I am NO expert and NOT qualified to give personal advice; so I do not offer personal advice.@dpenabill and other senior members
My application was sent on 3rd March 20019 and received on 06-03-2019 (dd-mm-yyyy).
Mine is family application and I have filed taxes for me and my wife for 2014,2015,2016,2017 and we were required to file and filed regularly.
But for 2018, mine RRSP slip from employer was not received so I could not file the return until a week later. And as a general rule, I and my wife goes to our Chartered Accountant office together so her tax return was also pending and we both filed the tax return a week later after application was received. Please note that, currently tax returns has already been filed.
So for me and my wife its like
Year - Required to file - Filed
2014 - Y - Y
2015 - Y - Y
2016 - Y - Y
2017 - Y - Y
2018 - Y - N
do you think that it would okay ?
Please advise. Its increasing my anxiety now...
In general terms:
Technically there is NO requirement to file before April 30 (or later, such as by June 15 for many, such as those self-employed). So for applications made so far in 2018, and prior to actually filing a return, there is no problem responding "No/No" for tax year 2018. Last I looked the IRCC information online also states this (albeit worded somewhat differently).
If the applicant has nonetheless already filed for 2018, it is OK to answer "Yes/Yes" (or even "No/Yes").
A "Yes/Yes" for three of the previous five years meets the requirements anyway.
So it is NOT clear why you have anxiety now.
NOTE: IRCC does NOT engage in gotcha-games. These are not trick questions. Yes, the applicant's information must (1) be sufficiently complete to meet IRCC requirements for making a proper application, and (2) certain details must meet the specific requirements (PR at least two years, physical presence credit for at least 1095 days in five years, language ability proof if applicable, compliance with CRA tax filing obligations for at least three of five years), but beyond that the applicant's answers are informational. Mistakes are expected and common. Imprecise answers are common. IRCC is NOT looking for technicalities to justify denying applications.
The vast majority of qualified applicants who made a reasonably diligent effort to completely, honestly, and appropriately provide the information requested SHOULD HAVE NO PROBLEM . . . other than perhaps being stuck in a long timeline which appears to be affecting many applicants now. NO NEED TO WORRY. Relax. Wait, wait and watch for communications from IRCC, and respond appropriately.