Everyone knows that you can’t avoid the tax collector, and death is no exception. Under the Canadian Income Tax Act, on the death of an individual subsection 70(5) will trigger a deemed disposition of all the deceased taxpayer’s capital property at fair market value thus taxing any accrued capital gains…
Death, taxes and cryptocurrency
By John OakeycloseAuthor: John Oakey
Name: John Oakey
Email: jfoakey@bakertilly.ca
Site: https://www.bakertilly.ca/en/btc/professionals/national-halifax/john-oakey
About: National Tax Director for Baker Tilly Canada. John has extensive experience with Canadian corporate and personal income taxes with specialization in the areas of corporate reorganizations, estate planning, succession planning and tax compliance. He also has significant experience dealing with GST/HST issues and U.S. citizen cross-border tax reporting issues.See Authors Posts (34) • March 30, 2021 • 1 Comment
Email: jfoakey@bakertilly.ca
Site: https://www.bakertilly.ca/en/btc/professionals/national-halifax/john-oakey
About: National Tax Director for Baker Tilly Canada. John has extensive experience with Canadian corporate and personal income taxes with specialization in the areas of corporate reorganizations, estate planning, succession planning and tax compliance. He also has significant experience dealing with GST/HST issues and U.S. citizen cross-border tax reporting issues.See Authors Posts (34) • March 30, 2021 • 1 Comment