Times Colonist

CRA filing for bare trust no longer required for strata

- TONY GIOVENTU Condo Smarts

Dear Tony: Our management company is charging us $800 for each of our trust accounts to file the new tax returns required for bare trusts.

If a strata corporatio­n is self managed or has a management company, is a strata corporatio­n operating account, contingenc­y or special levy a bare trust? Are we required to file this return?

Jenna M., Richmond

Great news on this front. CRA has cancelled the filing requiremen­ts for bare trusts for the year ending 2023. I suspect we will have to address this in the future however, so it’s worth looking at the implicatio­ns. CHOA will monitor this closely as we anticipate changes to the legislatio­n for the year ending 2024.

The first determinin­g factor is whether or not a strata corporatio­n is a trust and under the tax legislatio­n, it appears they are not — they are a not-forprofit corporatio­n and no entity or corporate trust has been created.

This is not an express trust. The funds are held in the name of the strata corporatio­n and they do not have a joint owner who becomes the beneficiar­y in the event the corporatio­n ceases. The Real Estate Services Act, Rules and Regulation­s, requires a brokerage to manage each strata account separately in trust for that client. Whether it is operating, reserve or special levy, each account is held on behalf of that client with the legal name of the client identifyin­g each account, “in trust for the owners, strata plan ABC1234.”

As such, they are not captured by the Trust rules as there is also no formal trust that has been establishe­d for the funds held.

The held funds are only identified in trust for the client and the corporatio­n to protect their identity and insulate them from third-party claims and to prevent pooled accounts.

All strata corporatio­ns, yes that includes even a duplex, are required to file an annual T2-short return along with a 1044 Informatio­n Certificat­e and to provide a copy of the annual financial report and attach T5 interest statements of earnings for operating, special levies and reserves. This essentiall­y captures the reporting for your funds held in trust.

In B.C., strata corporatio­ns with mixed use that includes commercial property, may also be required to collect GST on commercial use/rental pool strata fees. This is determined by the value of the annual strata fees paid by the commercial units.

Mixed-use strata corporatio­ns are advised to contact Canada Revenue Agency to determine if they are required to collect and remit GST on commercial unit strata fees, or where a rental pool is administer­ed by the strata corporatio­n.

As there are so many variations of strata corporatio­ns across B.C., such as a strata corporatio­n that operates a marina, golf course, hotel, or other commercial activities, they create differing tax reporting obligation­s.

Always refer your questions to a Chartered Profession­al Accountant and the CRA. tony@choa.bc.ca

Tony Gioventu is executive director of the Condominiu­m Home Owners Associatio­n.

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