The tax deadline is
fast approaching – the deadline to file your 2013 return, as always, is April
30th – are you ready? Getting your returns in order and filing on
time can sometimes be an annual hassle, but it can’t be avoided. Filing online
is growing in popularity, and can be done from the comfort of your own home.
But what if you miss the deadline – what are the consequences of this?
If filing taxes seems
like a hassle, then dealing with the consequences of missing the tax deadline
can seem like a nightmare, especially if you owe. Missing the deadline when you
are owed money just means waiting longer to receive it (why would anyone want
to do that?), but when you owe money, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) won’t
wait – and that tax debt will just continue to grow the longer you wait to pay
it.
What are we talking
about here? When you owe a tax debt, interest and penalties accumulate at an
alarming rate, to the tune of 5% of the total tax debt plus 1% monthly for up
to 12 months. Additionally, if you filed late in previous years, your penalty
can increase to 10% of the total tax debt plus 2% monthly for up to 20 months.
These additional charges are significant, and left unpaid can grow to become
larger than the total debt you originally owed.
Interest and penalties
are not the only things that contribute to your tax debt becoming seriously
problematic. Once the CRA knows that you owe, they can get pretty aggressive in
their attempts to gather the money. Good cop, bad cop tactics to obtain your
personal information, collection calls, and enforcement action (wage
garnishments, frozen bank accounts) are all realistic and costly outcomes of a
missed deadline and failure to pay.
So, knowing all of
this, how can you avoid the irksome effects? If you know that you are going to
end up owing money to the CRA it is a smart idea to have a plan in place before
they learn about it. Firstly, if you have the ability to pay the debt in full
upon filing, great – do that. This will solve the problem before it starts and
leave you in a fresh financial position tax-wise. However, if you don’t think
you can pay the debt in full, getting a plan in place to do so is a very smart
idea.
For more information
about avoiding the consequences of a missed tax deadline please contact
DebtCare Canada by calling 1 (888) 890-0888 or visit us
online at www.debtcare.ca
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ReplyDeleteNice information, on target, publish good stuff excellent
ReplyDeleteDebt Collection
A tax deadline cannot be missed . Rightly said the Canada Revenue Agency will not wait and the tax debt will just continue to grow the longer you wait to pay it. Consult a Canadian tax adviser and get the services of KPMG who can help out with the tax systems.
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