Hello everyone,
We became Canadian PR in 10/2023 and have stayed for 150 days in Canada in 2024. So we are not required to file any Canadian tax for 2023 and 2024. We work in the U.S. east coast and have always been paying tax to the IRS.
Now coming into 2025, we aim to live in Canada for 300 days each for this year and the next two years to fulfill the citizenship residency requirement. We bought a house in Montreal and will commute weekly from US and Montreal. We also have a home in the State. The question comes down to we have significant ties with both US and Canada and is it possible for us to claim that we are residents in US and not filing Canada and Quebec tax for the next couple of years? Our car, insurance, work, and income are all in the U.S.. we only have a place to live in Canada when we come here. I know there is 183 day rule but even if you live more than 183 days it still comes down to significant ties to decide tax residency.
and when we file for citizenship we will submit the tax obligation form as
Required to file/file?
No No
No No
No No
No No
No No
if that is not possible and we are tax residents of both US and Canada then it will become
No No
No No
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
I understand that from IRCC standpoint they probably would more likely to believe the person below fulfills the tax requirement than the one above. However, we both have to pay a huge amount of additional tax to CRA and Quebec. So just wondering is that possible to not file any tax with CRA and Quebec but still fulfill the residency and tax requirements when we apply for citizenship?
Again, this is purely a technical tax discussion and in no way we are trying to avoid any tax obligations. We have consulted tax experts but they didn’t understand IRCC rule. We have asked immigration experts but they also didn’t understand the CRA rule. I am also trying to find a job in Montreal but things have not been easy so far. Every dollar saved can be used to kids and family. Thank you very much for your help and advice!
We became Canadian PR in 10/2023 and have stayed for 150 days in Canada in 2024. So we are not required to file any Canadian tax for 2023 and 2024. We work in the U.S. east coast and have always been paying tax to the IRS.
Now coming into 2025, we aim to live in Canada for 300 days each for this year and the next two years to fulfill the citizenship residency requirement. We bought a house in Montreal and will commute weekly from US and Montreal. We also have a home in the State. The question comes down to we have significant ties with both US and Canada and is it possible for us to claim that we are residents in US and not filing Canada and Quebec tax for the next couple of years? Our car, insurance, work, and income are all in the U.S.. we only have a place to live in Canada when we come here. I know there is 183 day rule but even if you live more than 183 days it still comes down to significant ties to decide tax residency.
and when we file for citizenship we will submit the tax obligation form as
Required to file/file?
No No
No No
No No
No No
No No
if that is not possible and we are tax residents of both US and Canada then it will become
No No
No No
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
I understand that from IRCC standpoint they probably would more likely to believe the person below fulfills the tax requirement than the one above. However, we both have to pay a huge amount of additional tax to CRA and Quebec. So just wondering is that possible to not file any tax with CRA and Quebec but still fulfill the residency and tax requirements when we apply for citizenship?
Again, this is purely a technical tax discussion and in no way we are trying to avoid any tax obligations. We have consulted tax experts but they didn’t understand IRCC rule. We have asked immigration experts but they also didn’t understand the CRA rule. I am also trying to find a job in Montreal but things have not been easy so far. Every dollar saved can be used to kids and family. Thank you very much for your help and advice!