Banking and Finance Law

Common CRA Penalties and How a Tax Lawyer Can Help You Avoid Them

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Common CRA Penalties and How a Tax Lawyer Can Help You Avoid Them

The Canada Revenue Agency uses penalties to encourage people and businesses to file and pay on time. While these rules exist to keep the tax system fair, many penalties happen because of timing issues, complex rules, or honest mistakes, not because someone tried to cheat. Understanding the most common penalties and how they can be avoided or reduced helps you protect yourself and your business.

Late Filing and Late Payment Penalties

One of the most common penalties occurs when a tax return is filed or taxes are paid after the deadline. For individuals, this penalty can reach as high as 17 percent of the tax owing if the return is filed late and tax is owed. Daily interest also adds up on any unpaid amount.

These late filing penalties usually only apply when you actually owe tax. However, you can still face interest and penalties if you miss or underpay your required instalment payments during the year, even if your final return shows a refund.

Gross Negligence and False Statement Penalties

A more serious penalty can apply if the CRA believes you made a false statement or left out important information on your return. This is often called a gross negligence penalty. It can be very costly and is only applied when the CRA believes the mistake was significant and not just an honest error.

The CRA must prove that the behaviour went well beyond ordinary negligence. In many cases, a tax lawyer can successfully challenge or reduce these penalties.

Repeated Failure to Report Income

Another penalty applies when a taxpayer fails to report income of 500 dollars or more on their current return and also failed to report income in at least one of the previous three years. This penalty can add a significant amount to your tax bill and is separate from other penalties.

Payroll and Information Return Penalties

Employers can face penalties for failing to remit source deductions such as income tax, CPP, and EI on time. These penalties can increase quickly if the delay continues. Similar penalties can apply for failing to file certain information returns, such as Form T1135 for foreign property.

How Pax Law Can Help You Avoid or Reduce These Penalties

A tax lawyer can help you both prevent penalties before they happen and deal with them effectively if they arise. At Pax Law, we assist clients by:

Many penalties can be avoided with proper planning or significantly reduced with the right professional help.

If you have received a notice with penalties, are facing an audit, or want to make sure you are protected going forward, contact Pax Law today for a confidential consultation. We are here to help you understand your options and take the right steps.

Frequently Asked Questions

For individuals, the late filing penalty can reach as high as 17 percent of the tax owing if the return is filed late and tax is owed.

It is a serious penalty applied when the CRA believes a taxpayer made a significant, false statement or left out important information on their return, going well beyond ordinary negligence.

Pax Law assists by reviewing tax situations, submitting Voluntary Disclosure applications, challenging penalties during audits/objections, representing clients in the Tax Court of Canada, and requesting penalty cancellations under extraordinary circumstances.

1 Comment

Karah Kirkland · May 29, 2026 at 4:15 pm

CRA has frozen my bank account due to not filing taxes and owing them money. Just wondered if this is something you firm would help with?

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