Notice to the reader:
You may have received a 2004 or 2006 version of the T5013, Statement of Partnership Income, slip. Below you will find instructions for both versions. Use the instructions that apply to the version of the T5013 slip you received.
This credit is for foreign income or profits taxes you paid on income you received from outside Canada and reported on your Canadian return. Tax treaties with other countries may affect whether you are eligible for this credit.
Note
You may have deducted an amount on line 256 for income that is not taxable in Canada under a tax treaty. In that case, do not include that income, or any tax withheld from it, in your foreign tax credit calculation.
If you paid tax to more than one foreign country, and the total non-business income tax you paid to all foreign countries is more than $200, you have to do a separate calculation for each country for which you claim a foreign tax credit. In that case, enter the total of your allowable federal foreign tax credit on line 42 of Schedule 1 or line 45 for residents of Quebec.
You also have to do a separate calculation for business income taxes paid to each foreign country. In that case, use Form T2209, Federal Foreign Tax Credits, to calculate your credit for both non business income taxes and the business income taxes paid to each foreign country. For tax years ending before March 23, 2004, you can carry unclaimed foreign business income taxes back three years and forward seven years. For tax years ending after March 22, 2004, the carry forward period is 10 years.
In most cases, the foreign tax credit you can claim for each foreign country is whichever of the following two amounts is lower:
Note
If you paid tax on income from foreign property (other than real property), your foreign tax credit for the income from that property cannot be more than 15% of your net income from that property. However, you may be able to deduct on line 232 the part of the foreign taxes you paid over 15%.
Beginning in 2004, your contribution to a foreign public pension plan is considered as a non-business income tax for foreign tax credit purposes where the following two conditions apply:
Note
U.S. FICA payments qualify for this credit.
For details on how to calculate your claim, read Interpretation Bulletin IT-270, Foreign Tax Credit and ITNEWS-31R2 Income Tax - Technical News.
Supporting documents - If you are filing a paper return, include your documents, such as official receipts, that show the foreign taxes you paid, and a note showing your calculations. Also include Form T2209, if you use it. If you paid taxes to the United States (U.S.), attach your W-2 information slip, U.S. 1040 return, and any other supporting documents that apply. If you are filing electronically, keep all your documents in case we ask to see them.
Tax TipsYour federal foreign tax credit on non-business income may be less than the tax you paid to a foreign country. If so, and you were not a resident of Quebec on December 31, 2006, you may be able to claim a provincial or territorial foreign tax credit. Get Form T2036, Provincial or Territorial Foreign Tax Credit, to help you calculate the credit.
If you were a resident of Quebec on December 31, 2006, see the guide for your provincial income tax return for Quebec.
Also, on line 232, you may be able to deduct the amount of net foreign taxes you paid for which you have not received a federal, provincial, or territorial foreign tax credit. This does not include certain taxes you paid, such as those on amounts you could have deducted under a tax treaty on line 256. For details, get Interpretation Bulletin IT506, Foreign Income Taxes as a Deduction From Income.
Otherwise:
Be sure to complete the tax and credit form for your province or territory of residence as the provincial or territorial credit is calculated separately.