Charitable Donations
Charitable donations must be made by December 31 to be counted for this year.
Charitable donations receive special tax assistance. Donations that exceed $200 per year give you a significant tax credit. If you are in the top federal tax bracket (over $210,371 of taxable income after all deductions), the federal credit is 33% of the lesser of your donations over $200 and the amount of your taxable income in the top bracket. If you are not in the top bracket, the federal credit is 29%. As well, there is a provincial credit that typically increases the total credit to something in the range of 40-50%, or even higher.
If you are not in the top tax bracket, you can benefit by receiving income and donating it back to a charity. This may be possible if you volunteer for a charity. If the charity pays you for your volunteer work, and you donate the money back to the charity, you will come out ahead.
For example, suppose you are in a 30% tax bracket (including provincial tax), and you have already made over $200 in donations this year. If the charity pays you $10,000 for work you have done for it, your tax bill will go up $3,000 (maybe a bit higher, if you move up to the next bracket). If you donate the same $10,000 back to the charity, your tax bill will go down about $4,500 (varying by province). The net is a saving of about $1,500 after tax.
Of course, the income must represent real work you do for the charity, and your donation must be voluntary. You and the charity also need to determine whether you are an employee or an independent contractor. If you are an employee, the charity must issue you a T4 and might have to withhold some tax at source. If you are an independent contractor, you may be able to deduct expenses from your “business income”, providing you with even more tax savings; and if your total business revenues for the year exceed $30,000 you may need to charge GST or HST.
An even simpler technique is to have the charity reimburse you for actual expenses you have incurred as a volunteer (e.g., travel and parking costs). Such reimbursements, provided they are reasonable, are not taxable to you. You can then donate the reimbursed amount back to the charity and get a tax credit.
Another idea to consider is donating publicly-traded shares or mutual fund units to a charity. If you do this, you do not pay tax on any capital gain on the securities, but the donation is valued for tax purposes at its current fair market value. If you are considering making a donation to a charity, and you have some securities that have gone up in value, donating the securities will be very tax effective.
Overall, you can claim charitable donations up to 75% of your “net income” for tax purposes. Net income is basically your income after most deductions, but before claiming the capital gains deduction (capital gains exemption) or any loss carryovers from other years.
In every case, make sure to get a tax receipt from the charity that meets all of the conditions specified in section 3501 of the Income Tax Regulations, or you will not be entitled to the credit.
Note that donations of property will be valued at your cost of the property, if you acquired the property within the past 3 years or if you acquired it for the purpose of donating it. (This rule does not apply to publicly-traded securities or certain other property.) This prevents the so-called “gifting” schemes which used to attract many taxpayers, who would purchase art or other goods for less than their appraised value and then donate the art to a charity for a high-value tax receipt. Note also that the CRA carefully audits donations of property to check whether the value that is provided on the tax receipt is correct.
RRSP contributions
If either you or your spouse are not yet 71 this year, then you can normally make contributions to a registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) and deduct them from your income for tax purposes. Your RRSP contribution limit for 2018 is based on your 2017 “earned income” as well as your pension adjustment (reflecting future pension credited to you in 2017 from your being a member of a company pension plan).
Your available RRSP contribution room should be printed on the Notice of Assessment that you received from the CRA after you filed your 2017 return in the spring of 2018. Your maximum contribution room for 2018 is: