When you receive money from someone as gift, or give money as gift, do you have to declare it in tax return?
Don't understand. It's not investment. Just cash. And not spouse.Yes if is material and it is not your spouse. However if you give money to your spouse you are taxed on the first level of investment income. The investment income on the income of the gifted money is taxed to the receiver of the gift. Atribution rule.
So what happens during a wedding or your first house when your friends shower you with $$$ or your parents give you money for your new house. How many people actually declare this kind of stuff?Don't understand. It's not investment. Just cash. And not spouse.
Are you sure? Didn't come up on Google search. Do you have a source?There is a certain threshold where you can gift money with no tax implications
not sure what it is ....25k?
So the answer is no? Even if the amount is in millions?So what happens during a wedding or your first house when your friends shower you with $$$ or your parents give you money for your new house. How many people actually declare this kind of stuff?
Correct - even if it is millions. No tax.So the answer is no? Even if the amount is in millions?
Don't bother - irrelevant - not the OP question. This information bulletin refers to gifts and their tax deductibility as in giving to a registered charity etc and what you can deduct.
Brother in law gifted his kids 25k each...but his accountant told him to keep it at 25k or less...not sure why..so take it for what it's worth...he does it every few years when his company divvies up the profit sharing...Are you sure? Didn't come up on Google search. Do you have a source?
Yes but there could be tax implications. Let's say you gift this house to your adult family member. No tax but you will have deemed to have sold it so you may have capital gains and the tax liability that goes along with it (if this is not your principle residence).My question is more about gifting of house or money from one family member to another. From all I read, there is no tax.
The sale of a principal residence in Canada is not taxable. But yes when you get into cottages that are secondary residences there is a tax on any capital gains.Yes but there could be tax implications. Let's say you gift this house to your adult family member. No tax but you will have deemed to have sold it so you may have capital gains and the tax liability that goes along with it (if this is not your principle residence).
Say I give one of my extra cottages to my hero brother in law. He's happy but I gotta pay the tax on the gain of the sale. Ends up costing me cash flow.
So here is a hypothetical situation:The sale of a principal residence in Canada is not taxable. But yes when you get into cottages that are secondary residences there is a tax on any capital gains.
As far as gifts are concerned there is no tax in Canada on such a transaction unless it is done with the primary intention of minimizing taxation.
Isn't the cost base to the child $0?Child gets cottage at the new cost price / enter price...