Zedbra | 08-08-2013 07:33 AM | If you are an employee, the company needs to supply you with a T2200 tax form. Said form states you must use your own vehicle to perform your job, and also states if the company pays you a car allowance or mileage per kilometre. Some companies pay both - mine does. If the company gives you a monthly car allowance, then they are not required to pay the mileage standard set by the CRA (around $0.56 per kilometre). (However, a good accountant can often weigh the difference between what the company pays, what the CRA credits should have been, and that gives you a further write-off.)
You must keep track everyday of all the kilometres that you use your car for business use. Driving to and from the office does not count - that is considered personal mileage. In fact, CRA only considers mileage after you reach your FIRST appointment as business use (though this is loosely observed).
Keep all receipts for repairs, supplies, and parts needed throughout the year to keep the car running. I keep everything - wiper receipts, cleaners, gas receipts, tires, oil changes, etc. If you have financed or leased the car, then (a percentage of) the interest can also be written off.
Tax credits are then calculated based on your cost to run the vehicle vs monies paid by the company (either as car allowance, mileage allowance, or both) vs percentage of business/personal use of the vehicle. You would be surprised how much of a benefit this is against your take-home wages. I often write-off up to $12k per year on my taxes and is sometimes the only reason I get a CRA refund.
If you need more precise details, contact a CGA - they can explain how everything is calculated and charge you a pretty penny to do such. |