Alan McEwen
Employee benefits are subject to provincial sales in both Ontario and Québec, at 8 and 9 percent respectively. These sales taxes only apply to coverage provided through group plans so, for example, term life insurance provided to just one individual is not subject to tax. These taxes are separate from the normal HST, GST or QST that apply in these provinces. These taxes apply to both employee and employer payments of premiums for the coverage or benefits supplied.
The question is, what happens when the employee lives in one of these provinces and the employer is established in the other? Which tax applies. The answer, as you will see below, is not straightforward and depends on whether the employer is resident in that province, whether the coverage is provided through an insurance contract or is self-insured, whether coverage applies to employees, former employees or retirees, and in some cases, also on the type of benefits.
The following chart is structured to show that requirements that apply, whether the tax concerned is the Ontario tax or the Québec tax. For example, the phrase “resident employers” in the chart below means, when looking at the Ontario requirements, employers resident in Ontario. When looking at the Québec requirements, this means employers resident in that province. Mostly this works because there is very little difference between the two requirements. However, there are minor differences, which are noted below:
Employee Group Benefits |
Employer Premiums |
Employee Premiums |
||
Which Employers |
Which Employees |
Which Premiums for These Employees |
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Insured benefit coverage |
Resident employers |
For employees, based on the province of employment; for non-employees, based on the province of residence |
All premiums paid by the employer |
Only residents are liable to tax, on any payment toward coverage or benefits received. Québec residents are also liable for any premiums paid by non-resident employers. Ontario residents are liable to pay tax on premiums they pay to non-resident employers |
Non-resident employers (Ontario only) |
Tax on employer premiums only applies to non-employees, based on the province of residence |
|||
Self-insured, benefit plans, funded and unfunded |
Resident employers |
For employees, based on the province of employment; for non-employees, based on the province of residence |
For Ontario, no tax is payable on premiums that relate to coverage which is a CRA taxable benefit. For Québec, no tax is payable on wage loss replacement plans, whose benefits would be MRQ taxable when paid to employees |
|
Non-resident employers (Ontario only) |
Tax on employer premiums only applies to non-employees, based on the province of residence |
Example: Sophie is an Ontario resident. She lives near Cornwall, in eastern Ontario, and commutes to work every day near Pincourt, on Île Perrot, which is just west of Montréal Island. Her employer provides a variety of employee group benefits, including group term life insurance, extended medical care and short-term disability. All of these benefits are provided through an insurance carrier. The cost of these benefits is shared equally between Sophie and the employer. Since the province of employment is Québec, the employer must pay 9% Québec sales tax on the employer portion of the premiums related to Sophie’s coverage. If the employer is also resident in Ontario, Sophie must pay 8% Ontario sales on her payments to the employer for the benefits and coverage received. If the employer does not carry on business in Ontario, Sophie is responsible for remitting this 8% sales tax directly to the Ontario government. Since she is not a Québec resident, Sophie owes no sales tax on these benefits to the Québec government.
The major difference between the two regimes deals with premiums paid by non-resident employers. Only Ontario claims this tax on the premiums paid by non-resident employers. But, for Québec purposes, a Québec resident is liable for both the employee and employer premiums related to any group benefit coverage provided by a non-resident employer. By contrast, Ontario residents are only liable to pay any premiums they pay to a non-resident employer, not the employer’s own premiums. For self-insured benefits, there are also differences between the group benefits, whose premiums are exempt from these sales taxes.
Alan McEwen & Associates
armcewen@cogeco.ca
This year’s Ontario Employment Law Conference co-sponsored by First Reference and Stringer Brisbin Humphrey on June 2, 2010, will touch on several topics of importance to employers. The first topic on the Agenda will provide employers with guidance on a significant court decision and changes in court procedures affecting the termination process. Specifically it should help employers minimize claims arising from the termination process.
Marie-Yosie Saint-Cyr, LL.B. Managing Editor
I just read a Statistics Canada report stating that the gender wage gap has recently been decreasing. The report briefly noted that between 1988 and 2008, the wage gap narrowed throughout the wage distribution. However, the gap shrank the most at the lowest end of the wage distribution, and the gap shrank the least at the upper end. Also, although women dramatically increased their representation in high-wage occupations such as management, there were still significant gender wage gaps within these occupations.
Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD
Recently, one of our subscribers was wondering how to deal with payroll deductions relating to long-term disability (LTD) premiums. They wanted to know if the amount they deduct from the employee’s paycheque must include the Ontario sales tax on the LTD premium?
Alan McEwen