The Government of Canada has introduced new reporting requirements for trusts on December 15, 2022 through Bill C-32. According to the new rules, all trusts, unless specific conditions are met, must file a T3 return for tax years ending after December 30, 2023. You may have a bare trust if you have one or more of the following situations (This is not exclusive list):
▪An adult child adds parents in legal title of house to get mortgage
▪Two spouses are living in a house but one spouse on title
▪Corporate account opened by the shareholder
▪A corporate is on title of an individual’s vehicle, or vise versa.
▪A partner holds the title to the property for the partnership
The bare trust has the following features:
▪The trustee has no significant power or responsibilities
▪The trustee can take no action without instruction from the beneficiary
▪The trustee’s only function is to hold legal title to the property
▪There is no trust deeds/instruments
The filing deadline is 90 days after the trust's year end. If a bare trust fails to file a trust return under the new legislation, the late-filing penalty will be:
▪Return of income penalty
▪Outstanding x 5% +outstanding x 1% x months, <=12 months
▪Information return penalty
▪Max ($100, $25 x days), <=100 days
▪New gross negligence penalty
▪Max ($2500, 5% x highest Fair Market Value)
Yong Qiang Chartered Professional Accountant
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