http://www.canadian-accountant.com/content/practice/more-bite-than-bark
Update important changes Dec 15,2022
News release
December 15, 2022 - Ottawa, Ontario - Department of Finance Canada
Today, Bill C-32, the Fall Economic Statement Implementation Act, 2022, received Royal Assent. With the passage of this legislation, the government is delivering on key measures from the 2022 Fall Economic Statement to help families cope with increasing costs, make housing more affordable, and strengthen and build a thriving net-zero economy with opportunities and good jobs for Canadians.
Key measures adopted in Bill C-32 to make life more affordable include:
Permanently eliminating interest on Canada Student Loans and Canada Apprentice Loans to reduce the burden of student loans on young Canadians.
Cutting taxes for Canada’s growing small businesses from 15 per cent to 9 per cent by more gradually phasing out their access to the small business tax rate.
Requiring Canada’s largest financial institutions to pay their fair share by implementing the Canada Recovery Dividend, a one-time, 15 per cent tax on taxable income above $1 billion of banking and life insurer groups.
Bill C-32 also delivers key components of the government’s plan to make housing more affordable by:
Helping young Canadians afford a down payment faster with the new Tax-Free First Home Savings Account, which will allow prospective first-time home buyers to save up to $40,000 tax-free toward their first home starting in mid-2023
Helping Canadians save on closing costs by doubling the First-Time Home Buyers’ Tax Credit to provide up to $1,500 in direct support to home buyers, starting in 2022, to offset increasing closing costs involved in buying a first home.
Helping families afford to have a grandparent or a family member with a disability move back in if they want to with a new, refundable Multigenerational Home Renovation Tax Credit of up to $7,500, starting January 1, 2023.
Cracking down on house flipping by ensuring that profits from flipping properties held for less than 12 months are fully taxed, starting in 2023, with certain exceptions for unexpected life events (e.g. death, divorce).
And, Bill C-32 invests in jobs, growth, and an economy that works for everyone by:
Supporting the launch of the new Canada Growth Fund, which will help bring to Canada the billions of dollars in new private investment required to reduce our emissions, grow our economy, and create good jobs at the same time.
Securing Canada’s competitiveness by introducing a new 30 per cent Critical Mineral Exploration Tax Credit for specified mineral exploration expenses incurred in Canada.
Eliminating flow-through shares for fossil fuel sector activities by no longer allowing oil, gas, and coal exploration and development expenditures to be renounced to a flow-through share investor.
Let's not forget bare trust reporting, and the huge penalty burden that will be to all that have a intrust account.
Comments
https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/news/newsroom/tax-tips/tax-...
check out 2022 tax for many other resources, especially in the comment section
https://improvingfutures.ning.com/blog/tax-tips-2022
https://www.knowledgebureau.com/index.php/site/kbr/tax-literacy-mat...
parking disallowed if not part of a long trip
https://financialpost-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/financialpost.com/...
https://financialpost.com/personal-finance/taxes/cra-tax-changes-ne...
https://www.advisor.ca/columnists_/wilmot-george/selling-real-estat...
https://www.canada.ca/en/services/taxes/excise-taxes-duties-and-lev...
https://tnc.news/2022/12/28/tax-hikes-2023/
First Home Savings Accounts (FHSA): Legislation to create the new tax-free FHSA was recently passed, paving the way for it to be launched as early as April 1, 2023. This new registered plan gives prospective first-time homebuyers the ability to save $40,000 on a tax-free basis towards the purchase of a first home in Canada.
Like a RRSP, contributions to an FHSA will be tax deductible, but withdrawals to purchase a first home, including from any investment income or growth earned in the account, will, like a TFSA, be non-taxable. The new legislation confirms that a first-time homebuyer can use both the FHSA and the existing Home Buyers’ Plan to purchase their first home.
Multigenerational Home Renovation Tax Credit: Jan. 1 also marks the beginning of this new credit, which is equal to 15 per cent of eligible expenses (up to $50,000) incurred for a qualifying renovation that creates a secondary dwelling to permit an eligible person (such as a senior or a person with a disability) to live with a relative.
Anti-flipping rules: Finally, new anti-flipping rules for residential real estate are scheduled to come into force on Jan. 1, and are designed to “reduce speculative demand in the marketplace and help to cool excessive price growth.”
The principal residence exemption will not be available on the sale of your home if you’ve owned it for less than 12 months (with certain exceptions). Instead, the gain will be 100-per-cent taxable as business income.
https://financialpost.com/personal-finance/taxes/cra-tax-changes-ne...
https://financialpost.com/personal-finance/taxes/cra-tax-changes-ne...