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Common Tax Mistakes Canadians Make in 2026

Updated

Top Tax Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Filing Mistakes

MistakeImpactHow to Avoid
Filing late (when you owe)5% penalty + 1%/month (up to 17%)Set a reminder for April 30 deadline
Forgetting to file (no balance owing)Lose refund; interrupts benefit payments (CCB, GST/HST credit)File even if you owe nothing
Wrong SIN or personal informationDelays processing; may not match CRA recordsDouble-check before submitting
Missing T-slipsCRA will reassess and may add penaltiesCheck My Account for all slips by end of March
Not reporting all income sourcesCRA matches T-slips; penalties for omissionReport everything, including gig and side income
Using the wrong tax year’s softwareApplies incorrect rates and creditsAlways use current-year certified software

Missed Deductions and Credits

Commonly Missed Credit/DeductionWho QualifiesTypical Value
RRSP contributionsAnyone with contribution room20–53% refund on contribution
Medical expensesOver-the-counter and prescribed costs above 3% of income or $2,759$200–$2,000+
Charitable donationsAnyone donating to registered charities15–33% credit
Tuition credit (federal)Post-secondary students15% of tuition paid
Moving expensesMoved 40+ km closer to work or schoolCost of move (up to income earned at new location)
Home office deductionEmployees working from home or self-employed$2/day (simplified) or actual expenses
Child care expensesParents with children under 16Up to $8,000/child under 7
Disability tax creditIndividuals with qualifying impairment$9,428 (2025) non-refundable credit
Canada Workers Benefit (CWB)Low-income workersUp to $1,518 (single)
Student loan interestAnyone repaying government student loans15% credit on interest paid
Union/professional duesEmployees who pay union or professional feesFull deduction
Northern residents deductionLiving in a prescribed northern zone$11/day (intermediate) to $22/day (northern)

RRSP and TFSA Mistakes

MistakeImpactHow to Avoid
Over-contributing to RRSP1%/month penalty on excess over $2,000Check your limit on My Account before contributing
Not claiming RRSP deduction for past contributionsPaying more tax than necessaryCarry forward and claim in a higher-income year
Contributing to RRSP after age 71Not allowed (must convert to RRIF by Dec 31 of year you turn 71)Contribute to spousal RRSP if spouse is under 71
Over-contributing to TFSA1%/month penalty on excessCheck room on My Account; avoid re-contributing in the same year as a withdrawal
Withdrawing from RRSP to fund short-term needsIncome tax + lost contribution roomUse TFSA or emergency savings instead
Not naming a beneficiaryRRSP/TFSA goes through estate (probate + delays)Name a beneficiary on the account

Self-Employment and Side Income Mistakes

MistakeImpactHow to Avoid
Not reporting side incomeCRA audits; penalties + interestReport all income over $500 on T2125
Not collecting GST/HST when requiredPenalties; owe back GST/HSTRegister once revenue exceeds $30,000 in 4 rolling quarters
Not saving receipts for business expensesCan’t claim deductions; lost savingsKeep receipts digitally (photos/scans) for 6 years
Not making quarterly instalment paymentsInterest chargesPay quarterly if net tax owing exceeds $3,000
Claiming personal expenses as businessAudit risk; penaltiesOnly claim expenses with a clear business purpose

Late-Filing and Late-Payment Penalties

SituationPenalty
Filed late, owe taxes (first offence)5% of balance + 1%/month (max 12 months)
Filed late, owe taxes (repeat offence)10% of balance + 2%/month (max 20 months)
Filed late, owe nothing or owed refundNo financial penalty, but delays refund and benefits
Paid late (filed on time)0% penalty, but compound daily interest on amount owing
Interest rate on unpaid balanceCRA prescribed rate + 4% (currently ~9–10%)
False statement or omission50% of understated tax or overstated credit (gross negligence penalty)