Tax Residency Status for International Students
| Situation | Tax Residency | Filing Obligation |
|---|---|---|
| Study permit holder living in Canada year-round | Canadian tax resident | File T1; report worldwide income |
| Student with Canadian housing, bank account, and ties | Canadian tax resident | File T1 |
| International student in Canada 8+ months of the year | Generally Canadian resident | File T1 |
| Cross-border student commuting from USA | Depends on ties; may be non-resident | Consult CRA or a cross-border tax advisor |
| Student on exchange for under 6 months with no ties | May be non-resident | Only Canadian-source income reported |
Getting Your SIN as an International Student
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| Ensure you have work authorization | Study permit must include condition allowing work (on-campus, or off-campus permit condition) |
| Apply at Service Canada | In-person with study permit + passport + proof of address |
| SIN prefix | Begins with 9; valid only during your current permit |
| Renew your SIN when permit renews | Bring renewed study permit to Service Canada |
| Give SIN to employer | Required before first paycheque for payroll setup |
| Use on tax return | Same SIN used on your T1 return |
Understanding Your T4 as a Student
| T4 Box | What It Shows | What to Do with It |
|---|---|---|
| Box 14 | Total employment income | Line 10100 on T1 return |
| Box 16 | CPP contributions deducted | Line 30800 (generates CPP tax credit) |
| Box 18 | EI premiums deducted | Line 31200 (generates EI tax credit) |
| Box 22 | Income tax withheld | Line 43700 (tax already paid; may generate refund) |
CPP and EI for International Students
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| CPP contributions mandatory | Yes — deducted from all Canadian employment income |
| CPP pension eligibility | Need approximately 10+ years of contributions for a reduced pension |
| Totalization Agreement benefit | Combine Canadian CPP years + home country contribution years |
| EI contributions mandatory | Yes |
| EI benefit eligibility | Yes — if you lose a job, have valid study permit with work authorization, and enough insurable hours |
| Minimum hours for EI | 420–700 insurable hours (depends on regional unemployment rate) |
Investment Accounts Available to International Students
| Account | Available to Students | Key Rule |
|---|---|---|
| TFSA | Yes — if 18+ and Canadian tax resident | $7,000/year; stop if you become non-resident |
| RRSP | Yes — if you have earned income (T4) | 18% of prior year earned income; practical for students with higher part-time income |
| FHSA | Yes — if planning to buy a home | $8,000/year; must intend to buy in Canada |
| Non-registered account | Yes | Capital gains taxable |
| RESP (as a beneficiary) | Only if Canadian resident | Your parents/sponsor can contribute to RESP naming you as beneficiary |
Tax Credits and Benefits Available to International Students
| Benefit / Credit | Eligibility | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition tax credit (T2202) | Any Canadian university or college; T2202 slip required | 15% federal credit on tuition paid; carry forward if not used |
| GST/HST Credit | File T1; low to moderate income | Up to $519/year; paid quarterly |
| Climate Action Incentive | Most provinces; file T1 | $250–$450/year |
| Canada Workers Benefit | Working income under threshold | Up to $2,616/year |
| Textbook and education amount | Eliminated federally in 2017; some provinces still have it | Varies by province |
| Moving expenses | Moved 40km+ closer to school; eligible income required | Deductible on T1 against employment or scholarship income |
| Public transit pass | Federal credit eliminated; some provinces have credits | Check your province |
Scholarship and Bursary Tax Rules
| Income Type | Taxable? | T Slip |
|---|---|---|
| Scholarship / bursary (full-time student) | Exempt — not taxable | T4A Box 105 |
| Scholarship / bursary (part-time student) | Exempt up to tuition paid | T4A Box 105 |
| Research grant | Taxable income | T4A Box 104 |
| TA / RA paid via payroll by employer | Fully taxable employment income | T4 Box 14 |
| Athlete grant / Canada Summer Games | Partially exempt | T4A |
| Provincial student assistance (bursary) | Exempt if educational institution issues it | T4A Box 105 |
Tax Treaties — Student Exemptions
Some tax treaties include provisions specifically for students. Check if your home country’s treaty provides:
- An exemption from Canadian tax on part-time income from performing services (for students maintaining home-country residency)
- Reduced withholding on scholarship or fellowship income
- A period during which you are treated as a non-resident despite living in Canada (rare; treaty-specific)
Common countries with student provisions in their Canada treaties: USA (Article XX — students excluded from Canadian tax on remittances from home), Germany, Netherlands, UK.
Filing Your T1 Return as an International Student
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| 1 | Collect T4 (employment), T4A (scholarship, bursary), T2202 (tuition) |
| 2 | Use CRA NETFILE software — Wealthsimple Tax (free), TurboTax, CloudTax |
| 3 | Enter SIN (starts with 9 is fine) |
| 4 | Select “Canadian resident” if you have residential ties |
| 5 | Enter tuition (T2202 amounts) on Schedule 11 |
| 6 | Enter employment income from T4 |
| 7 | Enter scholarship/bursary from T4A Box 105 |
| 8 | File by April 30 |
What Happens to Your Tax Records When You Graduate and Leave Canada
| Item | Effect When You Leave |
|---|---|
| TFSA | Stop contributing; account stays open under non-resident rules |
| Unused tuition credits | Can carry forward indefinitely on your Canadian return; OR transfer to a parent (up to $5,000 per year) |
| CRA My Account | Remains accessible from abroad |
| RRSP (if any) | Stays; withdrawals subject to 25% withholding as non-resident |
| Final tax return | File a departure return (part-year resident) for the year you leave |