T4002(E) Rev. 96 (VERIFIED AND PAGED) BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL INCOME PAGE 2 BEFORE YOU START IS THIS GUIDE FOR YOU? Use this guide if you are a self-employed businessperson (which includes a self-employed commission salesperson) or a professional. It will help you calculate the business or professional income you will report on your 1996 income tax return. Forms and publications In the middle of this guide you will find two copies of Form T2124, Statement of Business Activities, and Form T2032, Statement of Professional Activities. The forms are provided to help you calculate your income and expenses for income tax purposes. We encourage you to use these forms. However, you do not have to use them since we will continue to accept other types of financial statements. You have to complete a separate form for each business or professional activity you operate. Interpretation Bulletin IT-206, Separate Businesses, has more details. Throughout the guide, we also refer to other forms and publications. If you need more copies of Form T2124, Form T2032, or any other forms or publications, contact your tax services office. If you have access, many of our publications are available at our address http//www.rc.gc.ca/ on the Internet. This guide uses plain language to explain the most common tax situations. For most tax matters, please contact the General Enquiries Section of your Revenue Canada tax services office. If, after reading this guide, you need more information about businesses or professional activities, please contact the Business Enquiries Section of your tax services office. You can find the address and telephone numbers listed under "Revenue Canada" in the Government of Canada section of the telephone book. New Terminology Human Resources Development Canada is implementing legislative changes to the Unemployment Insurance program. As a result "Unemployment Insurance" (UI) is now called "Employment Insurance" (EI). Blind or visually-impaired persons can get this publication in braille and large print, and on audio cassette and computer diskette. To order, please call 1-800-267-1267 weekdays between 8:15 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. (Eastern Time). La version française de cette publication est intitulée Revenus d'entreprise ou de profession libérale. PAGE 3 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page CHAPTER 1 - GENERAL INFORMATION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Business and business income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 How do you report your business income?. . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Business records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Instalment payments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Dates to remember. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 What is a partnership? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Partnerships that have to file a partnership information return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Partnerships that do not have to file a partnership information return. . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 CHAPTER 2 -INCOME FROM BUSINESS OR PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES . . .9 Sole proprietorships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Partnerships . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Identification area on Forms T2032 and T2124 . . . . . . . . . .9 Do you have a tax shelter? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Form T2124, Statement of Business Activities . . . . . . . . . 10 Form T2032, Statement of Professional Activities . . . . . . . 12 CHAPTER 3 - EXPENSES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 CHAPTER 4 - CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE (CCA) . . . . . . . . . . . 23 What is capital cost allowance?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 How much CCA can you claim?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Definitions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 How do you make your claim?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Column 1 - Class number. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Column 2 - Undepreciated capital cost (UCC) at the start of the year. . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Column 3 - Cost of additions in the year . . . . . . . . . 25 Column 4 - Proceeds of dispositions in the year. . . . . . 26 Column 5 - UCC after additions and dispositions. . . . . . 26 Column 6- Adjustment for current year additions. . . . . . 27 Column 7 - Base amount for capital cost allowance (CCA). . 27 Column 8 - Rate (%) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Column 9 - CCA for the year. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Column 10 - UCC at the end of the year . . . . . . . . . . 27 Classes of depreciable property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Special situations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 CCA Classes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Summary of Chapters 2 to 4 - Completed Form T2124. . . . . . . 36 CHAPTER 5 - ELIGIBLE CAPITAL EXPENDITURES. . . . . . . . . . . 38 What is an eligible capital expenditure? . . . . . . . . . . . 38 What is an annual allowance? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 What is a cumulative eligible capital (CEC) account? . . . . . 38 How to calculate your annual allowance . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Did you own eligible capital property at the end of February 22, 1994 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Sole proprietor. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Sale of eligible capital property in a 1996 fiscal period . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Partnership. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Sale of eligible capital property in a 1996 fiscal period . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 CHAPTER 6 - INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 What is an investment tax credit?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 What is a refundable investment tax credit?. . . . . . . . . . 43 How to calculate your 1996 investment tax credit . . . . . . . 43 How to claim your 1996 credit. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Refund of investment tax credit. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Adjustments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 APPENDIX - INDUSTRY CODES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 PAGE 4 CHAPTER 1 - GENERAL INFORMATION This chapter has general information for all businesses (including self-employed commission sales) and professional activities. It also provides information specifically of interest to partnerships. BUSINESS AND BUSINESS INCOME A business is an activity that you conduct for profit or with a reasonable expectation of profit. A business includes: - a profession; - a calling; - a trade; - a manufacture; - an undertaking of any kind; and - an adventure or concern in the nature of trade (for more details, read Interpretation Bulletin IT-459, Adventure or Concern in the Nature of Trade). Therefore, business income includes income from any activity you conduct for profit or with a reasonable expectation of profit. For example, income from a service business is business income. Note that you do not include employment income as business income. You were asking...? Q. When does a business start? Can I deduct the costs I incur before and during the start of a business? A. We look at each case on its own merits. Generally, we consider that a business starts whenever you begin some significant activity that is a regular part of the business, or that is necessary to get the business going. For example, suppose you decide to start a merchandising business and you buy enough goods for resale to start the business. At this point, we would consider that the business has started. You can usually deduct expenses you have incurred to date to earn the business income. You could still deduct the expenses even if, despite all your efforts, the business wound up. On the other hand, assume you review several different business prospects in the hope of going into a business of some kind. In this case, we would not consider that the business has begun, and you could not deduct any of the costs you incur. If you would like more details about the start of a business, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-364, Commencement of Business Operations. HOW DO YOU REPORT YOUR BUSINESS INCOME? FISCAL PERIOD You report your business income on a fiscal period basis. A fiscal period is the time covered from the day your business starts its business year, to the day your business ends its business year. For an existing business, the fiscal period is usually 12 months. A fiscal period cannot be longer than 12 months. However, it can be shorter than 12 months in some cases, such as when a new business starts or when a business stops. For taxation years ending after 1994, self-employed individuals are generally required to use a December 31 year end. If you are an eligible individual, you may be able to use an alternative method of reporting your business income which allows you to keep a fiscal period that does not end on December 31. If you have a fiscal year end that is not December 31, you will need the publication called Reconciliation of Business Income for Tax Purposes in order to calculate the amount of business income to report on your 1996 income tax return. The publication includes Form T1139, Reconciliation of Business Income for Tax Purposes and is available from your tax services office or tax centre. If you filed Form T1139 with your 1995 income tax return, you have to file Form T1139 again this year. ACCRUAL METHOD In most cases, as a self-employed person, you report business income by using the accrual method of accounting. With this method, you: - report your income in the fiscal period you earn it, regardless of when you receive the income; and - deduct expenses in the fiscal period you incur them, whether you paid them in that period or not. Incur usually means you either paid or will have to pay the expense. As we said earlier, income from professional activities is business income. Therefore you report it using the accrual method. Chapter 2 has more details about professionals. CASH METHOD If you are a self-employed commission sales agent, you can use the cash method of reporting your income and expenses, as long as it accurately shows your income for the year. Under this method, you: - report income in the year you receive it; and - deduct expenses in the year you pay them. BUSINESS RECORDS You have to keep records of all your transactions to support your income and expense claims. Therefore, your records should be complete and organized. There are other benefits to keeping careful records: - When you earn income from many places, good records help you identify the source of the income. Unless you keep proper records, you may not be able to prove that some income is not from your business, or that it is not taxable. - Keeping good records will remind you of expenses you can deduct when it comes time to do your income tax return. - Good records will keep you better informed about the past and present financial position of your business. - Good records can help you budget, spot trends in your business, and get help from banks and other lenders. PAGE 5 - Good records can prevent problems you may run into if we audit your income tax returns. INCOME RECORDS Keep track of the gross income your business earns. Gross income is your total income before you deduct the cost of goods sold and expenses. Your income records should show the date, the amount, and the source of the income. Record the income whether you received cash, property, or services. Support all income entries with original documents. Original documents include sales invoices, cash register tapes, receipts, patient cards, fee statements, contracts, and so on. These documents will depend on the type of business you run. Here is an example of how to record your income. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Sales Journal - Month of June ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date Particular Cash Credit Sales Total GST PST Payment on sales* sales* returns* sales* (7%) (7%) account (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 June 1 Daily sales 146.00 27.00 173.00 12.11 12.11 10.00 2 June 2 Daily sales 167.00 36.25 26.00 177.25 12.41 12.41 3 June 3 Daily sales 155.02 19.95 10.00 164.96 11.55 11.55 32.40 4 June 4 Daily sales 147.00 29.95 176.95 12.39 12.39 5 6 7 8 9 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- * Does not include PST/GST On June 1, you examine the sales invoices and cash register tapes. You find that you had cash sales of $146.00 and sales on account of $27.00. In the sales journal, you record the cash sales in column 1, and the credit sales in column 2. Since there were no merchandise returns on June 1, leave column 3 blank. Column 4 then shows the total of your cash sales plus credit sales minus any merchandise returned for the day. In column 5 and 6 show the total of the goods and services tax (GST) and provincial sales tax (PST) you charged on your sales. In column 7, keep track of any cash received on previous credit sales. Don't include the amount in the daily sales figure, since you would have included it in the sales figure on the day the sale took place. EXPENSE RECORDS Always get receipts or other vouchers when you buy something for your business. When you buy merchandise or services, the receipts have to show: - the date of the purchase; - the name and address of the seller or supplier; - the name and address of the purchaser; and - a full description of the goods or services. Here is an example of how to record your expenses. PAGE 6 EXPENSE JOURNAL - MONTH OF JUNE ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date Part. Cheque Bank GST Purchases Legal Adv. Fees Repair Cap. No. acc't items ---------------------------------------------------------------------- June 1 XYZ Radio 407 374.50 24.50 350.00 June 1 Smith Hardware 408 27.47 1.80 25.67 June 2 City of Ottawa 409 160.50 10.50 150.00 June 3 Andy's Accounting 410 267.50 17.50 250.00 June 5 Wholesale Supply 411 1871.58 122.44 1749.14 June 5 Ed's Used Cars 412 1605.00 105.00 1500.00 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- YOU WERE ASKING...? Q. What should I do if there is no description on a receipt? A. When you buy something, make sure the seller describes the item. Sometimes however, there is no description on the receipt, like with a cash register tape. In this case, you should write what the item is on the receipt or in your expense journal. Q. What should I do if a supplier does not give me a receipt? A. When you buy something, make sure you request a receipt. Sometimes however, suppliers may not provide receipts. In this case, write the information in your records. Show the name and address of the supplier, the date you made the payment, the amount you paid, and the details of the transaction. Keep a record of the properties you bought and sold. This record should show who sold you the property, the cost, and the date you bought it. This information will help you calculate your claim for capital cost allowance, and other amounts. If you sell or trade a property, show the date you sold or traded it, and the amount of the payment or credit from the sale or trade-in. YOUR RECORD BOOKS Keep a record of your daily income and expenses. We do not issue record books or suggest any type of book or set of books. There are many record books and bookkeeping systems available. For example, you can use a book that has columns and separate pages for income and expenses. Keep your books, along with your duplicate deposit slips, bank statements, and cancelled cheques. Keep separate records for each business you run. If you want to keep computerized records, make sure they are clear and easy to read. Note Do not send your records with your income tax return. However, you must keep them in case we ask to see them. If you do not keep the necessary information and you do not have any other proof, we may have to determine your income using other methods. We may also reduce the expenses you deducted. TIME LIMITS Depending on the situation, keep your records for the following lengths of time: - If you file your return on time, keep your records for a minimum of six years after the end of the taxation year to which they relate. - If you file your return late, keep your records for six years after the date you file that return. - If you file an objection or an appeal, keep your records until either the issue is settled and the time for filing any further appeal expires, or the six-year period mentioned above has expired, whichever is later. If you want to destroy your records before the minimum six-year period is over, you must first get written permission from the Director of your tax services office. To do this, either use Form T137, Request for Destruction of Books and Records, or prepare your own written request. Information Circular 78-10, Books and Records Retention/Destruction and its Special Release have more details. INSTALMENT PAYMENTS As a self-employed person, you may have to make instalment payments for 1997. Your 1997 instalment payments are due on March 15, June 15, September 15, and December 15. If you have to pay by instalments, we will send you a notice telling you how much to pay. PAGE 7 You may have to pay a penalty and interest if you do not pay your instalment payments on time, or if you do not pay the full instalment amounts you owe. For more information, see the pamphlet called Paying Your Income Tax by Instalments. If you would like to calculate your instalment payments, get Form T1033-WS, Instalment Payment Calculation Worksheet. You can get the pamphlet and the worksheet from your tax services office. DATES TO REMEMBER FEBRUARY 28, 1997 - If you have employees, file your 1996 T4 Summary and T4A Summary returns. Also, give your employees their copies of the T4 Supplementary and T4A Supplementary slips. MARCH 15, 1997 - Make your first 1997 instalment payment. MARCH 31, 1997 - Most partnerships will file a partnership information return, (PIR) by March 31, 1997. However, there are exceptions. See the Guide for the Partnership Information Return, and Information Circular 89-5, Partnership Information Return and its Special Release. APRIL 30, 1997 - Pay any balance owing. File your 1996 income tax return if the expenditures of the business are primarily the cost or capital cost of tax shelter investments. JUNE 15, 1997 - Make your second 1997 instalment payment. File your 1996 income tax return if you have self-employment income, or if you are the spouse of someone who does, unless the expenditures of the business are primarily the cost or capital cost of tax shelter investments. Remember in every case to pay any balance owing by April 30, 1997, to avoid interest charges. SEPTEMBER 15, 1997 - Make your third 1997 instalment payment. DECEMBER 15, 1997 - Make your fourth 1997 instalment payment. NOTE You can file your annual GST and income tax returns at the same time by completing Form T1124, GST and Income Tax Reconciliation Form. You can also make one remittance for both taxes or offset a credit for one tax against a debit for the other. However, if you have a balance owing for 1996, your payment is due on or before April 30, 1997. Arrears interest, which we calculate separately on the GST and income tax owing, will accrue on any balance outstanding after April 30, 1997, until you pay the amount in full. WHAT IS A PARTNERSHIP? A partnership is usually the relationship between persons who conduct a business in common with the belief they will make a profit. You can have a partnership without a written agreement. Therefore, to determine if you are a partner, determine the type and extent of your involvement in the business. Please refer to the laws of your province to help you decide if you are a partner in a certain business. When you form, change, or dissolve a partnership, consider: - whether or not the relationship is a partnership; - the special rules about capital gains or losses and the recapture of capital cost allowance (CCA) that apply when you give properties to a partnership; - the special rules that apply when you dissolve a partnership; and - the special rules that apply when you sell or dispose of your interest in a partnership. If you need more details, contact the Business Enquiries Section of your tax services office. You can find the numbers listed under "Revenue Canada" in the Government of Canada section of the telephone book. REPORTING PARTNERSHIP INCOME A partnership does not pay income tax on its income, and it does not file an income tax return. Instead, each partner files an income tax return to report his or her share of the partnership's net income or loss. This requirement remains, whether the share of income was received in cash, or as a credit to a capital account in the partnership. GOODS AND SERVICES TAX (GST) REBATE If you are a member of a partnership and you claim expenses on your return, you may be able to get a GST rebate for any GST you paid on the expenses. The GST rebate is available to you as long as you meet both of these conditions: - you are a member of a GST-registered partnership; and - on your income tax return, you deduct expenses incurred to earn partnership income for which the partnership did not repay you. We base the rebate on the amount of the expenses subject to GST that you deduct on your income tax return. Examples of expenses subject to GST are vehicle costs, meals, and entertainment. You can also get a GST rebate for capital cost allowance (CCA) you claim on certain types of property (e.g., if you claim CCA for a vehicle you bought to earn partnership income, and you paid GST when you bought the vehicle). Use the chart called "Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss)" on page 2 of Form T2032 or Form T2124 to claim expenses for which the partnership did not reimburse you, and any other deductible amounts. For more information, see page 21. For more details about the GST rebate, get Form GST 370, Employee and Partner GST Rebate, from your tax services office. PARTNERSHIP LOSSES A partnership can have a loss. Calculate the loss as though the partnership were a separate person. However, apply the loss carryover rules to each partner, and not to PAGE 8 the partnership. For example, when you complete your own income tax return, combine your share of the partnership non-capital losses with any other non-capital losses you have in the year. Then, apply this amount against your income using the usual loss carryover rules. Contact your tax services office for details about these rules. Interpretation Bulletins IT-90, What is a Partnership?, and IT-138, Computation and Flow-Through of Partnership Income, have more details about partnerships. PARTNERSHIPS THAT HAVE TO FILE A PARTNERSHIP INFORMATION RETURN A partnership that has six or more members throughout the whole fiscal period has to file a partnership information return (PIR). A partnership that has five members or less throughout the whole fiscal period, and one or more of its members is another partnership, also has to file a PIR. If you are a member of a partnership that has to file a PIR you should get two copies of the T5013 Supplementary, Statement of Partnership Income, from the partnership. If you do not receive this form, contact the person who prepares the forms for the partnership. On your income tax return, report the gross partnership income and your share of the net partnership income or loss. You will get these amounts from your T5013 Supplementary slip. Attach copy 2 of your T5013 Supplementary slip to your income tax return. Do not attach the partnership's income and expense statement. You may need to adjust your share of the net partnership income or loss shown on your T5013 Supplementary slip. Do this to deduct any business expenses you incur for which the partnership did not repay you, and any other deductible amounts. If this is your situation, read the section called "Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss)" on page 21. You may also have expenses related to the business use of your home. See page 21 for more information. The Guide for the Partnership Information Return has more details about the PIR. Information Circular 89-5, Partnership Information Return and its Special Release also have more information. PARTNERSHIPS THAT DO NOT HAVE TO FILE A PARTNERSHIP INFORMATION RETURN Partnerships with five members or less throughout the whole fiscal period, and with no member who is another partnership, do not have to file a PIR. Read Information Circular 89-5, Partnership Information Return, and its Special Release, for information about partnerships that do not have to file a PIR. You can also read the Guide for the Partnership Information Return If you are a member of a partnership that does not have to file a PIR, when you calculate the partnership's income and expenses, use the same rules you would for a proprietorship. Calculate the partnership's income and expenses as if the partnership were a separate person. Some rules for capital cost allowance and eligible capital expenditures on partnership-owned property are different. We explain these rules below. CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE (CCA) A partnership can own depreciable property and claim CCA on it. As an individual partner, you cannot claim CCA on property the partnership owns. From the capital cost of depreciable property, subtract any investment tax credit allocated to the individual partners. We consider this allocation to be made at the end of the partnership's fiscal period. You also reduce capital cost by any type of government assistance. See Chapter 4 for more details about CCA and the adjustments to capital cost. Any capital gain or recapture from the sale of property the partnership owns is income of the partnership. Also, any capital or terminal loss from the sale of partnership-owned property is the loss of the partnership. See Chapter 4 for more details about capital gains and losses, and recapture and terminal losses. ELIGIBLE CAPITAL EXPENDITURES A partnership can own eligible capital property and deduct an annual allowance. Any income from the sale of eligible capital property the partnership owns is income of the partnership. See Chapter 5 for more details about eligible capital expenditures. LIMITED PARTNERSHIP A limited partnership is a partnership which gives its limited partners responsibilities that are similar to those given to shareholders of a corporation. A limited partner's liability as a member of the partnership is limited, as opposed to general partners. The following amounts can flow out (be passed on) to limited partners: - investment tax credits, except those for research and development that cannot flow out; - business losses; and - property losses. As a limited partner, you can claim these credits and losses (except losses from farming) only to the extent your investment in the partnership is at risk. This is your at-risk amount. In most cases, if you are the first-time buyer of a limited partnership interest, your at-risk amount for any year is the total of the following: - the adjusted cost base (ACB) of your interest in the limited partnership at the end of the year; plus - your share of any partnership income; minus - certain amounts you owe to the limited partnership, plus any guarantee or indemnity the limited partnership gave to you against the loss of your investment in the partnership. PAGE 9 You have to reduce your at-risk amount because the amount you owe to the partnership is not yet at risk in the partnership. If you are a buyer of a limited partnership interest on the secondary market, your ACB of the partnership interest is the lower of: - your cost; or - the ACB of the selling limited partner, as long as it is not less than zero. Note Interests in some limited partnerships that existed on or before February 25, 1986, may be exempt from these rules if they meet certain conditions. For more information on limited partnerships, contact your tax services office. CHAPTER 2 - INCOME FROM BUSINESS OR PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES SOLE PROPRIETORSHIPS If you are a sole proprietor, complete all the applicable areas and lines on Form T2032 or T2124. PARTNERSHIPS The details of your business or professional activities that you have to give us depend on the type of partnership you are in. If you are a member of a partnership that has to file a partnership information return, complete Form T2124 or Form T2032 as follows: - Complete the identification area. - Enter your share of the partnership income shown in box 18 of the T5013 Supplementary, Statement of Partnership Income, on line 8237 "Net income (loss) before adjustments." - Complete the "Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss)" chart to claim any expenses for which the partnership did not reimburse you, and any other deductible amounts. See page 21 for more information. Complete the "Calculation of business-use-of-home expenses" chart if applicable. See page 21 for more information. - Enter your share of the net income or loss from the business on line 8243 "Your net income (loss)." If you did not make any adjustments to the amount in box 18 of your T5013 Supplementary slip, the amount you enter on line 8243 will be the same as the amount you entered on line 8237. If you are a member of a partnership that does not have to file a PIR, complete Form T2124, Statement of Business Activities, or Form T2032, Statement of Professional Activities, as follows: - Complete the identification area. - Report the business income for all partners. - Report the business portion of expenses for all partners. - Complete the "Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss)" chart to claim any expenses for which the partnership did not reimburse you, and any other deductible amounts. See page 21 for more information. Complete the "Calculation of business-use-of-home expenses" chart if applicable. See page 21 for more information. - Complete the "Details of other partners" chart. To see if your partnership has to file a PIR read the section called "What is a partnership?" on page 7. We explain later in this chapter, as well as in Chapter 3, how to complete each of the lines on Form T2124 or Form T2032. IDENTIFICATION AREA ON FORMS T2032 AND T2124 Complete all the lines that apply to your business or professional activities. Most of the information required is self-explanatory. Indicate the period your business year covered, which is your fiscal period. See page 4 for an explanation of fiscal period. Enter the industry code that corresponds to your business from the appendix on page 45 of this guide. If more than one code describes your business, or if you have more than one activity in your business, use the code that most closely describes your main business activity. For example, you might operate a bookstore. However, the store might also sell postage stamps. You would still use industry code 6511 (for books and stationery) and not 4841 (for postal services). If you did not prepare your Form T2032 or T2124, enter the name and address of the person or the firm that prepared it for you. If you have a 15-digit Business Number, enter it in the appropriate area. If your business or professional activities are a partnership, identify your percentage of the partnership, and enter the partnership identification number if applicable. DO YOU HAVE A TAX SHELTER? If you have a tax shelter, enter its number on the appropriate line. A tax shelter is any property (including a right to income, as per proposed changes) that you expect will result, based on statements or representations made, in losses or other deductible amounts in the first four years after you acquire it. These losses or amounts would be equal to or more than the cost of your interest in the property (minus prescribed benefits). The cost of your interest in the property has to be reduced by prescribed benefits you or a person with whom you do not deal at arm's length will receive or enjoy. Prescribed benefits include tax credits, revenue guarantees, PAGE 10 contingent liabilities, limited-recourse debt, and rights of exchange or conversion. We define a non-arm's-length transaction on page 24. Tax shelters do not include flow-through shares or prescribed property. Prescribed property means property that is a registered pension plan, a registered retirement savings plan, a deferred profit-sharing plan, a registered retirement income fund, or a registered education savings plan. If you want more details, see Information Circular 89-4, Tax Shelter Reporting. If you invested in a tax shelter after August 31, 1989, and before 1991, you have to provide your tax shelter identification number to make a claim on your 1996 return. If you acquired a tax shelter after 1990 and are claiming a deduction for 1996, you have to file Form T5004, Statement of Tax Shelter Loss or Deduction, with your tax return. The identification number is for administrative purposes only, and does not confirm that an investor is entitled to claim any tax benefits associated with a tax shelter. Regardless of when you acquired a particular tax shelter, if this is the first year you are making a claim for it, include a copy of a T5003 Supplementary, Statement of Tax Shelter Information, with your income tax return. FORM T2124, STATEMENT OF BUSINESS ACTIVITIES This section explains how to complete the area called "Income" on Form T2124, Statement of Business Activities. SALES, COMMISSIONS, OR FEES Your sales include all sales, whether you receive or will receive money, something the same as money (such as credit units possessing a notional monetary value), or something from bartering. Bartering occurs when two people agree to exchange goods or services without using money. Interpretation Bulletin IT-490, Barter Transactions, has more details. You might usually deduct the goods and services tax (GST), provincial sales tax (PST), or returns and allowances directly from sales at the time they take place. If you do this, you can show your net sales (after GST, PST, and returns and allowances) on the first line of Form T2124. Otherwise, show the GST, PST, and returns and allowances separately on the appropriate lines of the form. If you used the quick method option to calculate your GST, remember to deduct only 5% of your gross sales. If you are a self-employed commission salesperson, enter the commissions you received on this line. LINE 8123 - NET SALES, COMMISSIONS, OR FEES Enter your net sales, commissions, and fees after deducting any goods and services tax (GST), provincial sales taxes (PST), and any returns, allowances, and discounts, if these have been included in your sales. RESERVES DEDUCTED LAST YEAR Include in your 1996 income any reserves you deducted for 1995. See "Allowable reserves" on page 20 for more details. OTHER INCOME Show income you received from any other sources separately on the "Other income" line on Form T2124. Some examples of other income you would report on this line are: - a recovery of an amount you wrote off as a bad debt in a previous year; - the value of vacation trips or other prizes awarded to you because of your business activities; - payments for land you leased for petroleum or natural gas exploration. For more information, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-200, Surface Rentals and Farming Operations, or contact the Business Enquiries Section of your tax services office. You can find the numbers under "Revenue Canada" in the Government of Canada section of your telephone book; and - grants, subsidies, incentives, or assistance you received from a government, a government agency, or a non-government agency. Interpretation Bulletin IT-273, Government Assistance - General Comments (after January 18, 1981) and its Special Release have more information. Note Subtract any rebate, grant, or assistance you receive from the applicable expense. Enter the net figure on the appropriate line of this form. If the rebate, grant, or assistance is for a depreciable asset, subtract the amount you received from the asset's capital cost. This will affect the amount of capital cost allowance (CCA) you can claim for that asset. See Chapter 4 for information about CCA. If the asset qualifies for the investment tax credit, this reduction to the capital cost will also affect your claim. See Chapter 6 for details. If you cannot apply the rebate, grant, or assistance you received to reduce a particular expense, or to reduce an asset's capital cost, include the total as other income. Under proposed changes, this amount must be included in income to the extent that it was not used to reduce the cost of a property or the amount of an outlay or expense. LINE 8124 - GROSS INCOME Enter your gross income, which is your net sales (line 8123) plus any reserves deducted last year, and any other income. CALCULATION OF COST OF GOODS SOLD Complete this area of Form T2124 if your business buys goods for resale or makes goods for sale. Claim the cost of the goods you buy or make for sale in the fiscal period you sell them. To calculate your cost of goods sold, you need to know the following: - the value of your inventory at the start of your fiscal period; PAGE 11 - the value of your inventory at the end of your fiscal period; and - the cost of your purchases (net of discounts) for the fiscal period. LINE 8200 - OPENING INVENTORY AND LINE 8203 - CLOSING INVENTORY Enter your opening and closing inventory on the appropriate lines. These amounts must include raw materials, goods in process, and finished goods. The way you value your inventory is important when you determine your income. For income tax purposes, we accept the following two methods: - Value your entire inventory at its fair market value. Use either the price you would pay to replace an item, or the amount you would receive if you sold an item. Once you have chosen one method for valuing your inventory, you have to use that method consistently. - Value individual items in your inventory at either their fair market value, or their cost, whichever is less. Cost is the price you incur for an item. Cost also includes any expenses you incur to bring the item to the business location, and to put it in a condition so that you can use it in the business. When you cannot easily tell one item from another, you can value the items as a group. See page 24 for the meaning of fair market value. If this is your first year of reporting business income, you can choose either method to value your inventory. In your first year of business, you will not have an amount to enter on line 8200. If this is not your first year of business, continue to use the same method you used in past years. The value of your inventory at the start of a fiscal period has to be the same as the value of your inventory at the end of the preceding fiscal period. Do an actual stock count at the end of each fiscal period, unless you use a perpetual inventory system. Under this system, you do periodic stock counts and keep a written record of each count. Remember to keep your inventory records with your other books and records. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-473, Inventory Valuation, and its Special Release, for more information about valuing inventory. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Under proposed changes, businesses that are adventures or concerns in the nature of trade must value their inventory at the cost to the taxpayer. Generally, these rules apply to taxation years that end after December 20, 1995. For more information, contact your tax services office. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- INVENTORY VALUE OF AN ARTISTIC ENDEAVOUR An artistic endeavour occurs when you are in the business of creating paintings, prints, etchings, drawings, sculptures, or similar works of art. An artistic endeavour does not include reproducing works of art. When you calculate your income from an artistic endeavour, you can choose to value your ending inventory at nil. To do this, show your ending inventory as "nil" on line 8203. Your choice stays in effect for each following year, unless we allow you to change it. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-504, Visual Artists and Writers, for more information. GIFTS OF INVENTORY BY AN ARTIST If you donate a work of art you create, you may not have to report a profit for income tax purposes on your donation. To benefit from this tax treatment, your gift must fall within the definition of total cultural gifts. A cultural gift is art: - you give to an institution or public body that is named under the Cultural Property Export and Import Act; and - the Department of Canadian Heritage has determined meets certain criteria set out in the Cultural Property Export and Import Act. If your gift is a cultural gift, we consider you to have disposed of it at its cost amount to you as long as: - it is part of a total cultural gift; - it is a work of art you created; and - you included it in your inventory. You will be able to get a donation tax credit based on the fair market value of your gift. The Department of Canadian Heritage will decide the fair market value of your gift. The following example shows how this legislation works. EXAMPLE Mike is an artist who creates a sculpture that cost him $8,000 in materials. He includes it in his inventory at that amount. In 1996, Mike donates the sculpture to the National Gallery, an institution named under the Cultural Property Export and Import Act. The Department of Canadian Heritage decides the sculpture is a total cultural gift and has a fair market value of $32,000. The effect on Mike's income is as follows: Proceeds of disposition $ 8,000 Cost amount $ 8,000 ------- Amount Mike will include in his income $ 0 ======= We will base Mike's donation tax credit on the gift having a fair market value of $32,000. LINE 8201 - PURCHASES DURING THE YEAR (NET OF RETURNS, ALLOWANCES, AND DISCOUNTS) The cost of goods you buy to resell, or to use in manufacturing other goods, includes costs such as delivery, freight, or express charges. The amount to enter on line 8201 is your net purchases during the year (your total purchases, minus any discounts you received). Sometimes, you might use goods you bought for the business for personal use. When this happens, you have to subtract the cost of these goods from your total purchases for the year. Do this before you enter the amount of the purchases on line 8201 of Form T2124. PAGE 12 LINE 8202 - SUBCONTRACTS Enter, on line 8202, all the costs of hiring outside help to perform special tasks related to the goods you sell. LINE 8245 - DIRECT WAGE COSTS Include the remuneration you paid to employees who work directly in the manufacture of your goods. Do not include on line 8245: - indirect wages (see line 8223); - a salary paid to yourself or a partner (see the section called "Details of equity" on page 22); and - cash withdrawals you may have made from the business (see the section called "Details of equity" on page 22). For more information on salaries and wages, see line 8223 in Chapter 3. LINE 8125 - GROSS PROFIT Enter your gross profit, which is your gross income (line 8124) minus your cost of goods sold. FORM T2032, STATEMENT OF PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES This section explains how to complete the area called "Income" on Form T2032, Statement of Professional Activities. As mentioned in Chapter 1, professional activities are business activities. Usually, you calculate your income from professional activities using the same rules as for a business. However, there are some aspects of professional activities that are different from those of other types of businesses. Some of these differences are discussed in this section. PROFESSIONAL FEES Your professional income includes all fees, whether you receive or will receive money, something the same as money (such as credit units possessing a notional monetary value) or something from bartering. Bartering occurs when two people agree to exchange goods or services without using money. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-490, Barter Transactions, for more information. As a professional, your income generally includes the value of your work-in-progress (WIP) at the end of your 1996 fiscal period minus your WIP at the end of the previous fiscal period. WIP is goods or services that you have not yet completed at the end of your fiscal period. Your professional fees for the current year are the total of: - all amounts you receive during the year for professional services, whether you provide the services during the current year or after your current year end; plus - all amounts receivable at the end of the current year for professional services you provided during the current year; minus - all amounts receivable at your previous year end. Note You might usually deduct the goods and services tax (GST) and provincial sales tax (PST) directly from your professional fees at the time you earn them. If you do this, you can show your net professional fees (after GST and PST) on the first line of Form T2032. Otherwise, show the GST and PST separately on the appropriate line of Form T2032. If you used the quick method option to calculate your GST, remember to deduct only 5% of your gross sales. ELECTION TO EXCLUDE YOUR WIP You can choose to exclude your WIP when you calculate your income if you are one of the following types of professionals: - an accountant; - a dentist; - a lawyer (including a notary in Quebec); - a medical doctor; - a chiropractor; or - a veterinarian. If you did not choose to exclude your WIP in any previous year, you can do so in 1996. You do not need a special form to do this. Attach a letter to your return telling us that you want to exclude your WIP. You can also use Form T2032 to exclude your WIP by doing the following: - on the "Work-in-progress, end of the year" line, write the amount you included as "Work-in-progress, end of year" in your professional fees. - on the "Work-in-progress, beginning of the year" line, write the amount of your WIP at the beginning of the year. Make this election when you file the original return to which it relates. We will not accept an election you file with an amended return. For partnerships, an authorized partner must choose for all partners that the partnership wants to exclude its WIP. The choice to exclude WIP stays in effect for each following year, unless we allow you to change it. Interpretation Bulletin IT-457, Election by Professionals to Exclude Work in Progress From Income, has more information about excluding work in progress. LINE 8123 - ADJUSTED PROFESSIONAL FEES Enter your net fees plus your work-in-progress for the beginning of the year if you excluded it at the end of last year, minus any GST and PST included in your sales, and your work-in-progress at the end of the year if you elect to exclude it. PAGE 13 RESERVES DEDUCTED LAST YEAR Include in your 1996 income any reserves you deducted for 1995. See "Allowable reserves" on page 20 for more details. OTHER INCOME Show income from any other sources separately on the "Other income" line on Form T2032. Some examples of other income you would report on this line are: - a recovery of an amount you wrote off as a bad debt in a previous year; - the value of vacation trips or other prizes awarded to you because of your professional activities; and - grants, subsidies, incentives, or assistance you received from a government, a government agency, or a non-government agency. Interpretation Bulletin IT-273, Government Assistance - General Comments (after January 18, 1981) and its Special Release have more information. LINE 8124 - GROSS INCOME Enter your gross income. This amount includes your adjusted professional fees (line 8123) plus your work-in-progress at the end of the year, any reserves deducted last year, and any other income. The following example summarizes this chapter. Since the rules for calculating business and professional income are similar, our example focuses on a business. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Cathy is the sole proprietor of a fashion boutique that has a December 31 fiscal year end. She rents the premises where the store is located. Cathy entered the following in her sales journals for 1996: Total sales (excluding PST or GST) $ 189,000 Returned items $ 1,000 Inventory at the beginning of 1996 $ 36,500 Inventory at the end of 1996 $ 30,000 Purchases (including freight, etc.) $ 88,000 Cathy completes the "Income" and "Cost of goods sold" sections of Form T2124 as shown on the following page. (SEE PRINTED COPY FOR FORM T2124(E) CHAPTER 3 - EXPENSES This chapter discusses the more common expenses you incur to earn income from your business (including self-employed commission sales) or professional activities. Incur means that either you paid or will have to pay the expense. If, after reading this chapter, you still have questions about which expenses you can deduct, contact your tax services office. As a rule, you can deduct any reasonable expense you incur to earn business income. The expenses you can deduct include any goods and services tax (GST) you incur on these expenses. However, since you cannot deduct personal expenses, enter only the business portion of expenses on the form. In addition, you cannot claim expenses you incur to buy capital property. Chapter 4 of this guide and Interpretation Bulletin IT-128, Capital Cost Allowance - Depreciable Property, contain more information. Note When you claim the GST you paid on your business expenses as an input tax credit, reduce the amounts of the business expenses you show on Form T2124 or Form T2032 by the amount of the input tax credit. Do this when the GST for which you are claiming the input tax credit was paid or became payable. Similarly, subtract any other rebate, grant, or assistance from the PAGE 14 expense to which it applies. Enter the net figure on the proper line. Any such assistance you claim for the purchase of depreciable property used in your business will affect your claim for capital cost allowance. If you cannot apply the rebate, grant, or assistance you received to reduce a particular expense, or to reduce an asset's capital cost, include the total as "Other income" on Form T2032 or Form T2124. See "Grants, subsidies, or other incentives or inducements" on page 30. ENTER BUSINESS PORTION ONLY, means that any of the following are not included as part of your expenses: - salary or wages (including drawings) paid to self, partner(s), or both; - cost of saleable goods or services that you, your family, or your partners and their families used (including items such as food, home maintenance, or business properties); - donations to charities and political contributions; - interest and penalties you paid on your income tax; - life-insurance premiums; - fines and penalties; and - the portion of any expenses that can be attributed to non-business use of business property. PREPAID EXPENSES A prepaid expense is an expense you pay for ahead of time. Under the accrual method of accounting, claim any expense you prepay in the year or years in which you receive the related benefit. For example, suppose your fiscal year end is December 31, 1996. On June 30, 1996, you prepay the rent on your business store for a full year (July 1, 1996, to June 30, 1997). You can only deduct one-half of this rent as an expense in 1996. You deduct the other half as an expense in 1997. For more information, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-417, Prepaid Expenses and Deferred Charges. LINE 8204 - ADVERTISING You can deduct expenses for advertising, including ads in Canadian newspapers and on Canadian television and radio stations. You can also include on this line any amount you paid as a finder's fee. However, you cannot deduct expenses for advertising directed mainly to a Canadian market when you advertise: - with a foreign broadcaster; or - in an issue of a non-Canadian newspaper or periodical. This second restriction does not apply to ads in a special issue of a newspaper that is published twice a year or less, and is devoted to news or features mainly about Canada. LINE 8205 - BAD DEBTS You can deduct an amount for a bad debt if you: - determine that an account receivable is a bad debt in the year; and - had already included the receivable in income. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-442, Bad Debts and Reserves for Doubtful Debts, for more information. BUSINESS TAX, FEES, LICENCES, DUES, MEMBERSHIPS, AND SUBSCRIPTIONS You can deduct any annual licence fees and business taxes you incur to run your business. You can also deduct annual dues or fees to keep your membership in a trade or commercial association. You cannot deduct club membership dues (including initiation fees) if the main purpose of the club is dining, recreation, or sporting activities. LINE 8211 - DELIVERY, FREIGHT, AND EXPRESS You can deduct the cost of delivery, freight, and express incurred in the year that relates to your business. LINE 8212 - FUEL COSTS You can deduct the cost of fuel (including gasoline, diesel, and propane), motor oil, and lubricants used in your business. For information about claiming the fuel used in your motor vehicle, see the section called "Line 8218 - Motor vehicle expenses" on page 15. LINE 8213 - INSURANCE You can deduct all ordinary commercial insurance premiums you incur on any buildings, machinery, and equipment you use in your business. For more information about claiming your motor vehicle insurance costs, see the section called "Line 8218 - Motor vehicle expenses" on page 15. In most cases, you cannot deduct your life insurance premiums. LINE 8214 - INTEREST You can deduct the interest you incur on money you borrow to run your business. However, some limits can apply. There is a limit on the interest you can deduct on money you borrow to buy a passenger vehicle. See "Line 8218 - Motor vehicle expenses" on page 15. There is also a limit on the amount of interest you can deduct for vacant land. Usually, you can deduct interest only up to the amount of income that remains after you deduct all other expenses. You cannot use any remaining amounts of interest to create or increase a loss. You also cannot deduct interest from other sources of income. If you need more details, contact your tax services office. You can deduct the fee you pay to reduce the interest rate on your loan. You can also deduct any penalty or bonus a financial institution charges you to pay off your loan before it is due. Treat the fee, penalty, or bonus as prepaid interest (see "Prepaid expenses" on this page) and deduct it over the remaining original term of your loan. For example, if the term of your loan is five years, and in the third year you pay a fee to reduce your interest rate, treat this fee as a prepaid expense, and deduct it over the remaining term of the loan. PAGE 15 You can deduct certain fees you incur when you get a loan to buy or improve your business property. These fees include: - application, appraisal, processing, and insurance fees; - loan guarantee fees; - loan brokerage and finder's fees; and - legal fees related to financing. You deduct these fees over a period of five years. Deduct 20% in 1996, and 20% in each of the four following years. The 20% limit is reduced proportionally for short fiscal periods. However, if you repay the loan before the end of the five-year period, you can deduct the remaining financing fees at that time. The number of years for which you can deduct these fees is not related to the term of your loan. If you incur standby charges, guarantee fees, service fees, or any other similar fees, you may be able to deduct them in full for the year you incur them. To do so, they have to relate only to that year. For more information, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-341, Expenses of Issuing or Selling Shares, Units in a Trust, Interests in a Partnership or Syndicate, and Expenses of Borrowing Money. You may be able to deduct interest expenses for a property that you used for business purposes, even if you have stopped using the property for such purposes because you are no longer in business. These expenses were not deductible as business expenses before 1994. For more information, contact your tax services office. You can deduct interest you paid on a loan made against an insurance policy, as long as the insurer did not add the interest you paid to the adjusted cost base of the insurance policy. To claim the interest you paid for 1996, have the insurer verify the interest before May 1, 1997, on Form T2210, Verification of Policy Loan Interest by the Insurer. You can choose to capitalize interest on money you borrow: - to buy depreciable property; - to buy a resource property; or - for exploration and development. When you choose to capitalize interest, add the interest to the cost of the property or exploration and development costs instead of deducting the interest as an expense. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-121, Election to Capitalize Cost of Borrowed Money, for more information about capitalizing interest. LINE 8215 - MAINTENANCE AND REPAIRS You can deduct the cost of labour and materials for any minor repairs or maintenance done to property you use to earn income. However, you cannot deduct the value of your own labour. You cannot deduct costs you incur for repairs that are capital in nature. However, you may be able to claim capital cost allowance (CCA). For more information about CCA, see Chapter 4. LINE 8216 - MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION FEES You can deduct management and administration fees incurred to operate your business, including bank charges. Do not include on this line employees' salaries, property taxes, or rents paid. Instead, you can claim these amounts elsewhere on the appropriate form. LINE 8217 - MEALS AND ENTERTAINMENT The maximum portion you can claim for business meals, beverages, and entertainment expenses is 50% of either the amount you incur, or an amount that is reasonable in the circumstances, whichever is less. These limits also apply to the cost of your meals when you travel or go to a convention, conference, or similar event. However, special rules can affect your claim for meals in these cases. For more details, see "Line 8224 - Travel" on page 19, and "Convention expenses" on page 20. These limits do not apply if: - your regular business is to provide food, beverages, or entertainment to customers for compensation (for example, a restaurant, hotel, or motel); - you bill your client or customer for the meal and entertainment costs, and you show these costs on the bill; - you include the amount of the meal and entertainment expenses in an employee's income, or would include them if the employee did not work at a remote work location; - you incur meal and entertainment expenses to provide a Christmas party or similar event, and you invite all your employees from a particular location; or - the meal and entertainment expenses you incur are for a fund- raising event that was mainly for the benefit of a registered charity. Entertainment expenses include tickets and entrance fees to an entertainment or sporting event, gratuities, cover charges, and room rentals such as for hospitality suites. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-518, Food, Beverages, and Entertainment Expenses, for more information. LINE 8218 - MOTOR VEHICLE EXPENSES You can deduct expenses you incur to run a motor vehicle you use to earn business income. KEEPING RECORDS You can deduct motor vehicle expenses only when they are reasonable and you have receipts to support them. To get the full benefit of your claim for each vehicle, keep a record of the total kilometres you drove and the kilometres you drove to earn business income. For each business trip, list the date, destination, purpose, and the number of kilometres you drove. Be sure to record the oedometer reading of each vehicle at the start and end of the fiscal period. If you change motor vehicles during the fiscal period, record the dates of the changes and the oedometer reading at the time you buy, sell, or trade the vehicle. PAGE 16 WHAT TYPE OF VEHICLE DO YOU OWN? The kind of vehicle you own can affect the expenses you deduct. For income tax purposes, there are three types of vehicles: - motor vehicles; - automobiles; and - passenger vehicles. If you own or lease a passenger vehicle, there can be a limit on the amounts you can deduct for capital cost allowance (CCA), interest, and leasing costs. We explain the CCA limits on page 28, the interest limits on page 17, and the leasing costs on page 18. MOTOR VEHICLE - This is an automotive vehicle designed or adapted for use on highways and streets. Motor vehicles do not include a trolley bus or a vehicle designed or adapted to be operated exclusively on rails. AUTOMOBILE - This is a motor vehicle designed or adapted primarily to carry people on highways and streets. It seats a driver and no more than eight passengers. An automobile does not include: - an ambulance - a motor vehicle you acquire to use more than 50% as a taxi, a bus used in the business of transporting passengers, or a hearse in a funeral business; - a motor vehicle you bought to sell, rent, or lease in a motor vehicle sales, rental, or leasing business; - a motor vehicle (except a hearse) you bought to use in a funeral business to transport passengers; - a van, pick-up truck, or similar vehicle that seats no more than the driver and two passengers which, in the taxation year you bought it, you used it more than 50% to transport goods or equipment to earn income; and - a van, pick-up truck, or similar vehicle that, in the taxation year you bought it, you used 90% or more to transport goods, equipment, or passengers to earn income. PASSENGER VEHICLE - This is an automobile you bought after June 17, 1987. A passenger vehicle is also an automobile that you leased under a lease agreement you entered into, extended, or renewed after June 17, 1987. An automobile you bought or leased under the terms of a written agreement you entered into before June 18, 1987, is not a passenger vehicle. Most cars, station wagons, vans, and some pick-up trucks are passenger vehicles. They are subject to the limits for capital cost allowance, interest, and leasing. To help you determine what type of vehicle you have, see the chart on page 17. The chart does not cover every situation, but it does provide some of the main definitions. The chart is for a vehicle you buy or lease after June 17, 1987, that you use to earn business income. DEDUCTIBLE EXPENSES The types of expenses you can claim on line 8218 include: - licence and registration fees; - fuel costs; - insurance; - interest; - maintenance and repairs; and - leasing costs. You can also claim capital cost allowance (CCA), but you enter this amount on line 8207. See Chapter 4 for information about CCA. BUSINESS USE OF A MOTOR VEHICLE If you use a motor vehicle for business and for personal use, you can deduct only the portion of the expenses that you incur to earn income. To support the amount you can deduct, keep a record of both the total kilometres you drove, and the kilometres you drove to earn income. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Example Danielle owns a hardware store that has a December 31 year end. She has a van that she uses for the business. Danielle noted the following for 1996: Kilometres driven to earn business income 27,000 Total kilometres driven 30,000 Expenses: Licence and registration fees $100 Gas and oil $2,400 Insurance $1,900 Interest $800 Maintenance and repairs $200 Total expenses for the van $5,400 Danielle calculates the expenses she can deduct for her van for 1996 as follows: 27,000 (business kilometres) x $5,400 = $4,860 --------------------------- 30,000 (total kilometres) Therefore, the deductible business portion of Danielle's van expenses is $4,860. Danielle can claim this amount on line 8218 of Form T2124. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- JOINT OWNERSHIP If you and another person own or lease a passenger vehicle, the limits on capital cost allowance, interest, and leasing still apply. As a joint owner, the total amount you and any other owner(s) deduct cannot be more than the amount that one person owning or leasing the vehicle could deduct. MORE THAN ONE VEHICLE If you used more than one motor vehicle for your business, keep a separate record that shows the total and business kilometres you drove, and the cost to run and maintain each vehicle. Calculate each vehicle's expenses separately. For more details on motor vehicle expenses, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-521, Motor Vehicle Expenses Claimed by Self-Employed Individuals. PAGE 17 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- VEHICLE DEFINITIONS ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Type of vehicle Seating Business use in year Vehicle (includes driver) bought or leased definition ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Coupe, sedan, station wagon, sports, or luxury car 1 to 9 1% to 100% passenger Pick-up truck used to transport goods or equipment 1 to 3 more than 50% motor Pick-up truck (other than above) 1 to 3 1% to 100% passenger Pick-up truck with extended cab used to transport goods, equipment, or passengers 4 to 9 90% or more motor Pick-up truck with extended cab (other than above) 4 to 9 1% to 100% passenger Sport-utility used to transport goods, equipment, or passengers 4 to 9 90% or more motor Sport-utility (other than above) 4 to 9 1% to 100% passenger Van or Minivan used to transport goods or equipment 1 to 3 more than 50% motor Van or Minivan (other than above) 1 to 3 1% to 100% passenger Van or Minivan used to transport goods, equipment, or passengers 4 to 9 90% or more motor Van or Minivan (other than above) 4 to 9 1% to 100% passenger ---------------------------------------------------------------------- INTEREST You can deduct interest on money you borrow to buy a motor vehicle, automobile, or passenger vehicle you use to earn income. Include the interest as an expense when you calculate your allowable motor vehicle expenses. When you use a passenger vehicle to earn income, there is a limit on the amount of interest you can deduct. Complete the following chart to calculate the amount of interest you can deduct. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Available interest expense for passenger vehicles Total interest payable (accrual method) or paid (cash method) in the fiscal period $ _______ A $ 10.00 x the number of days in the ------ fiscal period for which interest was payable (accrual method) or paid (cash method) $ _______ B Available interest expense: amount A or B, whichever is less $ _______ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Example On May 1, 1996, Cathy bought a car that she uses to earn business income. Cathy's fiscal year ends on December 31. The car is a passenger vehicle. Cathy borrowed money to buy her car, and the interest payable in 1996 was $1,500. Her available interest expense is whichever of the following amounts is less: - the total interest payable in 1996 of $1,500; or - $10 x 245 days = $2,450. Therefore, Cathy can claim an interest expense of $1,500. Cathy also recorded the following information for 1996: Kilometres driven to earn business income 25,000 Total kilometres driven 30,000 Expenses: Licence and registration fees $ 70 Gasoline and oil $ 1,330 Insurance $ 750 Interest expense $ 1,500 Repairs and maintenance $ 100 Total car expenses $ 3,750 Cathy calculates the expenses she can deduct for her car for 1996 as follows: 25,000 (business kilometres) x $3,750 = $3,125 --------------------------- 30,000 (total kilometres) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PAGE 18 LEASING COSTS You can deduct amounts you incur to lease a motor vehicle you use to earn income. Include these amounts on line 8218. When you use a passenger vehicle to earn income, there is a limit on the amount of the leasing costs you can deduct. To calculate your eligible leasing costs, complete the chart called "Eligible leasing costs for passenger vehicles" on this page. The lease agreement for your passenger vehicle may include items such as insurance, maintenance, and taxes. In this case, include them as part of the lease charges on line 1 when you complete the chart. Note Most leases do not include items such as insurance, maintenance, and taxes. You have to pay these amounts separately. Therefore, list these expenses separately when you calculate your allowable motor vehicle expenses. Do not include them on line 1 when you complete the chart. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ELIGIBLE LEASING COSTS FOR PASSENGER VEHICLES Total lease Charges incurred in your 1996 fiscal period for the vehicle $ ________ 1 Total lease payments deducted before your 1996 fiscal period for the vehicle $ ________ 2 Total number of days the vehicle was leased in your 1996 and previous fiscal periodS _______ 3 Manufacturer's list price $ _______ 4 The amount on line 4 or ($28,235 + GST and PST on $28,235) whichever is more $_______ x 85% = $ _______ 5 (($650 + GST and PST on $650) x line 3) - line 2 $ _______ 6 --------------------------------------- 30 (($24,000 + GST and PST on $24,000) x line 1) $ _______ 7 ---------------------------------- line 5 Eligible leasing cost: line 6 or line 7, whichever is less $ _______ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The following example will show you how to calculate your eligible leasing costs. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Amy owns a toy store. Her business has a December 31 fiscal year end. On February 1, 1996, she started leasing a car that is a passenger vehicle. The PST rate for her province is 8%. Amy entered the following for 1996: Monthly lease payment $ 500 Lease payments for 1996 $ 5,500 Manufacturer's suggested list price $ 29,000 Number of days in 1996 she leased the car 334 GST and PST on $24,000 $ 3,600 GST and PST on $28,235 $ 4,235 GST and PST on $650 $ 98 Total lease charges incurred in Amy's 1996 fiscal period for the vehicle $ 5,500 1 Total lease payments deducted in fiscal periods before 1996 for the vehicle $ 0 2 Total number of days the vehicle was leased in 1996 and previous fiscal periods 334 3 Manufacturer's list price $ 29,000 4 The amount on line 4 or $32,470 ($28,235 + $4,235) whichever is more = ($32,470 x 85%) $ 27,600 5 ($748 x 334) / 30 $ 8,328 6 ($27,600 x $5,500) / $27,600 $ 5,500 7 Amy's eligible leasing cost is either line 6 or 7, whichever amount is less. In this case, her allowable claim is $5,500. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- REPAYMENTS AND IMPUTED INTEREST When you lease a passenger vehicle, you may have a repayment owing to you, or you may have imputed interest. If this is your situation, you will not be able to use the chart. Instead, contact your tax services office for help on how to claim lease costs. Imputed interest is interest that would be owing to you if interest were paid on money deposited to lease a passenger vehicle. You calculate imputed interest for leasing costs on a passenger vehicle only if all of the following apply: - one or more deposits were made for the leased passenger vehicle; - the deposit is, or the deposits are, refundable; and - the total of the deposits is more than $1,000. For more information, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-521, Motor Vehicle Expenses Claimed by Self-Employed Individuals. LINE 8219 - OFFICE EXPENSES You can deduct the cost of office expenses. These include small items such as pens, pencils, paper clips, stationery, and stamps. Office expenses do not include items such as calculators, filing cabinets, chairs, and desks. These are capital items. See Chapter 4 for more information. LINE 8252 - SUPPLIES If not allowed for elsewhere, you can deduct the cost of items consumed indirectly to provide the business' goods or services (e.g., drugs and medication used in a veterinary operation, or scripts required for an actor to portray a role). PAGE 19 LINE 8220 - LEGAL, ACCOUNTING, AND OTHER PROFESSIONAL FEES Deduct the fees you incurred for external professional advice or services, including consulting fees. You can deduct accounting and legal fees you incur to get advice and help in maintaining your books and records. You can also deduct fees you incur for preparing and filing your income tax and GST returns. You can also deduct accounting or legal fees you paid to have an objection or appeal prepared against an assessment for income tax, Canada Pension Plan or Quebec Pension Plan contributions, or Employment Insurance premiums. However, these are not business expenses. You have to reduce your claim by the amount of any award you get to cover your costs. Enter the difference on line 232 of your income tax return. If you received a reimbursement in 1996 for the types of fees which you deducted in a previous year, report the amount you received on line 130 of your return. You cannot deduct legal and other fees you incur to buy a capital property. Instead, add these fees to the cost of the property. See Chapter 4 for more details about capital property. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-99, Legal and Accounting Fees, for more details. LINE 8221 - PROPERTY TAXES You can deduct property taxes you incurred for property used in your business. For example, you can deduct property taxes for the land and building where your business is situated. LINE 8222 - RENT You can deduct rent incurred for property used in your business. For example, you can deduct rent for the land and building where your business is situated. LINE 8223 - SALARIES, WAGES, AND BENEFITS You can deduct gross salaries you pay to employees. Do not include on this line salaries and wages described on line 8245, "Direct wage costs," or line 8202, "Subcontracts," or salaries and drawings of the owner(s) of the business. For more information, see the section called "Details of equity" on page 22. Do not deduct on any line any salaries or withdrawals payable to yourself or a partner. As the employer, you can deduct your portion of Canada Pension Plan or Quebec Pension Plan (CPP or QPP) contributions, Employment Insurance (EI) premiums, and Workers' Compensation amounts. You can also deduct any premiums you pay on behalf of an employee for a sickness, accident, disability, or income insurance plan. You can deduct the salary you pay to your child, as long as you meet all these conditions: - you pay the salary; - the work your child does is necessary for earning business or professional income; and - the salary is reasonable when you consider your child's age, and the amount you pay is what you would pay someone else. Keep documents to support the salary you pay your child. If you pay your child by cheque, keep the cancelled cheque. If you pay cash, have the child sign a receipt. Instead of cash, you may pay your child with a product from your business. When you do this, claim the value of the product as an expense. You also add to your gross sales an amount equal to the value of the product. Your child has to include the value of the product in his or her income. You can also deduct the salary you pay to your spouse. When you pay your spouse a salary, use the same rules that apply to paying your child. Report the salaries you pay to your children and spouse on T4 Supplementary slips, the same as you would for other employees. However, you cannot claim as an expense the value of board and lodging you give to your dependent children and spouse. LINE 8224 - TRAVEL You can deduct travel expenses you incur to earn income. Travel expenses include public transportation fares, hotel accommodations, and meals. In most cases, the 50% limit applies to the cost of meals, beverages, and entertainment when you travel. We discuss this limit in the section called "Line 8217 - Meals and entertainment" on page 15. The 50% limit also applies to the cost of food and beverages served, and entertainment enjoyed when you travel on an airplane, train, or bus, when the ticket price does not include such amounts. LINE 8225 - TELEPHONE AND UTILITIES You can deduct expenses for telephone and utilities, such as gas, oil, electricity, and water, if you incurred the expenses to earn income. OTHER EXPENSES There are expenses you can incur to earn income, other than those listed on Forms T2032 and T2124. We cover some of them in the following sections. Enter, on this line, the total of "Other expenses" you incurred to earn income, as long as you did not include them on a previous line. You do not have to list these expenses on the form. DISABILITY-RELATED MODIFICATIONS You can deduct outlays and expenses you incur for eligible disability- related modifications made to a building in the year you paid them, instead of having to add them to the capital cost of your building. Eligible disability-related modifications include changes you make to accommodate wheelchairs, such as: - installing hand-activated power door openers; - installing interior and exterior ramps; and PAGE 20 - modifying a bathroom, elevator or doorway. You can also deduct expenses paid to install or acquire the following disability-related devices and equipment: - elevator car-position indicators (such as braille panels and audio indicators); - visual fire-alarm indicators; - telephone devices to help people who are hearing-impaired; and - listening devices for group meetings. In addition, you may be able to deduct expenses for disability-specific computer software and hardware attachments. COMPUTER AND OTHER EQUIPMENT LEASING COSTS If you lease computers, cellular telephones, fax machines, and other equipment, you can deduct the percentage of the lease costs that reasonably relates to earning your business income. You can also deduct the percentage of airtime expenses for a cellular telephone that reasonably relates to earning your business income. If you buy a computer, cellular telephone, fax machine, or other such equipment, you cannot deduct their cost. You can deduct capital cost allowance and interest you paid on money you borrowed to buy this equipment that reasonably relates to earning your business income. For more information on capital cost allowance, read chapter 4. LEASING COSTS Deduct the lease payments you incurred in the year for property used in your business. If you lease a passenger vehicle, see "Line 8218 - Motor vehicle expenses" on page 15. If you entered a lease agreement after April 26, 1989, you can choose to treat your lease payments as combined payments of principal and interest. However, you and the person you are leasing from have to agree to treat the payments this way. In this case, we consider that you: - bought the property rather than leased it; and - borrowed an amount equal to the fair market value of the leased property. You can deduct the interest part of the payment as an expense. You can also claim capital cost allowance (CCA) on the property. You can make this choice as long as the property qualifies and the total fair market value (FMV) of all the property subject to the lease is more than $25,000. Digging equipment that you lease with a FMV of $35,000 is property that qualifies. However, office furniture and automobiles often do not qualify. To treat your lease this way, file one of these forms with your return for the year you make the lease agreement: - Form T2145, Election in Respect of the Leasing of Property; or - Form T2146, Election in Respect of Assigned Leases or Subleased Property. If you and the person you are leasing from have agreed to this kind of lease arrangement and you need these forms, or for more details, contact your tax services office. SMALL TOOLS If a tool cost under $200, deduct its full cost. If it cost you $200 or more, add the cost to Class 8 on your CCA schedule. See Chapter 4 for details. CONVENTION EXPENSES You can deduct the cost of going to a maximum of two conventions a year. The conventions have to: - relate to your business; and - be held by a business or professional organization within the geographical limits of where the sponsor of the convention usually does business. This second limit may not apply if an organization from another country sponsors the convention, and if the convention relates to your business. Sometimes, convention fees include the cost of food, beverages, or entertainment. However, the convention organizer may not show these amounts separately on your bill. For each day the organizer provides food, beverages, or entertainment, subtract $50 from the total convention fee. You can deduct this daily $50 amount as a meal and entertainment expense. However, the 50% limit applies to the daily $50 amount. We discuss the 50% limit in the section called "Line 8217 - Meals and entertainment" on page 15. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Cathy went to a two-day convention in May 1996 that cost her $600. The organizer did not indicate what part of the $600 fee was for food and entertainment. Her convention expense is $500 ($600 - ($50 x 2)). Cathy could also claim a meal and entertainment expense of $50 ($50 x 2 x 50%). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Food, beverages, or entertainment at a convention does not include incidental items such as coffee and doughnuts available at meetings or receptions at the convention. Interpretation Bulletin IT-131, Convention Expenses, has more details. ALLOWABLE RESERVES You can deduct an amount for a reserve, contingent account, or a sinking fund as long as the Income Tax Act allows it. The amount you deduct has to be reasonable. You can find details about allowable reserves in the following publications: - Interpretation Bulletin IT-154, Special Reserves; - Interpretation Bulletin IT-215, Reserves, Contingent Accounts and Sinking Funds, and its Special Release; - Interpretation Bulletin IT-321, Insurance Agents and Brokers - Unearned Commissions; - Interpretation Bulletin IT-442, Bad Debts and Reserve for Doubtful Debts; PAGE 21 - the income tax guide called Capital Gains; and - the income tax guide called Preparing Returns for Deceased Persons. For more information on allowable reserves, contact your tax services office. LINE 8207 - CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE If you use a property you own, such as a building, motor vehicle, or equipment in your business, you might be able to claim capital cost allowance (CCA). Enter, on this line, the amount you calculated in Area A of Form T2124 or Form T2032. For information on how to complete Area A, see Chapter 4. LINE 8246 - ALLOWANCE ON ELIGIBLE CAPITAL PROPERTY If you buy a property, such as goodwill or a franchise for your business, you might be able to claim an annual allowance. See Chapter 5 for more information. LINE 8237 - NET INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE ADJUSTMENTS Enter on this line the gross income minus the deductible expenses. If you are a member of a partnership, this amount is the net business income of all partners. On line e of Form T2032, or line h of Form T2124, show your share of line 8237. This is the amount left after you subtract the amounts the other partners are responsible for reporting as specified in the partnership agreement. In the chart called "Details of other partners" on Form T2124 or Form T2032, show the full names and addresses of the other partners, as well as a breakdown of their shares of the income and their percentages of the partnership. OTHER AMOUNTS DEDUCTIBLE FROM YOUR SHARE OF NET PARTNERSHIP INCOME (LOSS) Enter the total of any extra expenses you incurred to earn your share of the partnership income (loss), such as the business portion of allowable motor vehicle expenses. These expenses must not have been claimed anywhere else on the form. Claim these amounts only if the partnership did not repay you for them. The limits discussed earlier in this chapter also apply to these expenses. You can use the chart on Form T2124 or Form T2032 to list the other amounts you can deduct from your share of the partnership's net income or loss. You can also use the chart to claim the business income reduction, if you are a member of a partnership that has sold an eligible capital property, and you have made an election for 1994 regarding the $100,000 capital gains deduction on your interest in the partnership. For more information, see Chapter 5. LINE 8235 - BUSINESS-USE-OF-HOME EXPENSES You can deduct expenses for the business use of a work space in your home, as long as you meet one of these conditions: - it is your principal place of business; or - you use the space only to earn your business income, and you use it on a regular and ongoing basis to meet your clients, customers, or patients. You can deduct a portion of your maintenance costs, such as heating, home insurance, electricity, and cleaning materials. You can also deduct a portion of your property taxes, mortgage interest, and capital cost allowance (CCA). To calculate the portion you can deduct, use a reasonable basis, such as the area of the work space divided by the total area. The capital gain and recapture rules will apply if you deduct CCA on the business-use part of your home and you later sell your home. See Chapter 4 for more information about these rules. If you rent your home, you can deduct the portion of the rent and any expenses you incur that relate to the work space. The amount you can deduct for business-use-of-home expenses cannot be more than your net income from the business before you deduct these expenses. In other words, you cannot use these expenses to increase or create a business loss. You can deduct whichever of the following amounts is less: - any amount you carry forward from 1995, plus the business-use-of- home expenses you incur in 1996; or n the amount on line j of Form T2124 or line g of Form T2032. In your next fiscal period, you can use any expense you could not deduct in 1996, as long as you meet one of the two previous conditions. You also use the same rules. You can use the chart "Calculation of business-use-of-home expenses" on Form T2124 or Form T2032 to calculate your allowable claim for business-use-of-home expenses. To see how to calculate your business-use-of-home expenses, read the example below. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Bill runs a hairstyling business and salon out of his home. His business has a December 31 fiscal year end. Bill recorded the following for 1996: Total house area (square metres) 180 Area for business use only (square metres) 18 Area for personal use (square metres) 162 Net business income (loss) after adjustments $ 7,100 Business-use-of-home expenses carried forward from 1995 $ 150 PAGE 22 Bill's home expenses for 1996: Heat $ 1,200 Electricity $ 1,000 Insurance $ 650 Maintenance $ 350 Mortgage interest $ 8,000 Property taxes $ 1,800 Water $ 300 Bill completes the appropriate sections of Form T2032 as follows: (SEE PRINTED COPY FOR FORM T2032(E) Interpretation Bulletin IT-514, Work Space in Home Expenses, has more details about these expenses. RESERVE FOR 1971 ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE (FORM T2032 ONLY) If you have operated the same professional business since 1971, you may be claiming a reserve for your accounts receivable at the end of 1971. You must add your 1995 reserve amount to your 1996 income. You can claim a new reserve for 1996. Use the chart on page 2 of your Form T2032 to calculate the amount to include on line i of the form. For more information, see Interpretation Bulletins IT-135, "Investment Interest" in a Professional Business, and IT-353, Partnership Interest - Some Adjustments to Cost Base. LINE 8243 - YOUR NET INCOME (LOSS) On the relevant lines of your income tax return, enter your total gross (from line 8124 on your Form T2124 or Form T2032) and total net (from line 8243 on your Form T2124 or Form T2032) business or professional income or loss. Include the total of income or losses from all the businesses or professional activities you are in. If you have a business or professional loss that is more than all your other sources of income, you may have a non-capital loss for the year. To apply this loss against income from previous years, complete and attach a copy of Form T1A, Request for Loss Carryback, to your return. For more details about loss carrybacks, read Interpretation Bulletin IT-232, Non-Capital Losses, Net Capital Losses, Restricted Farm Losses, Farm Losses and Limited Partnership Losses - Their Composition and Deductibility in Computing Taxable Income, or contact your tax services office. DETAILS OF OTHER PARTNERS If you are a member of a partnership that does not have to file a partnership information return (PIR), (see Chapter 1 for these requirements) complete the chart called "Details of other partners" on your Form T2124 or Form T2032. If you are a member of a partnership that has to file a PIR, you do not have to complete this chart. DETAILS OF EQUITY (CHART ON PAGE 2 OF FORMS T2032 AND T2124) If you are a member of a partnership that has to file a PIR, do not complete this section. LINE 8313 - TOTAL BUSINESS LIABILITIES A liability is a debt or obligation of a business. Total business liabilities is the total of all amounts your business or professional activity owes at the end of its fiscal period. This includes accounts payable; notes payable; taxes payable; unpaid salaries; wages, and benefits; interest payable; deferred or unearned revenues; loans payable; mortgages payable; or any other outstanding balance related to the business. LINE 8400 - DRAWINGS IN 1996 A drawing is any withdrawal of cash (including salaries), other assets, or services of a business by the proprietor or partners. This includes such transactions by the proprietor or partners (or family members) as withdrawing cash for non-business use, and using business assets or services for personal use. Include the cost or value of personal use of business assets or services in your drawings for the year. LINE 8401 - CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS IN 1996 A capital contribution is an addition you made to the business of cash or other assets during its fiscal period. This includes adding personal funds to the business account, PAGE 23 paying business debts with personal funds, and transferring personal assets to the business. CHAPTER 4 - CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE (CCA) WHAT IS CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE? You might acquire a depreciable property, such as a building, furniture, or equipment, to use in your business or professional activities. You cannot deduct the cost of the property when you calculate your net business or professional income for the year. However, since these properties wear out or become obsolete over time, you can deduct their cost over a period of several years. The deduction for this is called capital cost allowance (CCA). HOW MUCH CCA CAN YOU CLAIM? The amount of CCA you can claim depends on the type of property you own, and the date you acquired it. You group the depreciable property you own into classes. A specific rate of CCA generally applies to each class. We explain the most common classes of property in the section called "Classes of depreciable property," on page 27. We list most of the classes and their rates in the section called "CCA classes" on page 35. Base your CCA claim on your fiscal period ending in 1996, and not the calendar year. There are a few other things you should know about CCA: - For the most part, use the declining balance method to calculate your CCA. This means that you claim CCA on the capital cost of the property minus the CCA you claimed in previous years, if any. The remaining balance declines over the years as you claim CCA. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Last year, Nick bought a building for $60,000 to use in his business. On his return for last year, he claimed CCA of $1,200 on the building. This year, Nick bases his CCA claim on the remaining balance of $58,800 ($60,000 - $1,200). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- - You do not have to claim the maximum amount of CCA in any given year. You can claim any amount you like, from zero to the maximum allowed for the year. For example, if you do not have to pay income tax for the year, you may not want to claim CCA. Claiming CCA reduces the amount of CCA available to you for future years. - In the year you acquire a property, you can usually claim CCA only on one-half of your net additions to a class. We explain this 50% rule under the heading "Column 6 - Adjustment for current year additions" on page 26. The available-for-use rules discussed later in this chapter may also affect the amount of CCA you can claim. - You cannot claim CCA on most land or on living things such as trees, shrubs, or animals. However, you can claim CCA on timber limits, cutting rights, and wood assets. For more details, read Interpretation Bulletins IT-481, Timber Resource Property and Timber Limits, and IT-501, Capital Cost Allowance - Logging Assets and its Special Release. - If you claim CCA, and you later dispose of the property, you may have to add an amount to your income as a recapture of CCA. Alternatively, you may be able to deduct an additional amount from your income as a terminal loss. For more information, see the section called "Column 5 - UCC after additions and dispositions" on page 26. - If you receive income from a quarry, sand, or gravel pit, or a woodlot, you can claim a type of allowance known as a depletion allowance. For more details about quarries, pits, and woodlots, read Interpretation Bulletins IT-373, Farm Woodlots and Tree Farms and its Special Release, and IT-492, Capital Cost Allowance - Industrial Mineral Mines. - If you are a member of a partnership that provides you with a T5013 Supplementary, Statement of Partnership Income, you cannot personally claim CCA. The T5013 supplementary slip you receive will have already allocated to you a share of the partnership's CCA on the property. YOU WERE ASKING...? Q. How do I calculate my CCA claim if I start a business and my first fiscal period is from June 1, 1996, to December 31, 1996? A. If your fiscal period is less than 365 days, you have to prorate your CCA claim. Calculate your CCA using the rules we discuss in this chapter. However, base your CCA claim on the number of days in your fiscal period compared to 365 days. In your case, your fiscal period is 214 days. Suppose you calculate your CCA to be $3,500. The amount of CCA you can claim is $2,052 ($3,500 x 214/365). DEFINITIONS To calculate your CCA claim, you will need to know the meaning of the following terms: AVAILABLE-FOR-USE You can usually claim CCA on a property only when it becomes available for use. Property other than a building usually becomes available for use on the earlier of: - the date you first use it to earn income; - the second taxation year after the year you acquire the property; - the time immediately before the disposition of the property; and - the time the property is delivered or made available to the taxpayer and is capable of producing a saleable product or service. A building usually becomes available for use on the earlier of: - the date that you begin using 90% or more of the building in your business; PAGE 24 - the second taxation year after the year you acquire the building; and - the time immediately before the disposition of the property. A building that you are constructing, renovating, or altering usually becomes available for use on the earlier of: - the date you complete the construction, renovation, or alteration; - the date you begin using 90% or more of the building in your business; - the second taxation year after the year you acquire the property; and - the time immediately before the disposition of the property. CAPITAL COST This is the amount on which you first claim CCA. The capital cost of a property is usually the total of: - the purchase price (not including the cost of land, which is usually not depreciable - see the section called "Land" on page 25); - the part of your legal, accounting, engineering, installation, and other fees that relates to the purchase or construction of the property (not including the part that applies to land); - the cost of any additions or improvements you made to the property after you acquired it, if you did not claim these costs as a current expense (such as modifications to accommodate disabled persons); and - for a building, soft costs (such as interest, legal and accounting fees, and property taxes) related to the period you are constructing, renovating, or altering the building, if these expenses have not been deducted as current expenses. DEPRECIABLE PROPERTY This is any property on which you can claim CCA. You usually group depreciable properties into classes. For example, diggers, drills, and tools that cost $200 or more belong to class 8. You have to base your CCA claim on a rate assigned to each class of property. We explain the most common classes of property in the section called "Classes of depreciable property," on page 27. We list most of the classes and their rates in the section called "CCA classes" on page 35. To determine the rate for depreciable property not listed, contact your tax services office. FAIR MARKET VALUE (FMV) FMV is generally the highest dollar value that you can get for your property in an open and unrestricted market between an informed and willing buyer and an informed and willing seller who are dealing at arm's length with each other. NON-ARM'S-LENGTH TRANSACTION A non-arm's-length transaction includes a transaction between people who are related, such as members of a family. An example of a non- arm's-length transaction would be the sale of property between a husband and wife, or a parent and child. For more details on non- arm's-length transactions, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-419R, Meaning of Arm's Length. PROCEEDS OF DISPOSITION The proceeds of disposition are generally the sale price of a property. For more details about proceeds of disposition, read Interpretation Bulletins IT-220, Capital Cost Allowance - Proceeds of Disposition of Depreciable Property and its Special Release, and IT-285, Capital Cost Allowance - General Comments. UNDEPRECIATED CAPITAL COST (UCC) The UCC is the amount remaining after you deduct CCA from the capital cost of a depreciable property. Each year the CCA you claim reduces the UCC of the property. HOW DO YOU MAKE YOUR CLAIM? Use Area A on page 3 of your Form T2124 or Form T2032 to calculate your 1996 deduction for CCA, and any recaptured CCA and terminal losses. For 1996, you can get information to help you complete Area A from other areas of Form T2124 or Form T2032 and from your Form T2032 and Form T2124 filed for 1995. If you acquired or disposed of any buildings or equipment during the fiscal period, you should complete as required, Areas B, C, D, or E before completing Area A. You will find explanations on how to complete Areas B and C in the section called "Column 3 - Cost of additions in the year" on page 25. You will find explanations on how to complete Areas D and E in the section called "Column 4 - Proceeds of dispositions in the year" on page 25. NOTE Completing the above-noted charts will help you calculate your CCA claim for 1996. Even if you are not claiming a deduction for CCA for 1996, complete the appropriate charts to show any additions and dispositions during the year. COLUMN 1 - CLASS NUMBER Enter the class numbers of your properties in this column. If this is the first year you are claiming CCA, read the section called "Column 3 - Cost of additions in the year" before completing column 1. If you claimed CCA last year, you can get the class numbers of your properties from last year's form. We discuss the more common types of depreciable properties in the section called "Classes of depreciable property" on page 27, and list most of the classes and their rates in the section called "CCA classes" on page 35. To determine the rate for depreciable property not listed, contact your tax services office. PAGE 25 COLUMN 2 - UNDEPRECIATED CAPITAL COST (UCC) AT THE START OF THE YEAR If this is the first year you are claiming CCA, skip column 2, and go to column 3. Otherwise, enter in column 2 the UCC for each class at the end of last year. These amounts were included in column 10. From your UCC at the start of 1996, subtract any investment tax credit you claimed or were refunded in 1995. Also subtract any 1995 investment tax credit you carried back to a year before 1995. You may have received a GST input tax credit in 1996 for a passenger vehicle you use less than 90% for your business. In this case, subtract the amount of the credit from your beginning UCC. NOTE In 1996, you may be claiming, carrying back, or getting a refund of an investment tax credit. If you still have depreciable property in the class, you have to adjust the UCC of the class to which the property belongs in 1997. To do this, subtract the amount of the credit from the UCC at the beginning of 1997. When there is no property left in the class, report the amount of the investment tax credit as income in 1997. COLUMN 3 - COST OF ADDITIONS IN THE YEAR If you acquire or make improvements to depreciable property in the year, we consider them to be additions to the class in which the property belongs. You should: - complete Areas B and C of your Form T2124 or Form T2032, as explained below; and - enter, in column 3 of Area A for each class, the figure from column 5 of each class in Areas B and C. If a chart asks for the personal portion of a property, this refers to the part that you use personally, separate from the part you use for business. For example, if you use 25% of the building you live in for business, your personal portion is the other 75%. Do not include the value of your own labour in the cost of a property you build or improve. Include in the capital cost of the property the cost of surveying or valuing a property you acquire. Remember that a property usually has to be available for use before you can claim CCA. See the definition of available-for-use on page 23. If you received insurance proceeds to reimburse you for the loss or destruction of depreciable property, enter the amount you spent to replace the property in Column 3 of Area A, and also in Area B or C, whichever applies. Include the amount of insurance proceeds as deemed proceeds of disposition in Column 4 of Area A, and in Area D or E, whichever applies. If you replaced a lost or destroyed property within a year of the loss, special rules for replacement property may apply to you. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-259, Exchanges of Property and its Special Release, and IT-491, Former Business Property and it Special Release. To find out if any of these special situations apply in your case when you acquire property, you should refer to the sections in "Personal use of property" on page 29, "Non-arm's-length transactions," "Changing from personal to business use," and "Grants, subsidies, and other incentives or inducements" all on page 30. AREA B - DETAILS OF EQUIPMENT ADDITIONS IN THE YEAR List in this chart the details of all equipment (including motor vehicles) you acquired or improved in 1996. Group the equipment into the applicable classes, and put each class on a separate line. You will find information about classes on page 27. Equipment includes appliances (such as a laundry press) and maintenance equipment (such as a paint sprayer) you acquire to use in your business or professional activities. Enter on line 8304 the total business portion of the cost of the equipment. You will find information about capital cost on page 24. AREA C - DETAILS OF BUILDING ADDITIONS IN THE YEAR List in this chart the details of all buildings you acquired or improved in 1996. Group the buildings into the applicable classes, and put each class on a separate line. You will find information about classes on page 27. Enter on line 8306 the total business portion of the cost of the buildings. The cost includes the actual purchase price of the building, plus any related expenses that you should add to the capital cost of the building, such as legal fees, land transfer taxes, and mortgage fees. You will find information about capital cost on page 24. LAND Most land is not depreciable property. Therefore, you cannot usually claim CCA on its cost. If you acquire a property that includes both land and a building, enter in column 3 of Area C only the cost that relates to the building. To calculate the building's capital cost, you have to split any fees that relate to the purchase of the property between the land and the building. Related fees may include legal and accounting fees. Calculate the part of the related fees you can include in the capital cost of the building as follows: legal, the part of the fees building value x accounting, = you can include in ------------------ total purchase or other the building's cost price fees You do not have to split a fee if it relates specifically to the land or the building. In this case, you would add the amount of the fee to the cost to which it relates, either the land or the building. AREA F - DETAILS OF LAND ADDITIONS AND DISPOSITIONS IN THE YEAR Enter the total cost of acquiring land in 1996 on line 8302. The cost includes the actual purchase price of the land, plus any related expenses that you should add to the capital cost of the land, such as legal fees, land transfer taxes, and mortgage fees. Usually, you cannot claim CCA on land. Do not enter this amount in column 3 of Area A. PAGE 26 COLUMN 4 - PROCEEDS OF DISPOSITIONS IN THE YEAR Enter the details of your 1996 dispositions on your Form T2124 or Form T2032, as explained below. If you disposed of a depreciable property during the fiscal period, enter in column 3 of the appropriate dispositions chart one of the following amounts, whichever is less: - your proceeds of disposition, minus any related expenses; or - the capital cost of the property. Your proceeds of disposition are usually the amounts you receive, or that we consider you to have received, when you dispose of your property. This could include compensation you receive for property that someone destroys, expropriates, steals, or damages. Special rules may apply if you dispose of a building for less than both its undepreciated capital cost and for less than your capital cost. If this is the case, see "Special rules for disposing of a building in the year" on page 32 for details. NOTE If A chart asks for the personal portion of a property, this refers to the part that you use personally, separate from the part you use for business. For example, if you use 25% of the building you live in for business, your personal portion is the other 75%. Enter, in column 4 of Area A for each class, the figure from column 5 of each class in Areas D and E. If you sell a property for more than it cost, you will have a capital gain. You may be able to postpone or defer adding a capital gain or recapture to income. See the sections called "Capital gains," on page 31, and "Replacement property" on page 33 for more information. AREA D - DETAILS OF EQUIPMENT DISPOSITIONS IN THE YEAR List in this chart the details of all equipment (including motor vehicles) you disposed of in your 1996 fiscal period. Group the equipment into the applicable classes, and put each class on a separate line. You will find information about classes on page 27. Enter on line 8305 the total business portion of the proceeds of disposition of the equipment. You will find information about proceeds of disposition on this page. If all of the proceeds of disposition for the equipment are not received in the year you dispose of the equipment, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-236, Reserves - Disposition of Capital Property. AREA E - DETAILS OF BUILDING DISPOSITIONS IN THE YEAR List in this chart the details of all buildings you disposed of in your 1996 fiscal period. Group the buildings into the applicable classes, and put each class on a separate line. You will find information about classes on page 27. Enter on line 8307 the total business portion of the proceeds of disposition of the buildings. You will find information about proceeds of disposition on this page. If all of the proceeds of disposition for a building are not received in the year you dispose of the building, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-236, Reserves - Disposition of Capital Property. AREA F - DETAILS OF LAND ADDITIONS AND DISPOSITIONS IN THE YEAR Enter the total of all amounts you received or will receive for disposing of land in the period on line 8303. COLUMN 5 - UCC AFTER ADDITIONS AND DISPOSITIONS Add the amount in column 2 to the amount in column 3. Then subtract the amount in column 4 from this total. Enter the result in column 5. You cannot claim CCA when the amount in column 5 is: - negative (see "Recapture of CCA" below); or - positive, and you do not have any property left in that class at the end of your 1996 fiscal period (see "Terminal loss" on this page). In either case, enter "0" in column 10. NOTE Completing the above-noted charts will help you calculate your CCA claim for your 1996 fiscal period. Even if you are not claiming a deduction for CCA for your 1996 fiscal period, complete the appropriate charts to show any additions or dispositions during the period. If you need more details, get Interpretation Bulletin IT-220, Capital Cost Allowance - Proceeds of Disposition of Depreciable Property, and its Special Release. RECAPTURE OF CCA If the amount in column 5 is negative, you have a recapture of CCA. Enter your recapture on the line "Other income" of your Form T2032 or Form T2124. A recapture of CCA can happen if the proceeds from the sale of depreciable property are more than the total of: - the UCC of the class at the beginning of the period; and - the capital cost of any new additions during the period. TERMINAL LOSS If the amount in column 5 is positive, and you no longer own any property in that class, you have a terminal loss. More precisely, you have a terminal loss when, at the end of a fiscal period, you have no more property in the class but still have an amount which you have not deducted as CCA. You can subtract this terminal loss from your gross business or professional income in the year you disposed of the property. Enter your terminal loss on the line "Other expenses" of Form T2032 or Form T2124. For more information on recapture of CCA and terminal loss, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-478, Capital Cost Allowance - Recapture and Terminal Loss. NOTE The rules for recapture and terminal loss do not apply to passenger vehicles in class 10.1. However, see the comments in the section called, "Column 7 - Base amount for capital cost allowance" to calculate your CCA claim. (SEE PRINTED COPY FOR FORMS T1A, T2124 AND T2032) PAGE 27 COLUMN 6 - ADJUSTMENT FOR CURRENT YEAR ADDITIONS In the year you acquire or make additions to a property, you can usually claim CCA on only one-half of your net additions (the amount in column 3 minus the amount in column 4). We call this the 50% rule. Calculate your CCA claim only on the net adjusted amount. Do not reduce the cost of the additions in column 3, or the CCA rate in column 8. For example, if you acquired a property in your 1996 fiscal period for $30,000, you would base your CCA claim on $15,000 ($30,000 x 50%). If you acquired and disposed of depreciable property of the same class in your 1996 fiscal period, the calculation in column 6 restricts your CCA claim. Calculate the CCA you can claim as follows: - determine which of the following amounts is less: - the proceeds of disposition of your property, minus any related costs or expenses; or - the capital cost; - subtract the above amount from the capital cost of your addition; and - in column 6, enter 50% of the result. If the result is negative, enter "0." In some cases, you do not make an adjustment in column 6. For example, in a non-arm's-length transaction, you may buy property that the seller continuously owned for at least 364 days before the end of your 1996 fiscal period. Also, some properties are not subject to the 50% rule. Some examples are those in classes 13, 14, 23, 24, 27, 29, and 34, as well as some of those in class 12, such as small tools that cost less than $200. The 50% rule does not apply when the available-for-use rules discussed on page 23 deny a CCA claim until the second taxation year after you acquired a property. If you need more details on the 50% rule, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-285, Capital Cost Allowance - General Comments, and its Special Release. COLUMN 7 - BASE AMOUNT FOR CAPITAL COST ALLOWANCE (CCA) Base your CCA claim on this amount. For a class 10.1 vehicle you disposed of in your 1996 fiscal period, you may be able to claim 50% of the CCA that would be allowed if you still owned the vehicle at the end of the year. This is known as the half-year rule on sale. You can use the half-year rule on sale if, at the end of your 1995 fiscal period, you owned the class 10.1 vehicle you disposed of in 1996. If this applies to you, enter 50% of the amount in column 2 in column 7. COLUMN 8 - RATE (%) In this column, enter the % for each class of property in Area A. For detailed information on certain kinds of property, see "Classes of depreciable property" on this page. For a more complete list of rates, see the section called "CCA classes" on page 35. COLUMN 9 - CCA FOR THE YEAR In column 9, enter the CCA you choose to deduct for 1996. The CCA you can deduct cannot be more than the amount you get when you multiply the amount in column 7 by the rate in column 8. You can deduct any amount up to the maximum. If this is your first year of business, you may have to prorate your CCA claim. See "You were asking ...?" on page 23. Add up all the amounts in column 9 for all your classes of depreciable property. Enter the total on line 8207, "Capital cost allowance," on Form T2032 or Form T2124. See the section called "Personal use of property" on page 29 to find out how to calculate your CCA claim if you are using the property both for business and personal use. COLUMN 10 - UCC AT THE END OF THE YEAR This is the undepreciated capital cost (UCC) at the end of your 1996 fiscal period. This is the amount you will enter in column 2 when you calculate your CCA claim next year. Enter "0" in column 10 if you have a terminal loss or a recapture of CCA. There will not be an amount in column 10 for a class 10.1 passenger vehicle you dispose of in the year. CLASSES OF DEPRECIABLE PROPERTY In this part, we discuss the more common types of depreciable properties. We list most of the classes and their rates in the section called "CCA classes" on page 35. To determine the rate for depreciable property not listed, contact your tax services office. BUILDINGS A building may belong to class 1, 3, or 6, depending on what the building is made of and the date you acquired it. You also include in these classes the parts that make up the building, such as: - electric wiring; - lighting fixtures; - plumbing; - sprinkler systems; - heating equipment; - air-conditioning equipment (other than window units); - elevators; and - escalators. NOTE Most land is not depreciable property. Therefore, when you acquire property, only include the cost that relates to the building in Areas C and A. Enter on line 8302 of your Form T2124 or Form T2032 the cost of all land additions in 1996. See the sections called "Area F - Details of land additions and dispositions in the year" on PAGE 28 page 25, and "Column 3 - Cost of additions in the year" on page 25 for more details. CLASS 1 (4%) Class 1 includes most buildings acquired after 1987, unless they specifically belong in another class. Class 1 also includes the cost of certain additions or alterations you made after 1987 to a class 3 building. See "Class 3 (5%)" for more information. CLASS 3 (5%) Most buildings acquired before 1988 were added to class 3 or class 6. If you acquired a building before 1990 that does not fall into class 6, you can include it in class 3 if one of the following applies: - you acquired the building under the terms of a written agreement entered into before June 18, 1987; or - the building was under construction by you or on your behalf on June 18, 1987. Do not transfer property you previously included in class 3 to class 1. However, there is a limit to how much you can include in class 3 for the cost of any additions or alterations made after 1987 to a class 3 building. This limit is whichever of the following two amounts is less: - $500,000; or - 25% of the building's capital cost (including the cost of additions or alterations to the building included in class 3, class 6, or class 20 on December 31, 1987). Include the cost of any additions or alterations over this limit in class 1. CLASS 6 (10%) Include a building in class 6 if you acquired it before 1988, and it is made of frame, log, stucco on frame, galvanized iron, or corrugated iron. If you acquired the building after 1987, it has to be made of frame, log, stucco on frame, galvanized iron, or any corrugated metal. In addition, one of the following conditions has to apply: - the building is used for farming or fishing; or - the building has no footings or other base supports below ground level. If either of the above conditions applies, you also add the full cost of all additions and alterations to the building to class 6. If neither of the above conditions applies, include the building in class 6 if: - you acquired the building before 1979; - you entered into an agreement before 1979 to acquire the building, and footings or other base supports of the building were started before 1979; or - you started construction of the building before 1979 (or it was started under the terms of a written agreement you entered into before 1979) and footings or other base supports of the building were started before 1979. For additions or alterations to such a building: - Add to class 6: - all additions made before 1979; and - only the first $100,000 of additions or alterations made after 1978. - Add to class 3: - the part of the cost of all additions or alterations above $100,000 made after 1978 and before 1988; and - the part of the cost of additions or alterations above $100,000 made after 1987, but only up to $500,000 or 25% of the cost of the building. - Add to class 1 any additions or alterations above these limits. If you need more information, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-79, Capital Cost Allowance - Buildings or Other Structures. OTHER PROPERTY - CLASS 8 (20%) Class 8 includes property that is not included in any other class. For example, furniture, appliances, fixtures, machinery, and equipment you use in your business are all in this class. ELECTRONIC OFFICE EQUIPMENT - CLASS 8 (20%) AND CLASS 10 (30%) Certain types of computer equipment and office communication and electronic equipment can become obsolete before you can fully deduct their cost for income tax purposes. This includes photocopiers and fax machines. You can elect to include, in a separate prescribed class, one or more properties acquired after April 26, 1993, that would otherwise be included in class 8 or class 10. This new class doesn't change the specified rate. However, it ensures that any part of the cost of the equipment that has not been deducted as CCA will be fully deductible as a terminal loss on the disposition of all the property in that class. For more information on terminal losses, see the section called "Column 5 - UCC after additions and dispositions" on page 26. This election will only apply to properties that cost $1,000 or more. To make an election to put property in a separate prescribed class, let us know by attaching a letter to your return for the taxation year in which you acquired the property. NOTE You might still own the property at the beginning of the fifth taxation year following the taxation year in which the property became available for use. If so, you will have to transfer the UCC of each separate class from the separate prescribed class to the general class in which it would otherwise belong. For more details, contact your tax services office. PASSENGER VEHICLES - CLASS 10.1 (30%) Your passenger vehicle can belong to either class 10 or class 10.1. We define a passenger vehicle on page 15. Include your passenger vehicle in class 10 unless it meets a class 10.1 condition. List each class 10.1 vehicle separately. PAGE 29 Include your passenger vehicle in class 10.1 if it meets one of these conditions: - you bought it before September 1, 1989, and it cost more than $20,000; or - you bought it after August 31, 1989, and it cost more than $24,000. If a passenger vehicle you bought before September 1, 1989, cost more than $20,000, we consider the capital cost of that vehicle to be $20,000. If a passenger vehicle you bought after August 31, 1989, but before 1991, cost more than $24,000, we consider the capital cost of that vehicle to be $24,000. If a passenger vehicle you bought after 1990 cost more than $24,000, we consider the capital cost of that vehicle to be $24,000, plus the related goods and services tax (GST) and provincial sales tax (PST). The $20,000 and $24,000 amounts are the capital cost limits for a passenger vehicle. However, since January 1, 1991, to determine the class to which your passenger vehicle belongs, you have to use the cost of the vehicle before you add the GST and PST. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Erin owns a sporting goods retail business. On June 21, 1996, she bought two passenger vehicles to use in her business. The PST rate for her province is 8%. Erin noted these details for 1996: Cost GST PST Total Vehicle 1 $25,000 $1,750 $2,000 $28,750 Vehicle 2 $23,000 $1,610 $1,840 $26,450 Erin puts Vehicle 1 in class 10.1, since she bought it after August 31, 1989, and it cost her more than $24,000. Before Erin enters an amount in column 3 of Area B, she has to calculate the GST and PST on $24,000. She does this as follows: - GST at 7% of $24,000 = $1,680; and - PST at 8% of $24,000 = $1,920. Therefore, Erin's capital cost is $27,600 ($24,000 + $1,680 + $1,920). She enters this amount in column 3 of Area B. Erin puts Vehicle 2 into class 10, since she bought it after August 31, 1989, and it did not cost her more than $24,000. Erin's capital cost is $26,450 ($23,000 + $1,610 + $1,840). She enters this amount in column 3 of Area B. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE The rate for the GST is 7% for the whole country. However, we have used a provincial sales tax (PST) rate of 8% for the purposes of this example only. In your case, use the appropriate rate for your province. SPECIAL RATES FOR CERTAIN EQUIPMENT - CLASSES 24 AND 27 If you buy certain equipment that stops, reduces, or eliminates air or water pollution, it may qualify for an accelerated rate of CCA. For this equipment to qualify for the accelerated CCA rate, it must meet certain conditions. It has to be new, and the Minister of the Environment has to accept it as equipment you use solely to stop, reduce, or eliminate pollution. For more details, contact: Manager, ACCA Program Environment Canada Ottawa ON K1A 1C8 Telephone: (819) 997-2057 The accelerated CCA rate incentive will not apply to equipment acquired after 1998. For more details on the special CCA rates, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-336, Capital Cost Allowance - Pollution Control Property. SPECIAL SITUATIONS PERSONAL USE OF PROPERTY If you buy property for both business and personal use, there are two ways to show the business portion of the property in Area B or Area C: - If your business use stays the same from year to year, enter in Area B or Area C the total cost of the property in Column 3, the personal portion in Column 4, and the business portion in Column 5. Enter the amount from Column 5 in Column 3 of Area A to calculate the CCA you can claim. - If your business use changes from year to year, enter in Area B or Area C the total cost of the property in Column 3 and Column 5, and enter "0" in Column 4. Enter the amount from Column 5 in Column 3 of Area A to calculate the CCA you can claim. When you claim CCA, you will have to calculate the allowable portion you can claim for business use. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Nadir owns a financial consulting business. He bought a car in 1996 that he uses both for personal and for business use. The car cost $20,000, including all charges and taxes. Therefore, he includes the car in class 10. His business use varies from year to year. He calculates his CCA on the car for 1996 as follows: He enters $20,000 in Column 3 and Column 5 of Area B. Nadir also enters $20,000 in Column 3 of Area A. By completing the other columns in the chart, he calculates a CCA claim of $3,000. Because Nadir used his car partly for personal use, he calculates his CCA claim as follows: 12,000 (business kilometres) x $3,000 = $2,000 ---------------------------- 18,000 (total kilometres) Nadir enters $2,000 on line 8207, "Capital cost allowance," on his Form T2124. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE The capital cost limits on a Class 10.1 vehicle (a passenger vehicle) still apply when you split the capital cost between business and personal use. See the section called "Passenger vehicles - Class 10.1 (30%)" on page 28 for more details. PAGE 30 CHANGING FROM PERSONAL TO BUSINESS USE If you bought a property for personal use and then started using it in your business in your 1996 fiscal period, there is a change in use. You need to determine the capital cost for business purposes. If the fair market value (FMV) of a depreciable property is less than its original cost when you change its use, the amount you put in column 3 of Area B or C is the FMV of the property (excluding the land value if the property is land and a building). If the FMV is more than the original cost of the property (excluding the land value if the property is land and a building) when you change its use, use the following chart to determine the amount to enter in column 3 of Area B or C. NOTE We consider that you acquire the land for an amount equal to its FMV when you change its use. Include this amount on line 8302, "Total cost of all land additions in the year," in area F. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CAPITAL COST CALCULATION Actual cost of the property $ _______ 1 FMV of the property $ _______ 2 Amount on line 1 _______ 3 Line 2 minus line 3 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ 4 Enter any capital gains deduction claimed for the amount on line 4* $ _______ x 4/3 _______ 5 Line 4 minus line 5 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ x 3/4 $ _______ 6 Your capital cost is line 1 plus line 6 $ _______ 7 * Enter the amount that relates to the depreciable property only. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- GRANTS, SUBSIDIES, OR OTHER INCENTIVES OR INDUCEMENTS You may get a grant or subsidy from a government or a government agency to buy depreciable property. When this happens, subtract the amount of the grant from the property's capital cost. Do this before you enter the capital cost in column 3 of Area B or C. See Interpretation Bulletin IT-273, Government Assistance - General Comments (after January 18, 1981), and its Special Release, for more details about government assistance. You may have incurred the GST on some of the depreciable property you acquired for your business. If so, you may have also received an input tax credit from Revenue Canada. The input tax credit is government assistance. Therefore, subtract it from the property's capital cost. Do this before you enter the capital cost in column 3 of Area B or Area C, whichever applies. If you receive an input tax credit for a passenger vehicle you use in your business, use one of these methods: - For a passenger vehicle you use 90% or more for your business, subtract the amount of the credit from the vehicle's cost before you enter its capital cost in column 3 of Area C. - For a passenger vehicle you use less than 90% for your business, do not make an adjustment in 1996. In 1997, subtract the amount of the credit from your beginning UCC. You may get an incentive from a non-government agency to buy depreciable property. If this happens, you can either include the amount in income, or subtract the amount from the capital cost of the property. NON-ARM'S-LENGTH TRANSACTIONS When you acquire property in a non-arm's-length transaction, there are special rules to follow to determine the property's cost. These special rules will not apply if you get the property because of someone's death. You can acquire depreciable property in a non-arm's-length transaction from an individual resident in Canada, a partnership with at least one member who is an individual resident in Canada, or a partnership with at least one member that is another partnership. If you pay more for the property than the seller paid for the same property, calculate the cost as follows: PAGE 31 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CAPITAL COST CALCULATION The seller's cost or capital cost $ _______ 1 The greater of the fair market value of the property or the seller's proceeds of disposition $ _______ 2 Amount from line 1 $ _______ 3 Line 2 minus line 3 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ 4 Enter any capital gains deduction claimed for the amount on line 4 $ _______ x 4/3 $ _______ 5 Line 4 minus line 5 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ x 3/4 $ _______ 6 Capital cost (line 1 plus line 6) $ _______ 7 Enter this amount in column 3 of either Area B or Area C, whichever applies. Do not include the cost of the related land, which you have to include on line 8302, "Total cost of all land additions in the year," in Area F. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- You can also buy depreciable property in a non-arm's-length transaction from an individual who is not resident in Canada, or a partnership with no members who are individuals resident in Canada, or no members that are other partnerships. If you pay more for a property than the seller paid for it, calculate the capital cost as follows: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CAPITAL COST CALCULATION The seller's cost or capital cost $_______ 1 The greater of the fair market value of the property, or the seller's proceeds of disposition $ _______ 2 Amount from line 1 $ _______ 3 Line 2 minus line 3 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ x 3/4 $ _______ 4 Capital cost (line 1 plus line 4) $ _______ 5 Enter this amount in column 3 of either Area B or Area C, whichever applies. Do not include the cost of the related land, which you have to include on line 8302, "Total cost of all land additions in the year," in Area F. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- If you buy depreciable property in a non-arm's-length transaction and pay less for it than the seller paid, your capital cost is the same amount as the seller paid. We consider you to have deducted as CCA the difference between what you paid and what the seller paid. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Rachel bought a pickup truck from her father, Marcus, in her 1996 fiscal period for $4,000. Marcus paid $10,000 for the truck in 1987. Since the amount Rachel paid is less than the amount Marcus paid, we consider Rachel's cost to be $10,000. We also consider that Rachel has deducted CCA of $6,000 in the past ($10,000 - $4,000). Rachel completes the CCA chart as follows: - in Area B, she enters $10,000 in column 3, "Total cost." - in Area A, she enters $4,000 in column 3, "Cost of additions in the year," as the addition for her 1996 fiscal period. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- There is a limit on the cost of a passenger vehicle you buy in a non- arm's-length transaction. The cost is whichever of the following three amounts is less: - the FMV at the time you buy it; - $24,000 plus any GST and PST you would pay on $24,000, if you buy it after 1990; or - the seller's cost amount of the vehicle at the time you buy it. The cost amount can vary, depending on what the seller used the vehicle for before you bought it. If the seller used the vehicle to earn income, the cost amount will be the UCC of the vehicle at the time you buy it. If the seller did not use the vehicle to earn income, the cost amount will usually be the original cost of the vehicle. For more details on non-arm's-length transactions, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-405, Inadequate Considerations - Acquisitions and Dispositions, and IT-419R, Meaning of Arm's Length. CAPITAL GAINS If you sell a property for more than it cost, you may have a capital gain. List the dispositions of all your properties on Schedule 3, Capital Gains (or Losses) in 1996. You can get this schedule in the General Income Tax Guide and returns package. See the income tax guide called Capital Gains for details on how to calculate your taxable capital gain. You may be a member of a partnership that provides you with a T5013 Supplementary, Statement of Partnership Income. If the partnership has a capital gain, the partnership will allocate part of that gain to you. The gain will show on the partnership's financial statements, or on your T5013 supplementary slip. NOTE You cannot have a capital loss when you sell depreciable property. However, you may have a terminal loss. See the heading "Column 5 - UCC after additions and dispositions" on page 26, for an explanation of terminal losses. PAGE 32 SPECIAL RULES FOR DISPOSING OF A BUILDING IN THE YEAR If you disposed of a building in the year, special rules may apply that make the proceeds of disposition an amount other than the actual proceeds of disposition. This happens when you meet both of the following conditions: - you disposed of the building for an amount less than both its cost amount, as calculated below, and its capital cost to you; and - you, or a person with whom you do not deal at arm's length*, owned the land where the building is located, or the land next to it that was necessary for the building's use. * See the definition of non-arm's-length transaction on page 24. Calculate the cost amount as follows: - if the building was the only property in the class, the cost amount is the undepreciated capital cost (UCC) of the class before you disposed of the building; - if there is more than one property in the same class, you have to calculate the cost amount of each building as follows: capital cost of the building x UCC of the class = cost amount ---------------------------- capital cost of all of the building property in the class not previously disposed of NOTE Under proposed changes, where any property in the class of the building was acquired at non-arm's-length, was previously used for a purpose other than gaining or producing income or the portion of a property used for gaining or producing income has changed, the capital cost of such property has to be recalculated to determine the cost amount of the property. For more information contact your tax services office. If you disposed of a building under these conditions, and you or a person with whom you do not deal at arm's length disposed of the land in the same year, calculate your deemed proceeds of disposition as shown in Calculation A below. If you, or a person with whom you do not deal at arm's length, did not dispose of the land in the same year as the building, calculate your deemed proceeds of disposition as shown in Calculation B. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CALCULATION A LAND AND BUILDING SOLD IN THE SAME YEAR FMV of the building at the time you disposed of it $ _______ 1 FMV of the land immediately before you disposed of it $ _______ 2 Line 1 plus line 2 $ _______ 3 Seller's adjusted cost base of the land $ _______ 4 Total capital gains (without reserves) from any disposition of the land (such as a change in use) in the three-year period before you disposed of the building, (by either you or a person not dealing at arm's length with you, to you or to another person not dealing at arm's length with you) $ _______ 5 Line 4 minus line 5 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ 6 Line 2 or line 6, whichever amount is less $ _______ 7 Line 3 minus line 7 (if negative, enter "0") $ _______ 8 Cost amount of the building immediately before you disposed of it $ _______ 9 Capital cost of the building immediately before you disposed of it $ _______ 10 Line 9 or line 10, whichever amount is less $ _______ 11 Line 1 or line 11, whichever amount is more $ _______ 12 DEEMED PROCEEDS OF DISPOSITION FOR THE BUILDING Line 8 or line 12, whichever amount is less (enter this amount in column 3 of Area E and in column 4 of Area A) $ _______ 13 DEEMED PROCEEDS OF DISPOSITION FOR THE LAND Proceeds of disposition of the land and building $ _______ 14 Amount from line 13 $ _______ 15 Line 14 minus line 15 (include this amount on line 8303 of Area F) $ _______ 16 If you have a terminal loss on the building, include it on the line "Other expenses" on either your Form T2032 or Form T2124. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PAGE 33 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CALCULATION B LAND AND BUILDING SOLD IN DIFFERENT YEARS Cost amount of the building immediately before you disposed of it $ _______ 1 FMV of the building immediately before you disposed of it $ _______ 2 Line 1 or line 2, whichever amount is more $ _______ 3 Actual proceeds of disposition, if any $ _______ 4 Line 3 minus line 4 $ _______ 5 Line 5 $ _______ x 1/4 $ _______ 6 Amount from line 4 $ _______ 7 DEEMED PROCEEDS OF DISPOSITION FOR THE BUILDING Line 6 plus line 7 (enter this amount in column 3 of Area E and in column 4 of Area A) $ _______ 8 If you have a terminal loss on the building, include it on the line "Other expenses" on either your Form T2032 or Form T2124. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Ordinarily, you can deduct 100% of a terminal loss, but only 75% of a capital loss. Calculation B ensures that you use the same percentage to calculate a terminal loss on a building as you use to calculate a capital loss on land. As a result of this calculation, you add 25% of the amount on line 5 to the actual proceeds of disposition from the building (see the section called "Terminal loss" on page 26). REPLACEMENT PROPERTY In a few cases, you can postpone or defer adding a capital gain or recapture to income. Under proposed changes, this happens to the extent that the proceeds of disposition of the former property are reinvested by you in a replacement property within a certain period of time and it is reasonable to conclude that the property was acquired by you to replace the former property or it was acquired and used by you or a person related to you for the same or similar use to which you or the person related to you put the former property. For example, you may sell a property and replace it with a similar one, someone may expropriate your property, or you may transfer property to a corporation, a partnership, or your child. For more details, read Interpretation Bulletin IT-259, Exchanges of Property, and its Special Release, and Interpretation Bulletin IT-491, Former Business Property, and its Special Release. You can also defer a capital gain or recapture when you transfer property to a corporation or partnership. For more details, see: - Information Circular 76-19, Transfer of Property to a Corporation Under Section 85; - Interpretation Bulletin IT-291, Transfer of Property to a Corporation Under Subsection 85(1); - Interpretation Bulletin IT-378, Winding-up of a Partnership; and - Interpretation Bulletin IT-413, Election by Members of a Partnership Under Subsection 97(2). The following example summarizes the CCA chapter. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE When Cathy bought her new car in May 1996, it cost $16,000 including all charges and taxes. Therefore, she includes the car in class 10. She was allowed a $1,000 credit when she traded in her old car (which was also in class 10). Her UCC on the old car at the start of 1996 was $1,000. Cathy has a desk, calculator, filing cabinets, and shelves in her store. These are class 8 depreciable properties. The UCC of these properties at the start of 1996 is $5,000. She did not buy any class 8 properties in 1996. Cathy knows that her personal use of the car will vary each year. Therefore, she completes Form T2124 as follows: PAGE 34 (SEE PRINTED COPY FOR FORM T2124(E) Since Cathy used the car partly for personal use, she calculates the amount to include on line 8207 for her car as follows: 25,000 (business-use kilometres) x $2,550 = $2,125 -------------------------------- 30,000 (total kilometres) The most that Cathy can claim for CCA for 1996 is $2,125 for her car and $1,000 for the class 8 properties. She wants to claim the most CCA allowed to her in 1996. She enters $3,125 on line 8207 on Form T2124. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PAGE 35 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CCA CLASSES ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The following is a list of commonly used assets in a business. For more details, contact your tax services office. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- CLASS RATE (%) DESCRIPTION ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 4 Most buildings you bought after 1987, including components such as wiring, plumbing, heating, and cooling systems. 3 5 Most buildings, including components, that you bought after 1978 and before 1988. However, you may have to include part of the cost of additions made after 1987 in class 1. For more details, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-79, Capital Cost Allowance - Buildings or Other Structures. 6 10 Frame, log, stucco on frame, galvanized iron, or corrugated metal buildings that do not have any footings below the ground. Class 6 also includes fences and greenhouses. 7 15 Canoes, rowboats, and most other vessels and their motors, furniture, and fittings. For more details, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-267, Capital Cost Allowance - Vessels. CLASS RATE (%) DESCRIPTION 8 20 Property that you did not include in any other class. Some examples are fixtures, furniture, machinery, photocopiers, refrigeration equipment, telephones, and tools costing $200 or more. Class 8 also includes outdoor advertising signs you bought after 1987. 9 25 Aircraft, including furniture or equipment attached to the aircraft, and spare parts. 10 30 Automobiles, except those you use as a taxi or in a daily rental business, including vans, trucks, tractors, wagons, and trailers. You also put general-purpose electronic data-processing equipment (commonly called computer hardware) and systems software in class 10. CLASS RATE (%) DESCRIPTION 10.1 30 A passenger vehicle. See page 28 for the capital cost limits. 12 100 China, cutlery, kitchen utensils that cost under $200, linen, uniforms, dies, jigs, moulds, cutting or shaping parts of a machine, tools and medical or dental instruments that cost under $200, computer software (except systems software), and video cassettes bought after February 15, 1984, that you rent and do not expect to rent to any one person for more than seven days in a 30-day period. 13 Leasehold interest - You can claim CCA on a leasehold interest, but the maximum rate depends on the type of leasehold interest and the terms of the lease. 14 Patents, franchises, concessions, or licences for a limited period. Your CCA is whichever of the following amounts is less: - capital cost of the property spread out over the life of the property; or - UCC of the property of that class at the end of the taxation year. CLASS RATE (%) DESCRIPTION 16 40 Taxis, vehicles you use in a daily car-rental business, coin-operated video games or pinball machines acquired after February 15, 1984, and freight trucks acquired after December 6, 1991, that are rated higher than 11,788 kilograms. 17 8 Roads, parking lots, sidewalks, airplane runways, storage areas, or similar surface construction. 22 50 Most power-operated, movable equipment you bought before 1988 that you use for excavating, moving, placing, or compacting earth, rock, concrete, or asphalt. 38 30 Most power-operated, movable equipment you bought after 1987 and use for excavating, moving, placing, or compacting earth, rock, concrete, or asphalt. NOTE You can choose to keep an outdoor advertising sign, and any property you would usually include in class 38 in a separate class. To do this, attach a letter to your return for the year you bought the property. In the letter, list the properties you are including in a separate class. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PAGE 36 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SUMMARY OF CHAPTERS 2 TO 4 - COMPLETED FORM T2124 In this section, we summarize our discussion about income, expenses, and capital cost allowance, by showing you what the completed Form T2124 would look like for Cathy's business, and recapping the information we have so far. Total sales (does not include PST or GST) $ 189,000 Returned items $ 1,000 Inventory at the beginning of her 1996 fiscal period $ 36,500 Inventory at the end of her 1996 fiscal period $ 30,000 Purchases (including freight, etc.) $ 88,000 Meals and entertainment expenses $ 50 Motor vehicle expenses $ 3,125 Convention expenses $ 500 Capital cost allowance $ 3,125 Cathy also entered these expenses in her expense journals: Accounting fees $ 750 Advertising $ 2,800 Business tax $ 550 Business insurance $ 1,600 Interest on business loan $ 5,300 Maintenance $ 800 Rent of store $ 10,800 Utilities on store $ 3,500 Salaries (full and part-time help) $ 19,000 Office supplies $ 2,700 Travelling (except car) $ 350 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PAGE 37 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Therefore, the calculation of Cathy's net business income on her Form T2124 would look like this: (SEE PRINTED COPY FOR FORM T2124(E) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- PAGE 38 CHAPTER 5 - ELIGIBLE CAPITAL EXPENDITURES WHAT IS AN ELIGIBLE CAPITAL EXPENDITURE? You may buy property that does not physically exist, but gives you a lasting economic benefit. Some examples are goodwill, and franchises, concessions, or licenses for an unlimited period. We call this kind of property eligible capital property. The price you pay to buy this type of property is an eligible capital expenditure. Note that we do not consider franchises, concessions, or licenses with a limited period to be eligible capital properties, but as depreciable properties. See Chapter 4 for details about depreciable properties. If you need more information, you can contact the Business Enquiries Section of your tax services office. You can find the address and telephone numbers listed under "Revenue Canada" in the Government of Canada section of the telephone book. WHAT IS AN ANNUAL ALLOWANCE? You cannot deduct the full cost of an eligible capital expenditure, since it is a capital cost and gives you a lasting economic benefit. However, you can deduct part of its cost each year. We call the amount you can deduct your annual allowance. WHAT IS A CUMULATIVE ELIGIBLE CAPITAL (CEC) ACCOUNT? This is the bookkeeping record you establish to determine your annual allowance. You also use your CEC account to keep track of the property that you buy and sell. We call the property in your CEC account your eligible capital property. You base your annual allowance on the balance in your account at the end of your fiscal period. Keep a separate account for each business. HOW TO CALCULATE YOUR ANNUAL ALLOWANCE CEC ACCOUNT Calculate the balance in your CEC account at the end of your 1996 fiscal period as follows: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Balance in the account at the start of your 1996 fiscal period _______ 1 Eligible capital expenditures you made or incurred in your 1996 fiscal period _______ x 3/4 _______ 2 Line 1 plus line 2 _______ 3 All the amounts you received or are entitled to receive from the sale of eligible capital property in your 1996 fiscal period _______ 4 All the amounts that became receivable in your 1996 fiscal period from the sale of eligible capital properties before June 18, 1987 _______ 5 Line 4 plus line 5 _______ 6 x 3/4 _______ 7 CEC account balance (line 3 minus line 7) _______ 8 Annual allowance - 7% x line 8 _______ 9 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE For taxation years ending after February 22, 1994, an eligible capital expenditure is reduced by the amount of any assistance received or receivable from a government for the expenditure. Also, an amount forgiven (or entitled to be forgiven) on government debt reduces your CEC account. For more information on forgiveness of debt, contact your tax services office. You can deduct an annual allowance as long as there is a positive balance (line 8) in your CEC account at the end of your 1996 fiscal period. You do not have to claim the full amount of the maximum annual allowance for a given year. You can deduct any amount you wish, up to the maximum allowable of 7%. If there is a negative balance in your CEC account, see the sections called "Sole proprietor - Sale of eligible capital property in a 1996 fiscal period" on page 39, and "Partnership - Sale of eligible capital property in a 1996 fiscal period" on page 41. The following is an example of how to calculate the maximum annual allowance and the account balance. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Larry started a business on January 1, 1996. Larry's business has a December 31 year end. During 1996, he bought a franchise for $16,000. He calculates his maximum annual allowance of $840 for 1996 as follows: PAGE 39 Larry's CEC account Balance at the start of Larry's 1996 fiscal period $ 0 1 Larry's eligible capital expenditure: franchise cost for the 1996 fiscal period $ 16,000 x 3/4 12,000 2 Line 1 plus line 2 $ 12,000 3 Larry has not sold any eligible capital property during the 1996 fiscal period. Therefore, he will not have any amounts on lines 4 to 8. Larry's maximum annual allowance on eligible capital property is 7% x line 3 $ 840 9 Balance at the end of 1996 (line 3 minus line 9) $ 11,160 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- DID YOU OWN ELIGIBLE CAPITAL PROPERTY AT THE END OF FEBRUARY 22,1994 The $75,000 capital gains deduction is no longer available for dispositions of eligible capital property after February 22, 1994. However, if you owned this type of property at the end of the day on February 22, 1994, and you have not used all of your $75,000 capital gains deduction, there is a special election that may be available to you. This election allows you to report an accrued capital gain on your income tax return and claim a capital gains deduction, even though you did not actually sell your eligible capital property. To make this election, you have to complete and file Form T664, Election to Report a Capital Gain on Property Owned at the End of February 22, 1994. In most cases, this election was available only for the 1994 taxation year and you had to file it by April 30, 1995. If you did not file an election by April 30, 1995, and you want to file one for the 1994 taxation year, we will accept a late election up to April 30, 1997. You have to estimate and pay a penalty at the time you file your election. If you sold eligible capital property after February 22, 1994, and realized a capital gain, you can file this election to report the capital gain accrued up to February 22, 1994. You can then claim a capital gains deduction on your 1994 return. For information on how to calculate the penalty, see the Capital Gains Election Package. The package includes Form T664. If you want to make a late election, do not submit an amended 1994 income tax return. Instead, complete and submit Form T664, together with your payment of the estimated penalty to the Enquiries and Adjustments Section at your tax centre. Please note that a member of a partnership can't make an election for eligible capital property the partnership owns. ELECTION AVAILABLE FOR THE 1995 TAXATION YEAR The election described above was available for the 1995 taxation year if you owned eligible capital property at the end of the day on February 22, 1994, and your business fiscal year, including February 22, 1994, ended in 1995. Generally, you had to file this election by June 15, 1996. If you did not file an election by June 15, 1996, and you want to file one for the 1995 taxation year, we will accept a late-filed Form T664 up to June 15, 1998. When you file Form T664, you will have to estimate and pay a penalty. For information about filing the election and calculating the penalty, see the Capital Gains Election Package. HOW THE CAPITAL GAINS ELECTION WORKS FOR A BUSINESS The capital gains election lets you report a capital gain on your income tax return, and take advantage of the unused portion of your $75,000 capital gains deduction even though you have not actually sold your property. You cannot make the election on only one eligible capital property. You have to make the election on all eligible capital property of the business you operated at the end of the day on February 22, 1994, if your 1994 or 1995 fiscal period includes this date. When you make the capital gains election, you will have to report a taxable capital gain on your income tax return as if you had disposed of all of the eligible capital property of the business on February 22, 1994, for an amount you designate in the election. This amount becomes your designated proceeds of disposition. Your designated proceeds of disposition should not be more than the fair market value of the property at the end of the day on February 22, 1994. This taxable capital gain calculation will also take into account all of the eligible capital property of the business sold earlier in the fiscal period. If you had more than one business at the end of the day on February 22, 1994, and your 1994 or 1995 fiscal period includes this date, you may be able to elect for any one or more of the businesses you operated. However, you have to make a separate election for each business. It is important that you know your taxable capital gains limit for the election. To calculate this amount, see the section called "Calculating your taxable capital gains limit for the election" in Chapter 2 of the Capital Gains Election Package. If you have sold eligible capital property, see the section called "Sole proprietor - Sale of eligible capital property in a 1996 fiscal period" below. If you are a member of a partnership that has sold eligible capital property, see the section called "Partnership - Sale of eligible capital property in a 1996 fiscal period" on page 41. SOLE PROPRIETOR SALE OF ELIGIBLE CAPITAL PROPERTY IN A 1996 FISCAL PERIOD When you sell eligible capital property, you have to subtract part of the proceeds of disposition from your CEC account. You have to do this calculation if you sold eligible capital property: - in your 1996 fiscal period; or PAGE 40 - before June 18, 1987, and the proceeds of disposition become due to you in your 1996 fiscal period. For 1996, the amount you have to subtract is 3/4 of the total of these amounts: - the proceeds of disposition of all the eligible capital property you sell in your 1996 fiscal period; and - the amount of any proceeds that become due to you in your 1996 fiscal period from eligible capital property you sold before June 18, 1987. There may be a negative amount in your CEC account after you subtract the required amount. In this case, you will have to include the negative amount in your business income. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Carol started her business on January 1, 1990, with a December 31 year end. In 1990, Carol bought a client list for $10,000. Carol sold her business on September 1, 1996. She sold her client list for $15,000 and she does not have any other eligible capital property in her business. She deducted annual allowances each year as follows: 1990 $ 525 1991 488 1992 454 1993 422 1994 393 1995 365 ------- Total $ 2,647 ======= The amount included in Carol's business income on the line "Other income" of Form T2124 is the total of A and B: Calculation of amount A: The lesser of i) or ii): i) Excess amount calculated as follows: Proceeds of disposition: $15,000 $15,000 x 3/4 11,250 Plus: total annual allowances deducted 2,647 ------- $ 13,897 Minus: 3/4 eligible capital expenditures $10,000 x 3/4 $ 7,500 Excess amount $ 6,397 i ii) Total annual allowances deducted $ 2,647 ii The lesser of i) or ii) $ 2,647 A Calculation of amount B: Excess amount 6,397 Minus: total annual deductions taken 2,647 $ 3,750 B Line A plus line B $ 6,397 ======= The amount to be included in Carol's business income on the line "Other income" is $6,397. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- SALE OF ELIGIBLE CAPITAL PROPERTY FOR WHICH YOU FILED A FORM T664, ELECTION TO REPORT A CAPITAL GAIN ON PROPERTY OWNED AT THE END OF FEBRUARY 22, 1994 If you filed Form T664 for eligible capital property of your business, your cumulative eligible capital account does not change. Rather, the taxable capital gains on which you make the election create an exempt gains balance for your business. The exempt gains balance reduces your business income from the disposition of eligible capital property (other than the recapture of annual allowances deducted in previous years). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE Rick has operated a computer equipment business since February 1, 1989. The business has a January 31 year end. Rick paid $10,000 for a client list when he started the business. He has no other eligible capital property. Rick sells his business on September 1, 1995. He sells his client list for $15,000. He made the election for the 1995 fiscal period to claim a capital gains deduction on the gain accrued up to February 22, 1994. The designated proceeds of disposition are $14,000, which is the fair market value of the client list at the end of the day on February 22, 1994. In previous years, Rick claimed the following amounts as annual allowances on eligible capital property and has calculated his exempt gains balance for the 1995 fiscal period as follows : 1989 $ 525 1990 488 1991 454 1992 422 1993 393 1994 365 1995 0 ------- Total $ 2,647 FIRST STEP ELECTION CALCULATION - EXEMPT GAINS BALANCE Balance in Rick's CEC account at the beginning of his 1996 fiscal period $ 4,853 1 Election - Designated proceeds of disposition on February 22, 1994 : $14,000 $14,000 x 3/4 $ 10,500 2 Line 1 minus line 2 ( $ 5,647) 3 Negative account in balance $ 5,647 4 Minus: total annual allowances deducted from 1989 to 1994 $ 2,647 5 Line 4 minus line 5 - Exempt gains balance $ 3,000 6 The amount of $3,000 is the exempt gains balance. It equals the taxable capital gain on the client list accrued to February 22, 1994, on which Rick made the election. This amount will reduce any business income (other than the recapture of annual allowances deducted in previous years) when he sells his client list. Rick entered 4/3 of this amount (4/3 x $3,000 = $4,000) for 1995, in column 5 of Chart B of his Form T664, Election to Report a Capital Gain on Property PAGE 41 Owned at the End of February 22, 1994. Rick entered the $14,000 designated proceeds of disposition in column 2 of Chart B on the same form. NOTE If the designated proceeds of disposition are more than the fair market value of the property, this will reduce the exempt gains balance. Reducing the exempt gains balance will increase the amount of business income. For more information, contact the Business Enquiries Section of your tax services office. SECOND STEP Calculation of amount to include in business income - Sale of client list on September 1, 1995 Rick calculates the amount to include in his business income on the line called "Other income" on Form T2124, as the total of amounts A and B: CALCULATION OF AMOUNT A: The lesser of i) or ii): i) Excess amount calculated as follows: Actual proceeds of disposition: $15,000 $15,000 x 3/4 $11,250 Plus: total annual allowances deducted 2,647 ------- Subtotal 13,897 Minus: 3/4 of eligible capital expenditures $10,000 x 3/4 7,500 ------- Excess amount $6,397 ii ii) Total annual allowances deducted $2,647 ii The lesser of i) or ii) 2,647 A Calculation of amount B: Excess amount $6,397 Minus: total annual allowances deducted 2,647 --------- Subtotal 3,750 Minus: exempt gains balance 3,000 750 B -------- -------- The total of lines A and B $3,397 ======= Rick would include $3,397 in his business income on the line "Other income." For more information about this election, get the Capital Gains Election Package. You will find copies of Form T664 in this publication. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- REPLACEMENT PROPERTY If you sell eligible capital property and replace it with another one, you can postpone all or part of any gain on the sale. Under proposed changes, this happens to the extent that the proceeds of disposition of the former property are reinvested by you in a replacement property within a certain period of time and it is reasonable to conclude that the property was acquired by you to replace the former property or it was acquired and used by you or a person related to you for the same or similar use to which you or the person related to you put the former property. To do this, you have to replace the property no later than one year after the end of the taxation year in which you sell the original property. For more details, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-259, Exchanges of Property, and its Special Release. For more information about eligible capital expenditures, see Interpretation Bulletins IT-123, Transactions Involving Eligible Capital Property (after 1987), IT-143, Meaning of Eligible Capital Expenditure, and its Special Release, or contact your tax services office. PARTNERSHIP SALE OF ELIGIBLE CAPITAL PROPERTY IN A 1996 FISCAL PERIOD When the partnership sells eligible capital property, it has to subtract part of the proceeds of disposition from its CEC account. The partnership has to do this calculation if it sold eligible capital property: - in its 1996 fiscal period; or - before June 18, 1987, and the proceeds of disposition become due in its 1996 fiscal period. For 1996, the amount the partnership has to subtract is 3/4 of the total of these amounts: - the proceeds of disposition of all the eligible capital property the partnership sells in its 1996 fiscal period. The total proceeds of disposition must be included even if the partnership will not receive the entire amount in 1996; and - the amount of any proceeds that become due in its 1996 fiscal period, from eligible capital property it sold before June 18, 1987. There may be a negative amount in the partnership's CEC account after it subtracts the required amount. In this case, it will have to include in its business income the negative balance in its CEC account. However, if you have made the capital gains election as a member of the partnership on your 1994 income tax return for your partnership interest, you will have reported the capital gain accrued to February 22, 1994. In this case, the adjusted cost base of your partnership interest has not changed as a result of the election. Rather, you have created a special account called your exempt capital gains balance. You will be able to use this account to reduce your share of business income of the partnership from the sale of eligible capital property (other than the recapture of annual allowances deducted in previous years). You have to include the business income that results from the sale of the eligible capital property on the line "Other income" on your Form T2124 or Form T2032. You will then reduce your share of the partnership income by claiming a business income reduction in the chart called "Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss)" on your Form T2032 or Form T2124. To calculate your exempt capital gains balance and your business income reduction, see Chapter 4 of the income tax guide called Capital Gains. PAGE 42 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- EXAMPLE You and your partner have operated a telephone sales business since January 1, 1990. Your partnership agreement states that you and your partner will share the business profits equally. The business has a December 31 year end. You and your partner paid a total of $10,000 for a client list when you started the business. The business has no other eligible capital property. You and your partner sell the business on September 1, 1996. The proceeds of disposition of the client list are $15,000. As a member of the partnership, you decide to make the capital gains election in 1994 on your partnership interest. In previous years, the partnership claimed $2,647 as annual allowances on eligible capital property. FIRST STEP CALCULATION OF AMOUNT TO INCLUDE IN BUSINESS INCOME - SALE OF CLIENT LIST ON SEPTEMBER 1, 1996 The amount to include in the partnership's business income, on the line called "Other income" on Form T2124, is the total of amounts A and B: CALCULATION OF AMOUNT A: The lesser of i) or ii) i) Excess amount calculated as follows: Actual proceeds of disposition: $15,000 $15,000 x 3/4 $11,250 Plus: total annual allowances deducted 2,647 ------- Subtotal 13,897 Minus: 3/4 Eligible capital expenditures $10,000 x 3/4 7,500 Excess amount $6,397 ii ii) Total annual allowances deducted $2,647 ii The lesser of i) or ii) $2,647 A CALCULATION OF AMOUNT B: Excess amount $ 6,397 Minus: Total annual allowances deducted 2,647 -------- Subtotal $3,750 B ------- The total of lines A and B $6,397 ======= SECOND STEP CALCULATING YOUR SHARE OF PARTNERSHIP INCOME FROM THE SALE OF THE CLIENT LIST (NOT INCLUDING THE RECAPTURE OF ANNUAL ALLOWANCES DEDUCTED) Excess amount as calculated above $6,397 1 Total annual allowances deducted 2,647 2 ------- Line 1 minus line 2 3,750 3 1/2 x line 3 $1,875 ======= The amount of $1,875 represents your share of the business income (other than the recapture of annual allowances deducted in previous years) from the sale of eligible capital property. You must enter this amount on line 10 of chart 1 in Chapter 4 of the income tax guide called Capital Gains. This chart will help you calculate your business income reduction for 1996 as well as your exempt capital gains balance available for 1997. To make sure you complete the chart correctly, you should read Chapter 4 in the income tax guide called Capital Gains. Once you have calculated your business income reduction on line 11 of this chart, you can enter this amount in the chart called "Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss)" on your Form T2124. If you did not make the capital gains election for 1994 as a member of the partnership, the amount to include on the line called "Other income" according to this example is $6,397. In this case, you could not use the calculation of the second step and the calculations in the Capital Gains income tax guide for the business income reduction. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE You can make a late capital gains election concerning your interest in a partnership. Usually, you would have made the election by April 30, 1995, on your 1994 income tax return. If you did not make the election for 1994 on your 1994 income tax return, you can still do so until April 30, 1997. However, you would have to pay a penalty at the time you make the election. REPLACEMENT PROPERTY If the partnership sells eligible capital property and replaces it with another one, the partnership can postpone all or part of any gain on the sale. Under proposed changes, this happens to the extent that the proceeds of disposition of the former property are reinvested by the partnership in a replacement property within a certain period of time and it is reasonable to conclude that the property was acquired by the partnership to replace the former property or it was acquired and used by the partnership or a person related to the partnership for the same or similar use to which the partnership or the person related to the partnership put the former property. To do this, the partnership has to replace the property no later than one year after the end of the tax year in which it sells the original property. For more details, see Interpretation Bulletin IT-259, Exchanges of Property, and its Special Release. For more information about eligible capital expenditures, see Interpretation Bulletins IT-123, Transactions Involving Eligible Capital Property (after 1987), and IT-143, Meaning of Eligible Capital Expenditure, and its Special Release, or contact your tax services office. CHAPTER 6 - INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT WHAT IS AN INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT? The investment tax credit lets you subtract, from the taxes you owe, part of the cost of some types of property you acquired or expenditures you incurred. You may be able to claim this tax credit if you bought qualifying property or incurred qualified expenditures in 1996. You may also be able to claim the credit if you have unused investment tax credits from years before 1996. PAGE 43 In 1994, we eliminated the annual limit on investment tax credit claims. This allows you to fully claim your investment tax credits against your federal tax and federal individual surtax payable - unless Alternative Minimum Tax applies. This change applies to current-year investment tax credits, as well as those you previously earned but have not yet claimed. Investment tax credits being carried back to a year before 1994 will still be subject to the previous annual limit. The specified percentages you use to calculate your investment tax credits are as follows: - The rate for qualified expenditures for scientific research and experimental development to be carried out in the Atlantic provinces or the Gaspé Peninsula is 20%. Expenditures incurred according to a written agreement entered into before February 22, 1994, will qualify for a 30% rate. - The rate for qualified property used in the Atlantic provinces, the Gaspé Peninsula, or a prescribed offshore region is 10% for property acquired after 1994. Qualified property you acquired according to a written purchase agreement you entered into before February 22, 1994, under construction by you or on your behalf on that date, or machinery or equipment that is a fixed and integral part of property under construction by you or on your behalf on that date will qualify for a 15% rate. - There is no longer a 30% rate for certified property. However, certified property you acquired according to a written purchase agreement entered into before February 22, 1994, under construction by you or on your behalf on that date, or machinery or equipment that is a fixed and integral part of property under construction by you or on your behalf on that date, will still qualify for the certified property investment tax credit. WHAT IS A REFUNDABLE INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT? PROPERTY PURCHASED, OR EXPENDITURES MADE, IN 1996 You may be able to claim a refundable investment tax credit if, in 1996, you: - purchased qualified property; - purchased certain certified property; or - made a qualified expenditure. In all cases, the property you bought has to be new and available for use. For the definition of available-for-use, see page 23. QUALIFIED PROPERTY This includes some types of new buildings, machinery, and equipment which are prescribed in section 4600 of the Income Tax Regulations. You must acquire the property and use it for designated purposes in specific areas. We cannot list all the properties that qualify in this guide. To determine if your property qualifies, contact your tax services office. Designated purposes include activities such as logging, storing grain, producing industrial minerals, manufacturing or processing goods for sale or lease, farming, and fishing. For a list of other designated purposes, contact your tax services office. The specific areas are Newfoundland, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, the Gaspé Peninsula, or a prescribed offshore region in the area off the east coast of Canada that we consider part of Canada. CERTIFIED PROPERTY This is a particular type of qualified property. To determine if your property qualifies, contact your tax services office. To qualify, you have to acquire the property for use in a prescribed area. You will find a list of these areas in Information Circular 78-4, Investment Tax Credit Rates, and its Special Release. The property must be part of a facility approved under the Regional Development Incentives Act. A facility means the structures, machinery, and equipment that make up the necessary parts of a manufacturing or processing operation. There are some limits for resource-based industries. QUALIFIED EXPENDITURE To be a qualified expenditure, the amount has to be for scientific research and experimental development. For more details, see Information Circular 86-4, Scientific Research and Experimental Development. PROPERTY PURCHASED, OR EXPENDITURES MADE, BEFORE 1996 You may have purchased property, or made expenditures, before 1996 that are eligible for the credit. However, you may not have used all the credit in the year you earned it, or in the three previous years. In this case, you may be able to apply any unused credit in 1996. To do this, complete Part A of Form T2038 (IND.), Investment Tax Credit (Individuals) 1996 and Subsequent Years. HOW TO CALCULATE YOUR 1996 INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT Base the investment tax credit on a percentage of the investment cost (the cost of the property or expenditure). The specified percentage you use to calculate the credit is on Form T2038 (IND.). If you are a member of a partnership, you should only include your portion of the partnership's investment or expenditure. In some cases, you may have to either decrease or increase your investment cost. You have to decrease your investment cost by the amount of any reimbursement, inducement, and government or non- government assistance that can reasonably be considered to relate to the property or expenditure. If you repay any of this assistance, add the repayment to the investment cost. Calculate the credit for any repayment using the same percentage you used for the original investment cost. PAGE 44 Determine your credit at the end of the calendar year. However, the fiscal year end of your business may differ from the end of the calendar year. In this case, include any credit you earn on the property you buy in the part of the calendar year that is after your fiscal year end. For example, suppose your fiscal period ends on June 30, 1996, and you buy property that is eligible for a credit in November 1996. You can claim a credit for the property you bought in November when you file your 1996 income tax return. HOW TO CLAIM YOUR 1996 CREDIT You can use the credit you earn in 1996 to reduce your federal tax and surtax for the year, for a previous year, or for a future year. CURRENT-YEAR CLAIM To calculate your claim to reduce your federal tax for 1996, complete Section I of Form T2038 (IND.). If a partnership or trust made the investments, enter only your share. Enter the amount of your credit on line 412 of your income tax return. To calculate your claim to reduce your federal individual surtax for 1996, complete Section II of the form. Enter the amount of your credit on line 518 of Schedule 1 with your income tax return. CARRY BACK TO PREVIOUS YEARS You can carry back the credit you earn in 1996 for up to three years and use it to reduce your federal tax and surtax in those years. To do this, complete Part B of Form T2038 (IND.). CARRY FORWARD TO FUTURE YEARS You can carry forward, for up to 10 years, a credit you earn in 1996 that you did not use to reduce taxes in 1996 or in a previous year. However, you lose any credits you do not use within 10 years of earning them. REFUND OF INVESTMENT TAX CREDIT If you do not use all of your investment tax credit to reduce your taxes in the year or in the three previous years, we may refund up to 40% of your unused credit to you in cash. You can only claim this refund in the year you buy property or make an expenditure that qualifies for the credit, unless the available-for-use rules, or other rules deeming that you made the expenditures in a subsequent year, apply. To calculate your refund, complete Part B of Form T2038 (IND.). If a partnership or trust made the investments, enter only your share of the amount. Enter this amount on line 454 of your income tax return. ADJUSTMENTS The amount of the credit you claim or that we refund to you in 1996 will reduce the capital cost of the property. Any 1996 credit you carry back to a previous year will also reduce the capital cost of the property. Make this adjustment in 1997. This adjustment will reduce the amount of capital cost allowance you can claim for the property. It will also affect your capital gain when you sell the property. You might have claimed a credit or received a refund for 1996 for a property that you have already sold. In addition, you might still have other property in the same class. If so, you have to reduce the undepreciated capital cost of the class for 1997 by the amount of the credit you claimed or received as a refund. If, after the disposition you do not have any property left in the same class, include in your 1997 income the amount of the credit you claimed or received as a refund. You have to reduce your scientific research and experimental development (SR&ED) pool by the amount you claim in 1996 as an investment tax credit for SR&ED. Make this adjustment in 1997. PAGE 45 APPENDIX - INDUSTRY CODES PROFESSIONS Architect - 7751 Chartered or certified accountant - 7731 Dentist - 8653 Engineer - 7752 Lawyer or notary - 7761 Management consultant - 7771 Psychologist - 8671 Physician, general practice - 8651 Surgeon or specialist - 8652 Veterinarian - 0211 Other accounting or bookkeeping services - 7739 Other health practitioner - 8660 Other scientific or technical services - 7759 Other social service practitioner - 8670 RETAIL SALES OR SERVICES Accommodation, food, or beverage services Catering - 9214 Hotel, motel, lodge, or campground - 9100 Licensed restaurant - 9211 Take-out food - 9213 Tavern, bar, or nightclub - 9221 Unlicensed restaurant (including drive-ins) - 9212 AGRICULTURAL OR ANIMAL SERVICES Animal specialty or livestock services - 0210 Crop services - 0220 Other agricultural services - 0230 AUTOMOTIVE Automobile sales - 6310 Auto painting or body repairs - 6352 Auto parts or accessories stores - 6340 Garage (general auto repairs) - 6351 Muffler, glass, transmission, or other repairs - 6350 Recreational vehicle sales - 6320 Service station (oil and gas only) - 6331 Service station (with repairs or a restaurant) - 6339 Other auto services - 6390 BUSINESS SERVICES Advertising - 7740 Computer or related services - 7720 Employment agency - 7710 Management consultant - 7771 Other business services - 7790 COMMUNICATIONS OR UTILITIES Courier services - 4842 Postal services - 4841 Telecommunications - 4810 Other utilities - 4900 DIRECT SALES Cosmetics - 6922 Food or beverage - 6924 Household goods - 6923 Other direct sales - 6929 ENTERTAINMENT OR RECREATION Commercial spectator sport or club - 9640 Entertainment or stage company - 9630 Film or video services - 9610 Film presenter - 9620 Gambling operation - 9661 Recreational facilities - 9650 Other amusements or recreation - 9690 FINANCE, INSURANCE, OR REAL ESTATE Farm rentals - 7591 Financial services - 7400 Insurance agency - 7612 Owner-operated properties (other than farm rentals) - 7510 Real estate agency - 7613 FOOD OR BEVERAGE STORES Baked goods - 6013 Beer, wine, or liquor - 6020 Candy or nuts - 6014 Fruits or vegetables - 6015 Groceries - 6012 Meat - 6016 Supermarket - 6011 Other food - 6019 HEALTH OR SOCIAL SERVICES Child care services - 8641 Educational services - 8500 Health or social services (other than child care) - 8600 HOUSEHOLD GOODS STORES Appliances, TV, radio, or stereo repairs - 6223 Appliances, TV, radio, or stereo sales - 6220 Furniture refinishing or repairing - 6213 Household accessories - 6230 Household furniture or appliances - 6210 PERSONAL OR HOUSEHOLD SERVICES Barber or beauty shop - 9710 Funeral services - 9730 Home maintenance services - 9741 Laundry, carpet, or dry cleaning - 9720 Other personal or household services - 9790 TRANSPORTATION OR STORAGE Air, rail, or water transport industry - 4500 Public transit - 4570 School busing - 4573 Taxi - 4581 Storage or warehousing - 4700 Transport via pipeline - 4600 Truck transport - 4560 Other transportation industry - 4589 Other transportation services - 4590 OTHER RETAIL STORES Books or stationery - 6511 Cameras or photographic supplies - 6571 Flowers or lawn and garden supplies - 6520 General merchandise - 6410 Hardware, glass, paint, or wallpaper - 6530 PAGE 46 Other retail stores (continued) Jewelry or watch sales or repairs - 6560 Musical instruments or records - 6550 Prescription drugs or patent medicines - 6030 Shoes, clothing, fabric, or yarn - 6100 Sporting goods or bicycles - 6540 Toys, hobbies, novelties, or souvenirs - 6580 Vending machine operations - 6911 Other merchandise - 6590 OTHER Artist - 9993 Athlete or promoter - 9642 Business, religious, or social organization - 9800 Commission sales, own account - 9992 Janitorial services - 9953 Machine or equipment rental or leasing - 9910 Miscellaneous building or dwelling services - 9950 Photography - 9931 Travel services - 9960 Vehicle rental or leasing - 9920 Writer - 9995 Other repairs - 9940 Other services - 9990 OTHER ACTIVITIES Construction Acoustical work - 4273 Asphalt paving - 4216 Buildings (including development) - 4000 Construction project management - 4411 Electrical installation - 4261 Excavating or grading - 4214 Fence installation - 4217 Finish carpentry - 4274 Glass or glazing - 4233 Hardwood flooring installation - 4277 Heating, air conditioning, or other duct or sheet metal work - 4240 Home renovations - 4013 Industrial construction (other than buildings) - 4100 Insulation - 4234 Masonry - 4231 Mechanical specialty work - 4250 Painting or decorating - 4275 Plastering or drywalling - 4272 Plumbing - 4241 Resilient flooring or carpet installation - 4278 Shingling - 4235 Siding installation - 4232 Structural or related work - 4220 Terrazzo or tile work - 4276 Other exterior close-in work - 4230 Other interior or finishing work - 4270 Other site work - 4210 Other trade work - 4290 Other construction services - 4499 MANUFACTURING Beverages - 1100 Chemicals or chemical products - 3700 Clothing - 2400 Electrical or electronic products - 3300 Fabricated textile products - 1900 Food - 1000 Furniture or fixtures - 2600 Leather or leather products - 1700 Non-electrical machines - 3100 Non-metallic mineral products - 3500 Paper products - 2700 Plastic - 1600 Primary metal - 2900 Primary textiles - 1800 Printing or publishing - 2800 Refined petroleum and coal products - 3600 Rubber - 1500 Tobacco - 1200 Transportation equipment - 3200 Wood products - 2500 Other fabricated metal products - 3000 Other - 3900 NATURAL RESOURCE INDUSTRIES Fishing services - 0321 Forestry services - 0510 Logging - 0410 Mineral, petroleum, or natural gas extraction services - 0900 Mining - 0600 Petroleum or natural gas extraction - 0700 Quarry or sand pit - 0800 Trapping - 0330 WHOLESALING Apparel and dry goods - 5300 Beverages, drugs, and tobacco - 5200 Farm products - 5000 Food - 5210 Furniture, appliances, and accessories - 5400 Household building materials and supplies - 5600 Machinery, equipment, and related supplies - 5700 Petroleum products - 5100 Vehicles, parts, and accessories - 5500 Other products - 5900 PAGE 47 INDEX PAGE Accounting fees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Accrual method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Advertising expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Allowance on eligible capital property . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Automobile, defined. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Available-for-use, defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Bad debts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Business, defined. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Business income reporting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Business liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Business records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Business tax, fees, licences, dues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Business-use-of-home expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Capital contributions in 1996. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Capital cost allowance (CCA) Adjustment for current-year additions. . . . . . . . . . . 27 Base amount. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Buildings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Class number . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Classes of depreciable property. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Cost of additions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Electronic office equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 50% rule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Grants and subsidies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Other property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Passenger vehicles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Personal use of property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Proceeds of dispositions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Rate (%) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Recapture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Replacement property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Terminal loss. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Undepreciated capital cost (UCC) after additions and dispositions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 UCC at the end of the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 UCC at the start of the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Capital cost allowance, deduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Capital cost, defined. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Capital gains. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Cash method . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Changing from personal to business use . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Commission income. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Computers and other equipment leasing costs. . . . . . . . . . 20 Convention expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Cost of goods sold . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Cumulative eligible capital (CEC) account. . . . . . . . . . . 38 Annual allowance calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Dates to remember. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Delivery, freight, and express . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Depreciable property, defined. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Details of equity. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Direct wage costs (cost of goods sold) . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Drawings in 1996 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Eligible capital expenditure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Eligible capital property Did you own eligible capital property at the end of February 22, 1994 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39, 40, 41 Fair market value (FMV), defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Fiscal period, defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Fuel costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Gifts of inventory by an artist. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Goods and services tax rebate. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Gross income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,13 Identification area. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Income from a business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Income from a profession . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Income, other. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,13 Industry codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Instalment payments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Insurance expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Interest expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Inventories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Investment tax credit Adjustments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Carry back to previous years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Carry forward to future years. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Certified property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Current-year claim . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 How to calculate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Property purchased, or expenditures made, before 1996. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Property purchased, or expenditures made, in 1996. . . . . 43 Qualified expenditure. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Qualified property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Refundable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Land . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Leasing costs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Legal fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Maintenance and repairs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Management and administration fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Meals and entertainment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Membership fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Motor vehicle, defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Motor vehicle expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Business use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Joint ownership. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Net income (loss). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Net income (loss) before adjustments . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Non-arm's-length transaction Defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Acquiring property . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Office expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Other expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 PAGE 48 Partnerships Defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Partnership information return (PIR) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 Passenger vehicle Defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Interest expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Prepaid expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Proceeds of disposition, defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Professional fees paid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Professional fees received . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Property taxes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Proprietorships, requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Rent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Reserve for 1971 accounts receivable . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Reserves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Salaries, wages, and benefits paid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Small tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Subcontracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Subsidies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Tax shelters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Telephone expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Travel expenses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Undepreciated capital cost (UCC) Defined . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Vehicles, more than one. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Work-in-progress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 YOUR OPINION COUNTS! We review our income tax guides and pamphlets each year. If you have any comments or suggestions to help us improve our publications, we'd like to hear from you! Please send your comments to: Client Services Directorate Revenue Canada 400 Cumberland Street Ottawa ON K1A 0L8
T4002 Business and Professional Income - Supplementary Income Tax Guide
Last printed on 1996-12-20.
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