Canada's tax system is based on residency, not citizenship. This means that if you are a resident of Canada for tax purposes — whether you are a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or even a foreign national living here — you must report your income from every country in the world on your Canadian T1 tax return. This is the worldwide income principle.

What "Worldwide Income" Means for Newcomers

When you become a Canadian tax resident (typically on the day you arrive and establish ties), you begin reporting worldwide income from that date. If you arrived in September, you report:

Types of Foreign Income to Report

Foreign Income Categories and Where to Report

  • Foreign employment income: Line 10400 — income from working for a foreign employer, even remotely from Canada
  • Foreign business income: Reported as business income; may qualify for foreign tax credits
  • Foreign rental income: Line 12600 — net rental income from foreign property
  • Foreign pension income: Line 11500 — see our foreign pension guide
  • Foreign interest income: Line 12100 — interest from foreign bank accounts
  • Foreign dividends: Line 12100 — dividends from foreign stocks (note: no dividend tax credit for foreign dividends)
  • Foreign capital gains: Schedule 3 — gains from selling foreign property, stocks, real estate

Currency Conversion

All foreign income must be reported in Canadian dollars. You can use:

Foreign Tax Credit — Avoiding Double Taxation

Canada has tax treaties with over 90 countries specifically to prevent double taxation. Even without a treaty, Canada generally allows a foreign tax credit for taxes paid to other countries.

The foreign tax credit (claimed on Form T2209) allows you to reduce your Canadian tax by the amount of foreign tax you paid on the same income. The credit is limited to the Canadian tax payable on that foreign income — it cannot create a refund or reduce tax on Canadian income.

Example: You earn $100 from a foreign source and pay $2,500 in foreign tax. Your Canadian tax on that income would be $3,200. Your foreign tax credit is $2,500, so you only pay $700 additional Canadian tax — not the full $3,200.

Working Remotely in Canada for a Foreign Employer

This is increasingly common and has specific tax implications:

Foreign Rental Property Income

If you own rental property abroad and continue to receive rental income after moving to Canada, you must report:

Foreign Investment Accounts

If you have investment accounts abroad (brokerage accounts, mutual funds, savings plans), the income earned in those accounts is taxable in Canada:

PFIC Rules (for US Mutual Funds and ETFs)

Canadian residents who own US mutual funds or ETFs may face an issue called "passive foreign investment company" (PFIC) treatment under US rules if they later become US persons. This is primarily a concern for those who may relocate to the US, or for US citizens living in Canada. The CRA does not have a PFIC regime, but the IRS does — and it can be punitive for Canadians who later move to the US.

Tax Treaties in Action

Tax treaties modify how the worldwide income principle applies. Common treaty provisions that help newcomers:

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