Eligible Vs. Ineligible Dividends
- Any dividend received by a Canadian resident from a Canadian corporation is an eligible dividend. Dividends received by non-residents are deemed ineligible, but they still benefit from a dividend tax credit, albeit lower than that for eligible dividends. Dividends from foreign corporations are reported separately and taxed as investment income.
- As of October 2010, eligible dividends are grossed up, or increased, by 145 percent and ineligible dividends are grossed up by 125 percent to determine their taxable amounts.
- The federal dividend tax credit reduces the federal tax that is due. In 2009 the federal dividend tax credit was 18.9655 percent of the taxable amount of eligible dividends and 13.3333 percent of the taxable amount of ineligible dividends.
- Suppose you were in the top federal tax bracket of 29 percent in 2009 and you received $10,000 each in eligible and ineligible dividends. The gross-up for eligible dividends is 145 percent, resulting in a taxable amount of $14,500 and a federal tax of $4,205. Ineligible dividends are grossed up by 125 percent, resulting in a taxable amount of $12,500 and a federal tax of $3,625.
- Applying the tax credit of 18.9655 percent to the $14,500 taxable eligible dividend results in a $2,750 tax reduction, or a net tax of $1,455. The tax credit for ineligible dividends would be 13.3333 percent of $12,500, or a $1,667 tax reduction, for a net tax on ineligible dividends of $1,958. You paid $503 less federal tax on your eligible dividends.