CANADA | Taxpayers’ Ombudsperson launches systemic examination into Canada Revenue Agency’s 2023 bare trust filing requirements

The Taxpayers’ Ombudsperson, Mr. François Boileau, has formally opened a systemic examination into whether the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) respected taxpayers’ rights in its administration of bare trust filing requirements for the 2023 tax year.

The Government introduced new reporting requirements for trusts. For most trust types, including bare trusts, the deadline to file a T3 Return and Schedule 15 for 2023 was March 30, 2024. On March 28, 2024, the last business day before the filing deadline, the CRA announced it will not require bare trusts to file a T3 Income Tax and Information Return (T3 return), including Schedule 15, for the 2023 tax year, unless directly requested by the CRA. Since this announcement, several taxpayers and representatives, as well as members of Parliament, have reached out to the Office of the Taxpayers’ Ombudsperson (OTO) to express their concerns.

Many stated that some bare trustees had already paid their representatives hundreds of dollars in order to meet their 2023 filing obligations that were waived by the CRA. Representatives were also concerned because they had spent time and money on training, software updates, research and other areas affected by legislative changes. That said, the decision was welcomed by some organizations.  

Based on the information received so far, the OTO is launching a systemic examination into the clarity and timing of the CRA’s communication and into the cost of compliance issues for taxpayers and their representatives.

 

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Source: Taxpayers' Ombudsperson, Canada

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