After reading several other threads on this board and reading a document from RBC DS, I have learned that capital gains distributions from US mutual funds are not eligible for the 50% inclusion rate in Canada.
Does anyone have a solid source for this rule? Preferably a law, regulation, or official CRA publication.
Does anyone know which line number to report the distribution? I had it on line 176, but I suppose it goes on line 121?
Reporting US mutual fund capital gains distributions to CRA
Moderator: Mark T Serbinski CA CPA
Not only are capital gains taxed 100% as ordinary income but so are dividends ( no bump up not tc) if any tax though was witheld this is part of the gross income you pick up but do get the FTC fot this.
If the mutual fund is a US corp then all the income you receive is view as US source dividend income regardless of how it was characterized by the fund and would again not be eligible for teh div tax cr. IN VERY rare instance if teh Mutual fund were operating as a partnership in the US not a corp, then by theory the flow out of income should retain its original form once it is received by the CND investor.
You can delcare it on line 121 as dividend income from US in CND funds.
THe tax section to explain this is contained in ITA 94.1, also refier to ITR:6900)
If the mutual fund is a US corp then all the income you receive is view as US source dividend income regardless of how it was characterized by the fund and would again not be eligible for teh div tax cr. IN VERY rare instance if teh Mutual fund were operating as a partnership in the US not a corp, then by theory the flow out of income should retain its original form once it is received by the CND investor.
You can delcare it on line 121 as dividend income from US in CND funds.
THe tax section to explain this is contained in ITA 94.1, also refier to ITR:6900)
JG
As to reference, a dividend has to be eligible. Since your dividend doen't meet the definition of eligible, then it is ineligible by default.
After 20 years, I am severely cutting back on responses. Do not ask specifically for my help. There are a few others on this board that can answer most questions. All the best
Not quite, in Canada we now have both eligible and ineligible dividends that both are allowed dividend tax credits at different rates. In this case the dividends are NOT allowed any dividend tax credits since they are from the US these are better off being termed excluded rather than ineligible since there now is the distinction of eligble and non eligible dividend income in Canada.
JG
JCGA, are you sure that US mutual funds are taxed under Section 94.1? A US mutual fund meets the criteria in (1)(a) and (b), but the tax due on fund income would not be significantly less (within the meaning of 94.1(1)) if the fund assets were held directly by the shareholder. Additionally, 94.1 prescribes a penalty regime which has not been discussed here.
I think that section was designed to combat abusive foreign investment entities as described in http://www.cch.ca/newsletters/TaxAccoun ... /Index.htm
I think that section was designed to combat abusive foreign investment entities as described in http://www.cch.ca/newsletters/TaxAccoun ... /Index.htm
Sec 94.1 covers a lot of FAPI areas including the offshore deemed recognition of funds held in offshore trusts as the one you mention, however the thrust of sec 94.1 is to classify all foreign income including those of trusts as income the wording in 94.1 that does this is as follows
" Where property is in an offshore investment fund there shall be added to the adjusted cost base of the property amounts deemed to be included in income in respect of the property" this provision will deem all income to be of one type no distinction is allowed as to cap gain, div or otherwise.
This also goes hand in hand with sec 53(1)(m) , but look at ITR 6900 also.
" Where property is in an offshore investment fund there shall be added to the adjusted cost base of the property amounts deemed to be included in income in respect of the property" this provision will deem all income to be of one type no distinction is allowed as to cap gain, div or otherwise.
This also goes hand in hand with sec 53(1)(m) , but look at ITR 6900 also.
JG