Minimize taxes now that I earn a living wageShould my husband & I be saving money?Investing for Dividend...
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Minimize taxes now that I earn a living wage
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Minimize taxes now that I earn a living wage
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Background
I recently received a hefty promotion for $350k (plus stocks and bonuses) with the same company. Now that I can finally start to pay down my debt, I'm not so happy that suddenly 45% of my pay disappears in the form of taxes.
Question
What can I do to minimize my tax exposure (i.e. on general principal), and how much tax money goes to the Canadian government? I know that I can max out my outstanding RRSP contributions and get a nice refund at annual tax return time, and I know that I can max out my TFSA and watch the interest itself grow without being taxed.
Besides these methods, what else can I do to minimize the tax going to the government? Donating to charity reduces my tax exposure, but results in a net loss of money for me (i.e. the only way, to my knowledge, that donating to charity benefits an individual if he/she is donating to a bogus charity and committing tax fraud).
Could I just gift money to family and friends so they can max out their respective RRSP contributions, for example? They don't have to claim gifted cash, and whatever they contribute to their own RRSPs is tax sheltered, resulting in a refund for them at tax return time. Sounds perfectly reasonable. Are there other such methods I could do to minimize how much of my money ends up in the government's coffers? I'm perfectly fine with gifting to people I know personally, and want to minimize the amount of money paid in taxes, even if it results in a greater overall personal loss.
taxes income-tax canada tax-deduction rrsp
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Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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show 5 more comments
Background
I recently received a hefty promotion for $350k (plus stocks and bonuses) with the same company. Now that I can finally start to pay down my debt, I'm not so happy that suddenly 45% of my pay disappears in the form of taxes.
Question
What can I do to minimize my tax exposure (i.e. on general principal), and how much tax money goes to the Canadian government? I know that I can max out my outstanding RRSP contributions and get a nice refund at annual tax return time, and I know that I can max out my TFSA and watch the interest itself grow without being taxed.
Besides these methods, what else can I do to minimize the tax going to the government? Donating to charity reduces my tax exposure, but results in a net loss of money for me (i.e. the only way, to my knowledge, that donating to charity benefits an individual if he/she is donating to a bogus charity and committing tax fraud).
Could I just gift money to family and friends so they can max out their respective RRSP contributions, for example? They don't have to claim gifted cash, and whatever they contribute to their own RRSPs is tax sheltered, resulting in a refund for them at tax return time. Sounds perfectly reasonable. Are there other such methods I could do to minimize how much of my money ends up in the government's coffers? I'm perfectly fine with gifting to people I know personally, and want to minimize the amount of money paid in taxes, even if it results in a greater overall personal loss.
taxes income-tax canada tax-deduction rrsp
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
7
Trying to minimize taxes used to pay for welfare and subsidized university? I'm with you philosophically on reducing taxes but the irony is too much.
– brian
8 hours ago
10
This is great. I love that beautiful moment someone enters the real world and has that "wait a minute...welfare is supposed to be free! You mean to tell me I have to pay for it? Hold on...but I earned this money. I should be able to keep it!!". And now you know why a huge segment of Americans don't want big social programs.
– acpilot
7 hours ago
6
According to this, gifts are not deductible for the giver, so how would this reduce your tax burden?
– D Stanley
7 hours ago
2
@DStanley Maybe OP thinks that he/she can gift money to friends who can't max out their RRSP headroom so that they can contribute more to their own RRSPs (and receive a refund at year end, which would draw more from the taxpayers' coffers). OP seems obsessed with minimizing money paid as taxes in general or finding creative ways to siphon from the tax pool and passing the benefit on to friends (i.e. views the government as an adversary).
– Cloud
7 hours ago
3
lol "living wage."
– quid
5 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
Background
I recently received a hefty promotion for $350k (plus stocks and bonuses) with the same company. Now that I can finally start to pay down my debt, I'm not so happy that suddenly 45% of my pay disappears in the form of taxes.
Question
What can I do to minimize my tax exposure (i.e. on general principal), and how much tax money goes to the Canadian government? I know that I can max out my outstanding RRSP contributions and get a nice refund at annual tax return time, and I know that I can max out my TFSA and watch the interest itself grow without being taxed.
Besides these methods, what else can I do to minimize the tax going to the government? Donating to charity reduces my tax exposure, but results in a net loss of money for me (i.e. the only way, to my knowledge, that donating to charity benefits an individual if he/she is donating to a bogus charity and committing tax fraud).
Could I just gift money to family and friends so they can max out their respective RRSP contributions, for example? They don't have to claim gifted cash, and whatever they contribute to their own RRSPs is tax sheltered, resulting in a refund for them at tax return time. Sounds perfectly reasonable. Are there other such methods I could do to minimize how much of my money ends up in the government's coffers? I'm perfectly fine with gifting to people I know personally, and want to minimize the amount of money paid in taxes, even if it results in a greater overall personal loss.
taxes income-tax canada tax-deduction rrsp
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Background
I recently received a hefty promotion for $350k (plus stocks and bonuses) with the same company. Now that I can finally start to pay down my debt, I'm not so happy that suddenly 45% of my pay disappears in the form of taxes.
Question
What can I do to minimize my tax exposure (i.e. on general principal), and how much tax money goes to the Canadian government? I know that I can max out my outstanding RRSP contributions and get a nice refund at annual tax return time, and I know that I can max out my TFSA and watch the interest itself grow without being taxed.
Besides these methods, what else can I do to minimize the tax going to the government? Donating to charity reduces my tax exposure, but results in a net loss of money for me (i.e. the only way, to my knowledge, that donating to charity benefits an individual if he/she is donating to a bogus charity and committing tax fraud).
Could I just gift money to family and friends so they can max out their respective RRSP contributions, for example? They don't have to claim gifted cash, and whatever they contribute to their own RRSPs is tax sheltered, resulting in a refund for them at tax return time. Sounds perfectly reasonable. Are there other such methods I could do to minimize how much of my money ends up in the government's coffers? I'm perfectly fine with gifting to people I know personally, and want to minimize the amount of money paid in taxes, even if it results in a greater overall personal loss.
taxes income-tax canada tax-deduction rrsp
taxes income-tax canada tax-deduction rrsp
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 7 hours ago
yoozer8
2,5775 gold badges12 silver badges26 bronze badges
2,5775 gold badges12 silver badges26 bronze badges
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 8 hours ago
TonioTonio
362 bronze badges
362 bronze badges
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Tonio is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
7
Trying to minimize taxes used to pay for welfare and subsidized university? I'm with you philosophically on reducing taxes but the irony is too much.
– brian
8 hours ago
10
This is great. I love that beautiful moment someone enters the real world and has that "wait a minute...welfare is supposed to be free! You mean to tell me I have to pay for it? Hold on...but I earned this money. I should be able to keep it!!". And now you know why a huge segment of Americans don't want big social programs.
– acpilot
7 hours ago
6
According to this, gifts are not deductible for the giver, so how would this reduce your tax burden?
– D Stanley
7 hours ago
2
@DStanley Maybe OP thinks that he/she can gift money to friends who can't max out their RRSP headroom so that they can contribute more to their own RRSPs (and receive a refund at year end, which would draw more from the taxpayers' coffers). OP seems obsessed with minimizing money paid as taxes in general or finding creative ways to siphon from the tax pool and passing the benefit on to friends (i.e. views the government as an adversary).
– Cloud
7 hours ago
3
lol "living wage."
– quid
5 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
7
Trying to minimize taxes used to pay for welfare and subsidized university? I'm with you philosophically on reducing taxes but the irony is too much.
– brian
8 hours ago
10
This is great. I love that beautiful moment someone enters the real world and has that "wait a minute...welfare is supposed to be free! You mean to tell me I have to pay for it? Hold on...but I earned this money. I should be able to keep it!!". And now you know why a huge segment of Americans don't want big social programs.
– acpilot
7 hours ago
6
According to this, gifts are not deductible for the giver, so how would this reduce your tax burden?
– D Stanley
7 hours ago
2
@DStanley Maybe OP thinks that he/she can gift money to friends who can't max out their RRSP headroom so that they can contribute more to their own RRSPs (and receive a refund at year end, which would draw more from the taxpayers' coffers). OP seems obsessed with minimizing money paid as taxes in general or finding creative ways to siphon from the tax pool and passing the benefit on to friends (i.e. views the government as an adversary).
– Cloud
7 hours ago
3
lol "living wage."
– quid
5 hours ago
7
7
Trying to minimize taxes used to pay for welfare and subsidized university? I'm with you philosophically on reducing taxes but the irony is too much.
– brian
8 hours ago
Trying to minimize taxes used to pay for welfare and subsidized university? I'm with you philosophically on reducing taxes but the irony is too much.
– brian
8 hours ago
10
10
This is great. I love that beautiful moment someone enters the real world and has that "wait a minute...welfare is supposed to be free! You mean to tell me I have to pay for it? Hold on...but I earned this money. I should be able to keep it!!". And now you know why a huge segment of Americans don't want big social programs.
– acpilot
7 hours ago
This is great. I love that beautiful moment someone enters the real world and has that "wait a minute...welfare is supposed to be free! You mean to tell me I have to pay for it? Hold on...but I earned this money. I should be able to keep it!!". And now you know why a huge segment of Americans don't want big social programs.
– acpilot
7 hours ago
6
6
According to this, gifts are not deductible for the giver, so how would this reduce your tax burden?
– D Stanley
7 hours ago
According to this, gifts are not deductible for the giver, so how would this reduce your tax burden?
– D Stanley
7 hours ago
2
2
@DStanley Maybe OP thinks that he/she can gift money to friends who can't max out their RRSP headroom so that they can contribute more to their own RRSPs (and receive a refund at year end, which would draw more from the taxpayers' coffers). OP seems obsessed with minimizing money paid as taxes in general or finding creative ways to siphon from the tax pool and passing the benefit on to friends (i.e. views the government as an adversary).
– Cloud
7 hours ago
@DStanley Maybe OP thinks that he/she can gift money to friends who can't max out their RRSP headroom so that they can contribute more to their own RRSPs (and receive a refund at year end, which would draw more from the taxpayers' coffers). OP seems obsessed with minimizing money paid as taxes in general or finding creative ways to siphon from the tax pool and passing the benefit on to friends (i.e. views the government as an adversary).
– Cloud
7 hours ago
3
3
lol "living wage."
– quid
5 hours ago
lol "living wage."
– quid
5 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Congratulations on an amazing rise on salary. Please pat yourself on the back for such an accomplishment.
The best thing you can do is to hire a competent tax specialist. Here in the US, it is typically an accountant and they would tell you that there is not much they can do. Maximizing tax favored retirement accounts is about the best one can get away with. It is unlikely that gifting relatives will result in tax deductions.
Here in the US, high income types also invest in mutual funds that spin off few capital gain distributions after they have maximized their tax favored accounts. Dividends are less of a concern as they are taxed at a lower rate. That way money that is earned from investments do not significantly add to their tax bill.
Doing a bit of research, you are among the highest 10% of wealth earners in Canada. As such, you and those that make more than you, likely pay about 85% of the tax revenue for the government. The top 1% pay around half. When a politician decries "tax cuts for the rich", he is correct because in reality only the "rich" or more accurately high wage earners actually pay income tax.
While the living off of 55% of your income is kind of crummy, you can take comfort in two things. The first is that most 4 person families live off of far less. Second, your income will likely to continue to rise.
So live off less than you bring home, invest, and keep up the good work.
add a comment
|
If you own any works of art or ecologically sensitive lands you can donate those to a city government/museum/conservation trust/accredited charity and receive a tax refund for the appraised value of the donation. This would only net you a tax benefit if the appraised value was greater than what you spent, but it would deprive the government of money if that's your goal.
You might be able to convince an artist to sell you a piece at a discount with the agreement that you would subsequently be donating it to a museum or city collection as this would add to the artist's reputation. For information on cultural donnations read the Canada Revenue Agency's pamphlet on writing off donations: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/p113/p113-gifts-income-tax-2016.html
add a comment
|
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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votes
active
oldest
votes
Congratulations on an amazing rise on salary. Please pat yourself on the back for such an accomplishment.
The best thing you can do is to hire a competent tax specialist. Here in the US, it is typically an accountant and they would tell you that there is not much they can do. Maximizing tax favored retirement accounts is about the best one can get away with. It is unlikely that gifting relatives will result in tax deductions.
Here in the US, high income types also invest in mutual funds that spin off few capital gain distributions after they have maximized their tax favored accounts. Dividends are less of a concern as they are taxed at a lower rate. That way money that is earned from investments do not significantly add to their tax bill.
Doing a bit of research, you are among the highest 10% of wealth earners in Canada. As such, you and those that make more than you, likely pay about 85% of the tax revenue for the government. The top 1% pay around half. When a politician decries "tax cuts for the rich", he is correct because in reality only the "rich" or more accurately high wage earners actually pay income tax.
While the living off of 55% of your income is kind of crummy, you can take comfort in two things. The first is that most 4 person families live off of far less. Second, your income will likely to continue to rise.
So live off less than you bring home, invest, and keep up the good work.
add a comment
|
Congratulations on an amazing rise on salary. Please pat yourself on the back for such an accomplishment.
The best thing you can do is to hire a competent tax specialist. Here in the US, it is typically an accountant and they would tell you that there is not much they can do. Maximizing tax favored retirement accounts is about the best one can get away with. It is unlikely that gifting relatives will result in tax deductions.
Here in the US, high income types also invest in mutual funds that spin off few capital gain distributions after they have maximized their tax favored accounts. Dividends are less of a concern as they are taxed at a lower rate. That way money that is earned from investments do not significantly add to their tax bill.
Doing a bit of research, you are among the highest 10% of wealth earners in Canada. As such, you and those that make more than you, likely pay about 85% of the tax revenue for the government. The top 1% pay around half. When a politician decries "tax cuts for the rich", he is correct because in reality only the "rich" or more accurately high wage earners actually pay income tax.
While the living off of 55% of your income is kind of crummy, you can take comfort in two things. The first is that most 4 person families live off of far less. Second, your income will likely to continue to rise.
So live off less than you bring home, invest, and keep up the good work.
add a comment
|
Congratulations on an amazing rise on salary. Please pat yourself on the back for such an accomplishment.
The best thing you can do is to hire a competent tax specialist. Here in the US, it is typically an accountant and they would tell you that there is not much they can do. Maximizing tax favored retirement accounts is about the best one can get away with. It is unlikely that gifting relatives will result in tax deductions.
Here in the US, high income types also invest in mutual funds that spin off few capital gain distributions after they have maximized their tax favored accounts. Dividends are less of a concern as they are taxed at a lower rate. That way money that is earned from investments do not significantly add to their tax bill.
Doing a bit of research, you are among the highest 10% of wealth earners in Canada. As such, you and those that make more than you, likely pay about 85% of the tax revenue for the government. The top 1% pay around half. When a politician decries "tax cuts for the rich", he is correct because in reality only the "rich" or more accurately high wage earners actually pay income tax.
While the living off of 55% of your income is kind of crummy, you can take comfort in two things. The first is that most 4 person families live off of far less. Second, your income will likely to continue to rise.
So live off less than you bring home, invest, and keep up the good work.
Congratulations on an amazing rise on salary. Please pat yourself on the back for such an accomplishment.
The best thing you can do is to hire a competent tax specialist. Here in the US, it is typically an accountant and they would tell you that there is not much they can do. Maximizing tax favored retirement accounts is about the best one can get away with. It is unlikely that gifting relatives will result in tax deductions.
Here in the US, high income types also invest in mutual funds that spin off few capital gain distributions after they have maximized their tax favored accounts. Dividends are less of a concern as they are taxed at a lower rate. That way money that is earned from investments do not significantly add to their tax bill.
Doing a bit of research, you are among the highest 10% of wealth earners in Canada. As such, you and those that make more than you, likely pay about 85% of the tax revenue for the government. The top 1% pay around half. When a politician decries "tax cuts for the rich", he is correct because in reality only the "rich" or more accurately high wage earners actually pay income tax.
While the living off of 55% of your income is kind of crummy, you can take comfort in two things. The first is that most 4 person families live off of far less. Second, your income will likely to continue to rise.
So live off less than you bring home, invest, and keep up the good work.
edited 7 hours ago
yoozer8
2,5775 gold badges12 silver badges26 bronze badges
2,5775 gold badges12 silver badges26 bronze badges
answered 7 hours ago
Pete B.Pete B.
56.7k14 gold badges124 silver badges176 bronze badges
56.7k14 gold badges124 silver badges176 bronze badges
add a comment
|
add a comment
|
If you own any works of art or ecologically sensitive lands you can donate those to a city government/museum/conservation trust/accredited charity and receive a tax refund for the appraised value of the donation. This would only net you a tax benefit if the appraised value was greater than what you spent, but it would deprive the government of money if that's your goal.
You might be able to convince an artist to sell you a piece at a discount with the agreement that you would subsequently be donating it to a museum or city collection as this would add to the artist's reputation. For information on cultural donnations read the Canada Revenue Agency's pamphlet on writing off donations: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/p113/p113-gifts-income-tax-2016.html
add a comment
|
If you own any works of art or ecologically sensitive lands you can donate those to a city government/museum/conservation trust/accredited charity and receive a tax refund for the appraised value of the donation. This would only net you a tax benefit if the appraised value was greater than what you spent, but it would deprive the government of money if that's your goal.
You might be able to convince an artist to sell you a piece at a discount with the agreement that you would subsequently be donating it to a museum or city collection as this would add to the artist's reputation. For information on cultural donnations read the Canada Revenue Agency's pamphlet on writing off donations: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/p113/p113-gifts-income-tax-2016.html
add a comment
|
If you own any works of art or ecologically sensitive lands you can donate those to a city government/museum/conservation trust/accredited charity and receive a tax refund for the appraised value of the donation. This would only net you a tax benefit if the appraised value was greater than what you spent, but it would deprive the government of money if that's your goal.
You might be able to convince an artist to sell you a piece at a discount with the agreement that you would subsequently be donating it to a museum or city collection as this would add to the artist's reputation. For information on cultural donnations read the Canada Revenue Agency's pamphlet on writing off donations: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/p113/p113-gifts-income-tax-2016.html
If you own any works of art or ecologically sensitive lands you can donate those to a city government/museum/conservation trust/accredited charity and receive a tax refund for the appraised value of the donation. This would only net you a tax benefit if the appraised value was greater than what you spent, but it would deprive the government of money if that's your goal.
You might be able to convince an artist to sell you a piece at a discount with the agreement that you would subsequently be donating it to a museum or city collection as this would add to the artist's reputation. For information on cultural donnations read the Canada Revenue Agency's pamphlet on writing off donations: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/publications/p113/p113-gifts-income-tax-2016.html
answered 4 hours ago
Dugan Dugan
554 bronze badges
554 bronze badges
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add a comment
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Tonio is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Tonio is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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7
Trying to minimize taxes used to pay for welfare and subsidized university? I'm with you philosophically on reducing taxes but the irony is too much.
– brian
8 hours ago
10
This is great. I love that beautiful moment someone enters the real world and has that "wait a minute...welfare is supposed to be free! You mean to tell me I have to pay for it? Hold on...but I earned this money. I should be able to keep it!!". And now you know why a huge segment of Americans don't want big social programs.
– acpilot
7 hours ago
6
According to this, gifts are not deductible for the giver, so how would this reduce your tax burden?
– D Stanley
7 hours ago
2
@DStanley Maybe OP thinks that he/she can gift money to friends who can't max out their RRSP headroom so that they can contribute more to their own RRSPs (and receive a refund at year end, which would draw more from the taxpayers' coffers). OP seems obsessed with minimizing money paid as taxes in general or finding creative ways to siphon from the tax pool and passing the benefit on to friends (i.e. views the government as an adversary).
– Cloud
7 hours ago
3
lol "living wage."
– quid
5 hours ago