![]() |
|
| *The Commerce Journal>>>Canada Taxes |
RE: NR7-R Recovery of withholding for a foreign investor? |
I am having trouble getting my 15% withholding back from a brokerage firm in a tax free Roth IRA account in the states which I hold multiple dividend paying stocks in Canada. (These stocks are not trusts either) Do I file the form with the nominee(brokerage) or the government to get my money back? I don't get a straight answer from either party when I pose the question to them. The form you note actually says on the instruction page where to send it: International Tax Services Office, Non Resident Withholding Division, 2204 Walkely Road , Ottawa, ON K1A 1A8 For questions: 1-800-267-3395 http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/e/pbg/tf/nr7-r/... |
| Tags |
| Spain Taxes Singapore Taxes Mexico Taxes Ireland Taxes India Taxes Germany Taxes Canada Taxes Australia Taxes Small Business Renting & Real Estate |
| Related information |
You are allowed to claim a capital gain exemption with respect to your principle residence. According to interpretation bulletin IT-120R6 (... Assuming you earn employment income, cannot take advantage of the spousal credit (ie. You are single or your spouse earns more than $8,300), and you have no other credits/deductions, your fe... It would depend upon how your employer treats your situation. You very well could be having US federal or a State tax taken off your income or pay cheques. If this is the case you would need... Yes, you will have to pay the tax and no you cannot deduct it as a business trip because you paid nothing out that is deductible and you probably conducted no business on the trip. If you... Trust the Canadian Revenue Agency to think of everything they can find under the sun to be liable for taxes. In your case, they have taxes for rental income for non-residents. Here's t... Based on a monthly salary about $3800. There is an online tax calculator that you can crunch numbers: ... We pay all of those, and we complain lots. But I (maybe not everyone) feel we get the services for our money. We have health care rich or poor, never hear of someone losing their house due... Approximately $2800 per month EI = 1.4% deducted CPP = 4.95% deducted Federal & Provincial Tax. Approx. $690.... |
Commerce Categories--Copyright/IP Policy--Contact Webmaster |