If you are wondering whether you qualify for the GST/HST credit, the answer is usually simpler than people expect. The credit is meant for low- and moderate-income Canadians, and the biggest mistake is often not income. It is failing to file a tax return or assuming zero income means zero eligibility.
Quick GST credit eligibility checklist
You generally qualify if all of these are true:
| Requirement | Rule |
|---|---|
| Tax residency | You are a resident of Canada for tax purposes |
| Age | You are 19+, or under 19 with a spouse/partner or child |
| Tax filing | You filed your tax return |
| Income | Your family income is within the credit range |
If one of these is missing, payments may be reduced, delayed, or denied.
The age rule people miss
Most adults become eligible starting in the quarter after the month they turn 19.
| Situation | Can You Qualify? |
|---|---|
| Age 19 or older | Yes |
| Under 19, single, no child | Usually no |
| Under 19 with spouse/common-law partner | Yes |
| Under 19 and parent living with child | Yes |
This is why many students do not receive the credit until after they turn 19, even if their income is very low.
Income thresholds: do you make too much?
The GST/HST credit is income-tested, so higher family income reduces the amount.
| Household Type | Full or Near-Full Benefit Often Available Up To |
|---|---|
| Single person | around $44,000 |
| Couple | around $55,000 |
| Family with children | somewhat higher depending on family size |
These are rough guideposts, not hard cutoffs. The exact amount depends on your adjusted family net income and family composition.
For detailed payment estimates, see GST/HST Credit 2026.
Can you qualify with no income?
Yes. This is very common.
| Income Situation | Possible Outcome |
|---|---|
| No income, filed return, age 19+ | Often eligible |
| Low income from part-time work | Usually eligible |
| Moderate family income | Reduced credit |
| Higher family income | Reduced to zero |
The CRA still needs your return, even if you had no job, no T4, and no tax owing.
Your spouse or partner affects eligibility
The GST/HST credit is based on family income, not just your personal income.
| Relationship Status | CRA Uses |
|---|---|
| Single | Your own income |
| Married | Combined family income |
| Common-law | Combined family income |
That means someone with very low personal income can lose part or all of the credit if their spouse or common-law partner earns more.
Are newcomers eligible?
Often yes, but not always automatically.
Newcomers may qualify if they are residents of Canada for tax purposes. In some cases, additional CRA forms are needed when you first arrive, especially if you have not yet filed a full Canadian return.
If your residency status is unclear, review am I a Canadian tax resident.
Common reasons people do not receive it
You may not get the GST credit if:
- You did not file a return.
- You are under 19 and do not meet the exception rules.
- Your family income is too high.
- Your marital status with CRA is wrong.
- Your address or direct deposit information is outdated.
Estimated payment examples
| Situation | Approximate Annual Credit |
|---|---|
| Single, low income | about $500+ |
| Couple, low income | about $680+ |
| Family with children | higher depending on child count |
The credit is usually paid quarterly, not monthly.
What to do if you think you qualify but are not getting it
- Confirm you filed your return.
- Check your CRA marital status.
- Confirm your residency status and mailing address.
- Review your notice of assessment.
- Contact CRA if the payment still appears missing.
Bottom line
You are likely eligible for the GST/HST credit if you are a resident of Canada for tax purposes, meet the age or family-status rule, file your return, and have low to moderate family income. The most common reason eligible people miss out is simple: they do not file.