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Canadian GST/HST Rules are changing July 1st 2021: Don't Miss Those Credits!

6/28/2021

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In the fall of 2020, the sales tax rules were proposed to be changed for e-commerce (electronic commerce) supplies starting July 1st 2021.  As Bill C-30 is being finalized, the bigger e-commerce providers see the writing on the wall and are updating their fees to also charge GST/HST. Now, when a foreign business sell to consumers in Canada, they may need to charge GST/HST!

Today, I just received an email from Spotify letting me know that starting July 1st, they will be charging me GST/HST on their services. You may have heard Netflix too is adding GST/HST starting July 1st.  Shopify already had started charging GST/HST on their services a long time ago.

When we entered our expenses for digital services charged by a non-Canadian business in the past, if the fees were in USD, or if they were charged from a US company, it was safe to assume there was no GST/HST being charged.  Even before this new bill, that was beginning to be less and less the case!  

What electronic subscriptions related to business do you have that may now have GST/HST credits for you that didn't before July 1st?  Even if you are being charged in US funds, don't assume there is or is not GST/HST!  Go to your settings and check out the actual invoice, and see if there is GST/HST being charged that you can claim back from CRA on your next HST return!


Here's CRA's FAQ on the new proposed changes
Further reading on this can be found on BDO and CPA Canada


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Setting Up Your Success Routine

6/10/2021

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Habits and routines are KEY in maintaining your data management. Do you constantly forget to brush your teeth in the morning? Probably not, because it is part of your morning routine. Habits can be a bad thing, but, they can also be good when implemented consciously! Intentionally create routines and processes that your future self with thank you later for. Let’s review some suggestions for routines to help you create your processes:


  •  Do your bookkeeping data entry every week, or every month. Do not wait longer than a month. You want to know what last month’s reports are showing within two weeks of the month ending.


  • Set aside a special day and time to work on your paperwork and bookkeeping. You must make time for it. It must become a habit or ritual. I call it the “Weekly Win Day”. Every Saturday morning, grab your car folder you brought indoors the night before, grab your notebook, grab a coffee or a glass of wine, put on some jazz music, and enter your paperwork. Relax and enjoy it. Relish the feeling of being on top of your paperwork. This is your story, this is your data, this is your business. 


  • Set aside a special day and time to work on your paperwork and bookkeeping. You must make time for it. It must become a habit or ritual. I call it the “Weekly Win Day”. This is not repeated because of a typo. It is repeated because it is extremely important! You could choose one Super Saturday morning every month, and put the entire month in, from start to finish, or take a few minutes every morning to enter the paperwork from the day before, and to clear your bank feed. Maybe you choose to set aside a Fabulous Friday morning, and put in the previous week. Maybe you choose a Magic Monday night, (magic, because your paperwork get’s magically done!). Whatever works for you. Though, I do suggest weekly. If it is not you doing the actual bookkeeping, you will still need to set time aside either daily or weekly to manage your paperwork, and correspond with the bookkeeper, forwarding requesting documents that you may have missed. Trust me, you’ll always be missing something.


  • Aim to intentionally stick with this weekly routine for Four weeks. Studies show that it takes about three weeks to create a new habit. If you cannot maintain the routine, do not be disappointed with yourself. Acknowledge that the routine you set up does not work for you and change the environment or routine such that it does work for you. Catch up and never give up. The bigger the pile grows, the less you will enjoy doing it. Doing a few minutes a day entering the transactions from the day before may work better for you than having a growing pile staring at you every week.


  • Use technology and processes together to make your life easier.  For example, I only ever buy gas at Esso, and I only use my business bank account to fill my business vehicle. Because of that real life rule I’ve created for myself “Only Buy GAS at Esso, and ALL gas paid with card X is the Business Vehicle”, I can set up an auto rule in my bank feed on Quickbooks to put all Esso transactions from that card to “Vehicle Gas” expense, without me even looking at it or touching the app.  Learn the tech, it will make your life easier.  Work with your tech, it will make your life beautiful.


  • If you fall behind, catch up and never give up. When catching up, do one month at a time, from start to finish. If you are doing your own bookkeeping, reconcile that one month (confirm all entries in the bookkeeping are on the bank statement and credit card statement) and solve unknowns before moving onto the next month. Entering more than one month at time may cause you to repeat errors that you would have understood and resolved when reconciling the first month, if you had focused on one month at a time. Entering and reconciling one month at a time when doing catch up also helps the pile seem surmountable. If you are not trying to tackle a huge pile, just one month at a time, and it will feel more manageable.


  • Write down important due dates, such as GST/HST, payroll taxes, tax installments, etc., on your calendar. Every Monday morning check this calendar to see what government due dates need to be paid that week. If you’re ready, go ahead and pay them on this weekly win day. No one says you have to pay ON the due date. Paying a few days early, on your weekly win day, takes it off your “I have to remember to do this” list. Remembering that you have to do something takes up Brain Bandwidth. You only have so much bandwidth, spend it wisely!


  • Looking at what is due once a week and paying it then and there is a great way to be efficient with your brain bandwidth, and also saves you from late penalties. Don’t give CRA more money than you have to! This is why I suggest a Fabulous Friday, Super Saturday or Sunday, or a Magic Monday, so that you can not only take care of the paperwork from the week that just passed, but you can also prepare yourself for the coming week. If you choose to do a Fabulous Friday (which is a great idea because the week has only just finished), the write down a to do note for yourself Monday Morning, and start your work week off on the right foot.


  • Every month look at your unpaid bills list and your unpaid invoices list. Clear up anything that does not make sense. Look at these lists monthly even if you have outsourced your bookkeeping.


  • Create and keep a monthly checklist. Checklists hold more power than you realize. Make sure everything is done on that checklist. Find an example Business Checklist here


  • Checklists and Calendars are how you win. Your brain has a limited amount of bandwidth. Spend it wisely. 


  • Every month review the Income Statement and compare it to the prior few months. Make sure there is nothing that jumps out as missing or incorrect. Then really take an analytical eye to it, and see if there are higher expenses in certain places than you realized. Are you happy with the profit? Why or why not? 


  • You should also plan to put aside a percentage of your monthly profit into a savings account for income tax each month. Unlike employees, no one is deducting income tax from your income for you! As your business profit increases, so will your taxes. Your accountant can suggest a percentage based on your situation. I personally do 20%


  • Every month, review the Balance Sheet. Make sure there is nothing that jumps out as missing or incorrect. Then take a look at how much Shareholder Draws or Equity you have pulled out so far. Is this greater or less than the profit of the business so far? Then see how much your GST/HST payable balance has increased from last month. 


  • Each month put the GST/HST you have collected for the month into your business savings account and do not touch it. You can also put aside any other liabilities collected, such as payroll deductions from employees for the month, into this bank account. 


  • Reward yourself with a fancy beverage of your choice as you bathe in the completion of another month’s worth of information tracking. Feel the control you have over your business.


​I cannot understate how much time and money these intentional and simple things can save! It only takes 10 seconds to put the receipt into a folder in your car instead of tossing it in the back seat and having to search and gather all your paperwork later on. So make this a habit. You may find that entering your expenses every week only takes about 30 minutes for your business once you begin to get quicker at it. If you leave it until it is a large pile, sorting through all the papers will end up taking exponentially longer. Reconciling the bank every month, and clearing the bank feed every week, helps if there is a transaction that is missing a receipt. You will have a much better chance of remembering what that transaction was and was for. Set up and start these processes, routines, habits, and rituals now, and your business will be humming along later instead of careening off the rails.
Make these routines your own, but make them. I call it “Setting Up Your Success Routine”. Studies have shown that it takes about three weeks to create a new habit. Also, keep in mind that changing Systems is Easier Than Changing Behaviors. If your system fails, don’t try and change your behavior; try to change your system. 
Pill boxes marked with the days of the week is a good example of changing a system instead of a behavior. We often have the best intentions, but we often forget until something is worked into our routine. Even routines are systems that may need changing. If you forget to take your medication each day, simply trying to change only your behavior is often a failing challenge. Change the system, change the routine. Maybe you could put your medication bottle next to your coffee maker and take your pill every time you make your morning coffee. You may find that then the question becomes, ‘did I take the medication’? Tweak the routine, buy a pill box marked with the days of the week, and refill it for Sunday to Saturday the moment you take your Saturday pill. 
Use this perspective as you develop your business routines. If they are not working, change them. It is easier to change a routine or process than to try and change just the behavior. If Friday nights do not work for you, try a time that does, such as Monday mornings. 
Work with yourself. There’s the phrase “Don't change your habits, change your habitat.” For example, do you constantly leave your socks on the floor in the living room? Put a hamper in the living room.   Do you constantly leave paperwork on that side desk in the hallways? Put a folder there specifically for the business documents.  Willpower is hard to control. We have more control over our environment, so set up the environment such that these processes are easier to put into practice. Our brain has less bandwidth than we think, and we will forget things that we were confident that we would remember. But we rarely forget to brush our teeth! Similarly, set up habits and routines that need no brain bandwidth to maintain, and you will set yourself, and your business, up for success.
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What Expenses Can a Business Claim?

6/10/2021

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I’m often asked, what expenses can a business claim? There are the obvious ones of course. A list of the standard categories to add up can be found at here, but what are the not so obvious transactions that a business needs to track? What expenses can a business claim?

A core message you hear from me is:  We are tracking our totals mainly for our own benefit, to make sure we are achieving the profit and growth we are aiming for. To this end, we want to make sure to capture all transactions that that would not have happened if we were not running the business. We want to get as close to reality as possible. In order to do so, we must keep our personal purchases separate from those that are business related.

Special Hack for the Grey Situations: "Would I Reimburse An Employee For That?" 

A really good guide for know what is business and what is personal is to think, ‘’Would I reimburse my employee for that?”.  For example, if you asked them to pick up donuts for the entire office because of an office meeting, would you expect them to pay for all the donuts? No, you would have no issues with giving them the money to cover it. If they went out at lunch to buy themselves a fast food lunch, and brought back the receipt, would you cover that? Probably not, especially if they did that every day. If you were at a job site that was far enough away from home that you and your crew needed to stay overnight in a hotel, would you cover that for them? Yes. Also, because they could not go home to pack a lunch the next day, you would probably cover their travel meal. Often, construction companies offer compensation for safety rated steel toed boots. In contrast, if one of your sales reps came into your office and said, “I need to have fresh breath for when I do my sales pitch to prospective clients, so I expect you to cover the cost of my toothpaste” you would likely think he was crazy!

Using the “would I reimburse an employee for this” guideline can be extremely helpful in deciding if it is an expense you believe is related to running the business or not. It also helps in considering if it is an expense that the CRA would allow if you are ever audited, because their goal is to find the number that is closest to reality too. 

ProTip: If you are claiming a meal expense, write down on the receipt who you met and how it was related to business, so that the info is there if you are audited.  And yes, you can include the Tip in the entry.  (But know that even business meals expenses are only claimed at 50% for tax purposes).  If you are travelling out of town, you can claim travel meal.  But if you're in town, and you're not meeting a business related person, then it's not claimable, as per the guideline above, "would I reimburse an employee for this". 


Mixed Use Expenses:
These guidelines also can help to understand mixed use expenses that you are allowed to claim. Mixed Use expenses are expenses that support the running of the business that also support the running of your non-business life, such as your car and your home office.

Let’s start with Vehicle Expenses

If you had a company truck that your employees picked up at the shop, and use to go to jobsites or clients, would you expect them to pay for any of the gas or maintenance? No, you would cover those truck expenses 100%.  Similarly as a business owner, a company vehicle that is used 100% for business, you can claim 100% of all expenses. But when you start out, you generally have a personal vehicle that you use for both personal errands and business running around, that is used for less than 100% for business.

If your employee used their own vehicle to just drive into the office in the morning, and then back home at the end of the day, would you cover the cost of their gas and vehicle maintenance? No. Driving to and from the main place of work, such as a store or office, is not something you would reimburse for.  CRA also does not consider this business use if you're just driving into your own office.  If your employee drove around in their own vehicle to sales appointments, they would expect some sort of compensation. Would you cover every single gas receipt they put in their car for the entire year, and 100% of all their maintenance bills? No. How would you feel if they drove 10 minutes to a meeting, and 10 minutes back from a meeting, and filled up their gas tank from empty along the way? Would you reimburse for the full tank of gas? No. In Canada, we generally use “Vehicle allowance” or a “per km rate” to reimburse employees for use of their personal car. Though, for business owners, currently in Canada, it is a bit more complex. 

For business owners, CRA would like to get a little closer to reality. That is, the per km rate does not account for higher maintenance costs for certain vehicles, or the variance of gas prices across the country. So, they become more detailed for business owners. (As mentioned above, getting as close to reality as possible).

For business owners, the way that the CRA allows vehicle expenses is by percentage. If you use your vehicle for business, you can claim the percentage of all your expenses that correlate with the percentage of time you use your vehicle for business. To do that, they expect you to keep a vehicle log so that the percentage can be calculated. They are trying to get as close to reality as possible. No more, no less. You can claim that percentage of ALL the vehicle expenses; maintenance, gas, plates, insurance, lease, Capital Cost Allowance (the vehicle losing value over time) or the interest on the loan. (Not the full loan payments. Paying down a loan is not an expense, it is decreasing how much you owe. It is the interest on the loan, that is an expense, and you can claim a percentage of that).

If you have a work vehicle that you ONLY use for business, then the percentage you are claiming is 100%. If you use your vehicle half the time for business, and the other half the time for personal, then you can only claim 50% of your vehicle expenses. If you use your vehicle for both personal and business, you are required to keep a vehicle log, and to note your odometer at the beginning of every year. (There are apps that can help!) If you use your vehicle for 90% or more for business use, then keep a vehicle log for 3 months with the odometer reading from the beginning and the end of the three months, and you can use that as a baseline to show CRA if you are ever reviewed or audited.

The next question is, how do you track all of the vehicles expenses, if you are only claiming a portion, especially if you do not know the percentage until the log is added up at the end of the year?
Good question.

Many bookkeeping software applications have not yet accounted for this percentage issue, (often referred to as “allocations” or “Personal Use Allocations”). Some have, especially since the rules for the amount you can claim for GST/HST on these expenses follow the same rule. Most have not, even the bigger named bookkeeping software. Many of them work on the assumption that your vehicle is 100% business use. 

You have options. To make your bookkeeping easier, if possible, you can try to focus on only one vehicle for business use and use another for personal errands. Otherwise, here are some suggestions:
  • If you use the vehicle for more than 90% business, you can treat it as if you use it 100% for business. 
  • If you use the vehicle for 50% to 90% for business, you could enter all the expenses into the software, and keep in mind that the vehicle expense total on your profit and loss is higher than what you will end up claiming at the end of the year when looking at your Income Statement. Then you would subtract the personal portion with an adjustment at the end of the year. 
  • If you use the vehicle for less than 50% business use, you can put the vehicle expenses into a special “Owners Vehicle Use” equity account on the balance sheet, and then ADD with an adjustment to the expenses at the end of the year. 
Pro Tip – use only one payment method for that specific vehicle’s gas, and a different payment method for the rest of the family’s gas. This way, you can see the total gas for that specific car easily by knowing, “all gas purchased with xyz card is for Vehicle A”.  Work smarter not harder!

If you are incorporated, it’s important to discuss how you will be handling your vehicle costs with your accountant at the beginning of the year. Also, before you purchase a vehicle, connect with your accountant to ask whether they think given your specific situation the vehicle should be purchased in your name or the corporation’s name.

Business Use of Home Expenses
Another scenario to consider. Kind of weird, but in keeping with the ‘would you reimburse your employee’ metaphor. If you wanted an office to run your business out of, and one of your employees said they had the perfect room for you at their place, would you expect to be able to work from their home office for free? Probably not. They would likely expect some sort of rent to be paid. Similarly, this is why CRA allows you to include your own home office as an expense. Then how do they calculate this amount?

It is a percentage game again. 

There are two categories to consider here. The cost of maintaining your home that you would have to pay anyway if you had a business or not, and those costs that are higher than usual because you are running a business, such as telephone and internet use, and maybe electricity if you have a workshop on your property.

For those costs you would have to pay anyway, first you calculate the percentage your office space takes up in your home. Then, you add up all the costs it takes to run your home; utilities, insurance, maintenance, property taxes, rent or mortgage interest (not the full mortgage payments, just the interest portion). These are not usually paid for out of the business bank account, because they are below 50% business use, and would really mess up your Income Statement totals. We usually total these up at the end of the year (and associated HST), and then add an adjustment in at the end of the year, mainly to decrease your taxable income. For my personal situation, I claim 12.5% of my Business Use of Home expenses (Also known as home office expenses).

The other category to consider are the home mixed expenses that are higher because you are running the business, such as telephone and internet use. 
​These can be claimed at a higher percentage, and you likely want to see them on your Income Statement, because you want to consider them when evaluating your profit. Consider adding the business portion only into your monthly entries into your bookkeeping, along with associated HST. Still pay the full bill out of your personal account, but mark the business portion of the expense you enter as “Paid by Owner” (or, paid by cash).


Mixed Expenses can be a pain. But, they do help reduce your taxable profit! And in the context of wanting to get as close to reality as possible, how CRA expects them to be claimed, and how you want to see them when evaluating your Income Statement, you can see how it is helpful to know what is expected and how you are going to handle them ahead of time! For example, right now, go outside and write down your odometer reading. Then grab a notebook to keep in the car, or download an app, to keep track of kilometers you drive for business!
In Summary: Start a vehicle log, today.

- You can claim a portion of all your vehicle expenses. The percentage you can claim is related to the percentage you drive your car in the year for business. The vehicle expenses you want to track are:

  • Vehicle Gas
  • Vehicle Insurance
  • Vehicle maintenance 
  • Vehicle License Plate Sticker costs
  • Interest on a Vehicle Loan
  • Vehicle Lease

Notice that I wrote “Vehicle” in every expense there. For clarity, you need to name your Ledger accounts specifically with the word “Vehicle” in it. Do not put all insurance into one GL account. This will cause headaches at year end. Put your Vehicle Insurance into It’s own GL Account, and put your business insurance into it’s own GL Account.

- You can claim a portion of all the expenses it costs you to live in your home. This is a much lower percentage, so it usually is an adjustment added in at the end of the year. The Home Expenses you will need totals for are:


  • Home Insurance
  • The INTEREST on your home Mortgage (just the interest, the mortgage company will mail you the total interest paid in the year to you in January)
  • Home Utilities such as Hydro Electricity, Heating costs, and Water costs.
  • Some home Maintenance costs. (A higher percentage if related to your home office).
  • Home Rent if you rent.
  • You generally can claim a higher percentage of your Cell Phone and Internet expenses.


- If you are incorporated, connect with your accountant with how they feel is the best way to claim your mixed use expenses given your specific situation. And if you are incorporated, connect with your accountant before you purchase a vehicle to discuss if the vehicle should be in your name or the corporation’s name. There are tax implications for both! 
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