A settlement or award for breach of contract will normally be considered tax-included if the following conditions are met:
- The payment is made by the “recipient” to the “supplier” rather than the other way round. That is, it is the purchaser, lessee or customer who is making the payment, and the vendor, lessor or supplier who is receiving it. (In other words, money is flowing in the same direction as it would have flowed under the contract.)
- The payment is for breach, termination or modification of a contract or agreement. (It need not be a written contract; an oral agreement to buy or lease property, or to provide services, is still a contract.)
- GST or HST was payable, or would have been payable, under the contract, if it had been fulfilled as planned.
In these circumstances, any settlement amount is normally deemed by the Excise Tax Act to be a total that already includes GST or HST.
The supplier (vendor, lessor) must carve out a fraction of the total and remit it to the Canada Revenue Agency as GST or HST. The fraction depends on the province. In Ontario (where the HST rate is 13%), the fraction is 13/113ths, or just over 11.5%. In the Atlantic provinces (15% HST rate), the fraction is 15/115ths. In non-HST provinces (5% GST rate), the fraction is 5/105ths. In Quebec, the Quebec Sales Tax (QST) is treated the same way.
The recipient (purchaser, lessee) can claim an input tax credit and recover the same amount from the CRA, if the recipient would have been able to claim the credit had the money been paid under the contract.
The same rule applies to an amount that is kept as a forfeited deposit.