- T1223 Clergy residence
deduction
If you are a member of the clergy, complete Form T1223,
Clergy Residence Deduction, to find out what you can deduct.
If your are a resident of Québec, also complete the provincial form
TP-76.
A person who is employed, or has an office, as a member of the
clergy or a religious order or as a regular minister of a religious
denomination may be entitled to claim a clergy residence deduction
in respect of his or her residence, when calculating the income
from that employment or office. In order to qualify for the
deduction, the person must satisfy both the status and function
tests discussed below.
Eligibility requirements
You are eligible to claim the clergy residence deduction on
line 23100 of your return if you were a member of the clergy
or a religious order or a regular minister of a religious
denomination, who was:
-
in charge of a diocese, parish or congregation;
-
ministering to a diocese, parish or congregation; or
-
engaged exclusively in full-time administrative service by
appointment of a religious order or religious denomination.
If you received free accommodation for your residence,
the value of it is shown as a taxable benefit in box 30 of your T4
slip. Report this taxable benefit on line 10400 of your return.
Claim this amount as a deduction on line 23100 of your return.
Subtract this taxable benefit from the amount in box 14 of your T4
slip and enter the difference on line 10100.
If you owned or rented the residence being claimed, enter
on line 23100 the amount from line 11 of Part
C of Form T1223.
If you received free accommodation for a residence and
also owned or rented the residence being claimed for a
different part of the year, add the amounts together and
claim that total on line 23100 of your return. The amount
claimed for the clergy residence deduction can never exceed
income from qualifying employment from all eligible employers.
Note
The actual rent and utilities paid, or if the residence is
owned, the fair rental value including utilities, must be reduced
by all amounts, other than your clergy residence deduction, that is
claimed by you, your spouse or common-law partner, or any other
person in respect of the same accommodation, if the other amounts
deducted are for the same months or period. This could arise, for
example, when your spouse or common-law partner claims
work-space-in-the-home expenses.
If both you and your spouse are claiming clergy residence
deductions, and provided there are no other deductions for
accommodations other than clergy residence, the spouse with the
higher salary should complete the calculation on the Form T1223
first. The spouse with the lower salary should then take into
consideration the deduction with respect to the clergy residence
for the same accommodation.
If you are filing a paper return, do not include Form T1223, but
keep it in case we ask to see it. If you are filing electronically,
keep all of your documents.
Useful links:
IT141R, Clergy Residence Deduction
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