (RRSP withdrawals, CPP, OAS, pension, and certain other amounts) can elect under Section 217 to have this income taxed under Part I (regular Canadian income tax) instead of Part XIII withholding. This can significantly reduce the tax payable if the non-resident's total Canadian income is modest.

A Section 217 return is beneficial when the graduated regular income tax rates applied to the income produce a lower tax than the Part XIII flat withholding rate. A cross-border tax advisor can calculate whether this election makes sense for your situation.

Part I Tax — Business and Employment Income

Non-residents with Canadian employment income or business income are subject to Part I tax (the regular income tax system), not Part XIII withholding. They must file a T1 General return. Employment income has tax withheld by the employer similar to Canadian residents. Business income is reported on a T1 with net income calculation.

Selling Canadian Real Estate as a Non-Resident

Non-residents selling Canadian real estate must:

Treaty-Based Withholding Rate Reductions

Canada has tax treaties with over 90 countries. To claim a reduced withholding rate under a treaty, the non-resident must:

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