qbosch said:
I am a Canadian. I married a Korean woman. I have lived in Korea for 19 years, and I am considered a non-resident of Canada. I suddenly just got a job in Canada. I have to leave Korea in a couple of days. My wife and two kids will move back with all our assets (about $700,000 Canadian) in four months after she is able to sell our house. We may have a shipping container full of household goods that will follow her as well. I know that it is important to declare all my money and goods coming into Canada before I enter. But I won't have the time for this. Can my wife (who is not a Canadian citizen) do this when she enters with my kids? I ask for tax purposes. I don't want to be taxed on all my assets that I have already paid tax on here in Korea.
Slightly different advice based on my reading of the situation. But this advice is based on your wife being sponsored by you for her PR. As you are Canadian I'm assuming your Children have Citizenship through birth?
If you don't declare your goods then you wife can bring them if she is 'settling' in Canada. All goods are tax free up to a value of CAD 10,000 per item. You can actually bring any amount of money into Canada as long as you declare (especially cash) it and can show where it comes from. It's only if you don't declare it that they get upset as they think you have something to hide.
Finally, again through investigation the B4 and B4A don't seem to be used anymore, someone correct me if I'm wrong. The form to use now is BSF186 and BSF186A
Link below on the CBSA website:
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/newcomers/before-border.asp
This page is for newcomers but if you click on the PDF you'll see that it's the same form for Settler, Former Resident, Seasonal Resident, or Beneficiary
Hope that helps.