Types of trusts ▲
Types of trusts ▲
A trust is either a testamentary trust or an inter vivos trust. Each trust has different tax rules. "Chart 1 - Types of Trusts," on page 9, describes different types of trusts and arrangements.
Testamentary trust
A testamentary trust is a trust or estate that is generally created on and as a result of the death of an individual. This includes a trust created under the terms of an individual's will or by court order in relation to the deceased individual's estate under provincial or territorial law.
Generally, this type of trust does not include a trust created by a person other than a deceased individual. It also does not include a trust created after November 12, 1981, if any property was contributed to it other than by a deceased individual as a consequence of the individual's death. For rules about testamentary trusts created before November 13, 1981, call 1-800-959-8281.
If the assets are not distributed to the beneficiaries according to the terms of the will, the testamentary trust may become an inter vivos trust.
For tax years ending after December 20, 2002, a testamentary trust may become an inter vivos trust if the trust incurs a debt or other obligation to pay an amount to, or guaranteed by, a beneficiary or any other person or partnership (any or all referred to as specified party), with whom any beneficiary of the trust does not deal at arm's length.
This does not apply for certain debts or other obligations, including those that are:
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incurred by the trust in satisfaction of a beneficiary's right to enforce payment of an amount payable by the trust to the beneficiary or to receive any part of the trust's capital
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owed to the beneficiary as a result of services provided by the beneficiary for the trust
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owed to the beneficiary as a result of a payment on behalf of the trust for which property was transferred to the specified party within 12 months of the payment and the beneficiary would have made the payment had they been dealing with the trust at arm's length
Inter vivos trust
An inter vivos trust is a trust that is not a testamentary trust.
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Chart 1 - Types of Trusts | |
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Type of trust |
General information |
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Graduated rate |
A graduated rate estate, of an individual at any time, is the estate that arose on and as a consequence of the individual's death, if all of the following conditions are met:
An estate can only be a "graduated rate estate" for up to 36 months following the death of an individual. The estate will cease to be a graduated rate estate if it is still in existence at the end of the 36 month period. |
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Spousal or |
A post-1971 spousal or common-law partner trust includes both a testamentary trust created after 1971, and an inter vivos trust created after June 17, 1971. In either case, the living beneficiary spouse or common-law partner is entitled to receive all the income that may arise during the lifetime of the spouse or common-law partner. That spouse or common-law partner is the only person who can receive, or get the use of, any income or capital of the trust during their lifetime. A pre-1972 spousal trust includes both a testamentary trust created before 1972, and an inter vivos trust created before June 18, 1971. In either case, the beneficiary spouse was entitled to receive all the income during the spouse's lifetime, and no other person received, or got the use of, any income or capital of the trust. These conditions must be met for the period beginning on the day the trust was created, up to the earliest of the following dates:
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Personal trust |
This is a trust (other than a trust that is, or was at any time after 1999, a unit trust) that is one of the following:
For 2016 and subsequent tax years, only a graduated rate estate automatically qualifies as a personal trust without regard to the circumstances in which beneficial interest in the trust has been acquired. |
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Alter ego trust |
This is a trust created after 1999 by a settlor who was 65 years of age or older at the time the trust was created, for which the settlor is entitled to receive all the income that may arise during their lifetime, and is the only person who can receive, or get the use of, any income or capital of the trust during the settlor's lifetime. A trust will not be considered an alter ego trust if it so elects in its T3 return for its first tax year. |
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Communal |
We consider a trust to exist when a congregation meets all of the following conditions:
The communal organization has to pay tax as though it were an inter vivos trust. However, it can elect to allocate its income to the beneficiaries. For more information, see Information Circular IC78-5R3, Communal Organizations. |
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Deemed resident |
A trust is deemed resident in Canada where there is one of the following:
A "resident contributor" to a trust at a particular time means a person that is, at that time, resident in Canada and has at or before that time made a contribution to the trust. A "resident beneficiary" under a trust at a particular time is a person (other than an "exempt person" or "successor beneficiary") that, at that time, is a beneficiary under the trust, is resident in Canada, and there is a "connected contributor" to the trust. A "connected contributor" is a person who made a contribution either while resident in Canada, within 60-months of moving to Canada, or within 60-months of leaving Canada. For tax years that ended before February 11, 2014, individuals who had been resident in Canada for a period of, (or periods the total of which is) 60 months or less were exempted from treatment as resident contributors or connected contributors. This exemption also applies to the tax years of non-resident trusts that end before 2015 if all of the following conditions are met:
These trusts are deemed resident for several purposes including:
The trusts are not considered resident for calculating a Canadian's liability when paying the trust (i.e. when a resident taxpayer pays the deemed resident trust it is required to withhold Part XIII). They are also not considered resident for the purpose of determining a Canadian resident's (other than the trust) foreign reporting requirements. If you need help in determining whether the trust is a deemed resident of Canada, call one of the telephone numbers listed in "Non-resident trusts and deemed resident trusts" on page 23. |
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Employee |
Generally, this is any arrangement under which an employer makes contributions to a custodian, and under which one or more payments will be made to, or for the benefit of, employees, former employees, or persons related to them. For more information, and for details on what we consider to be an employee benefit plan and how it is taxed, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT-502, Employee Benefit Plans and Employee Trusts, and its Special Release. Note: An employee benefit plan has to file a T3 return if the plan or trust has tax payable, has a taxable capital gain, or has disposed of capital property. Because the allocations are taxed as income from employment to the beneficiaries, report the allocations on a T4 slip, not on a T3 slip. For more information, see Guide RC4120, Employers' Guide - Filing the T4 Slip and Summary. |
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Employee life |
This is a trust, established by one or more employers, that meets a number of conditions under subsection 144.1(2) of the Act. The trust's only purpose is the payment of designated employee benefits (DEBs) for employees and certain related persons (certain limitations apply to the rights and benefits that may be provided to key employees). Employers can deduct contributions made to the trust, as long as they are for DEBs and meet the conditions in subsection 144.1(4). Employee contributions are permitted, but are not deductible. However, employee contributions may qualify for the medical expense tax credit, to the extent that they are made to a private health services plan. The trust can deduct amounts paid to employees or former employees for DEBs and can generally carry non-capital losses back or forward three years. Any amount received from an ELHT must be included in income, unless the amount was received as the payment of a DEB. Payments of DEBs to non-resident employees or former employees will generally not be subject to tax under Part XIII. For more information on ELHTs, designated employee benefits and key employees, see section 144.1 of the Act. |
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Employee |
This is a trust established to hold shares and control of a corporation, for the benefit of the corporation's current or former employees. Generally, it is established irrevocably and exclusively for the benefit of all individuals each of whom is either a current or former (where permissible) employee of the qualifying businesses it controls and at all relevant times meets a number of conditions (including distribution criteria, residency, trustee eligibility and representation, trust governance and qualifying business status) specified in the term's definition under subsection 248(1) of the Act. An EOT is generally taxed in the same manner as other personal trusts. Provided the trust continuously meets the definition of "employee ownership trust" under subsection 248(1), the EOT is eligible for the following benefits:
An EOT and if applicable, a corporation wholly owned by it are jointly and severally, or solidarily, liable for Part I taxes that result from a disqualifying event within 24 months of the disposition time for the qualifying business transfer if they were parties to the joint election that elected to allocate to certain individual(s) up to $10 million capital gains deduction under a qualifying business transfer as defined under the Act. For further details - see form T24EOT Joint Election for Capital Gains Deduction in respect of a Qualifying Business Transfer. An EOT is not an employee benefit plan or an employee trust for the purposes of the Act. |
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Employee trust |
This is a trust. Generally, it is an arrangement established after 1979, under which an employer makes payments to a trustee in trust for the sole benefit of the employees. The trustee has to elect to qualify the arrangement as an employee trust on the trust's first T3 return. The employer can deduct contributions to the plan only if the trust has made this election and filed it no later than 90 days after the end of its first tax year. To maintain its employee trust status, each year the trust has to allocate to its beneficiaries all non-business income for that year, and employer contributions made in the year. Business income cannot be allocated and is taxed in the trust. For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT-502, Employee Benefit Plans and Employee Trusts, and its Special Release. Note: An employee trust has to file a T3 return if the plan or trust has tax payable, has a taxable capital gain, or has disposed of capital property. Because the allocations are taxed as income from employment to the beneficiaries, report the allocations on a T4 slip, not on a T3 slip. For more information, see Guide RC4120, Employers' Guide - Filing the T4 Slip and Summary. |
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Environment |
A trust under paragraph 149(1)(z.1) of the Income Tax Act. This is a trust that was created because of a requirement imposed by section 56 of the Environment Quality Act, R.S.Q., c. Q-2. The trust must meet both of the following conditions:
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Certain |
These are inter vivos trusts under paragraph 81(1)(g.3) of the Act and are government funded trusts established under one of the following agreements:
As long as no contribution to the trust, other than contributions provided for under the Agreement, is made before the end of a tax year of the trust, the trust's income is generally exempt from income tax for that tax year. |
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Insurance |
This is a related segregated fund, as defined in paragraph 138.1(1)(a), of a life insurer for life insurance policies and is considered to be an inter vivos trust. The fund's property and income are considered to be the property and income of the trust, with the life insurer as the trustee. Throughout the Guide and on certain forms, we use the term "insurance segregated fund trust" or "insurance segregated fund" interchangeably. Note: You have to file a separate T3 return and financial statements for each fund. If all the beneficiaries are fully registered plans, complete only the identification and certification areas of the T3 return and enclose the financial statements. If the beneficiaries are both registered and non-registered plans, report and allocate only the income that applies to the non-registered plans. |
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First Home |
An FHSA trust has to complete and file a T3 return if the trust meets one of the following conditions:
For more information, go to canada.ca/fhsa. |
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Joint spousal or |
This is a trust created after 1999 by a settlor who was 65 years of age or older at the time the trust was created. The settlor and the settlor's spouse or common-law partner are entitled to receive all the income that may arise from the trust before the later of their deaths. They are the only persons who can receive, or get the use of, any income or capital of the trust before the later of their deaths. |
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Lifetime benefit |
This is a trust that is at any particular time a lifetime benefit trust with respect to a taxpayer and the estate of a deceased individual if both of the following conditions are met:
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Master trust |
This is a trust. A trust can elect to be a master trust if during the entire time since its creation it met all of the following conditions:
Note: A master trust is exempt from Part I tax. A trust can elect to be a master trust by indicating this in a letter filed with its T3 return for the tax year the trust elects to become a master trust. Once made, this election cannot be revoked. However, the trust must continue to meet the conditions listed above to keep its identity as a master trust. After the first T3 return is filed for the master trust, you do not have to file any further T3 returns for this trust. If a future T3 return is filed, we will assume the trust no longer meets the above conditions. The trust will not be considered a master trust and must file yearly T3 returns from then on. If the trust is wound up, send us a letter to tell us the wind-up date. |
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Mutual fund trust |
This is a unit trust that resides in Canada. It also has to comply with the other conditions of the Act, as outlined in section 132 and the conditions established by Income Tax Regulation 4801. For a mutual fund trust that is a public trust, or public investment trust, there are certain reporting requirements these types of trusts must meet. For more information, see below or go to canada.ca/cra-trust-types. Public trust A public trust is, at any time, a mutual fund trust of which its units are listed, at that time, on a designated stock exchange in Canada. Public investment trust A public investment trust is, at any time, a trust that is a public trust, where all or substantially all of the fair market value of the property is, at that time, attributable to the fair market value of property of the trust that is:
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Non-profit |
This is an organization (for example, club, society, or association) that is usually organized and operated exclusively for social welfare, civic improvement, pleasure, recreation, or any other purpose except profit. The organization will generally be exempt from tax if no part of its income is payable to, or available for, the personal benefit of a proprietor, member, or shareholder. For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT-496R, Non-Profit Organizations. If the main purpose of the organization is to provide services such as dining, recreational, or sporting facilities to its members, we consider it to be a trust. In this case, the trust is taxable on its income from property, and on any taxable capital gains from the disposition of any property that is not used to provide those services. The trust is allowed a deduction of $2,000 when calculating its taxable income. Claim this on line 38 of the T3 return. For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT-83R3, Non-profit organizations - Taxation of income from property. Note: A non-profit organization may have to file Form T1044, Non-Profit Organization (NPO) Information Return. For more information, see Guide T4117, Income Tax Guide to the Non-Profit Organization (NPO) Information Return. |
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Nuclear Fuel |
A trust under paragraph 149(1)(z.2) of the Income Tax Act. This is a trust that was created because of a requirement imposed by subsection 9(1) of the Nuclear Fuel Waste Act. The trust must meet both of the following conditions:
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Pooled |
Pooled Registered Pension Plans must operate through an arrangement acceptable to the Minister. All property held in connection with a PRPP is required to be held in trust by the administrator on behalf of the plan members. As a result, a PRPP is generally treated as a trust for tax purposes, the administrator is the trustee of that trust, the members are the beneficiaries, and the trust property is the property held in connection with the plan. A pooled registered pension plan trust will be excluded for purposes of the 21 year deemed disposition rule and other specified measures. When certain criteria are met, a pooled registered pension plan trust will be exempt from Part 1 tax. For more information, go to canada.ca/taxes-pooled-registered-pension-plan. |
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Qualified |
A qualified disability trust for a tax year is a testamentary trust that arose on the death of a particular individual that jointly elects (using Form T3QDT, Joint Election for a Trust to be a Qualified Disability Trust), with one or more beneficiaries under the trust, in its T3 return of income for the year to be a qualified disability trust for the year. In addition, all of the following conditions have to be satisfied:
For a trust that was a qualified disability trust in a previous tax year, refer to "Line 11 - Federal recovery tax" on page 66. |
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Qualifying |
Generally, this is a trust resident in Canada or a province, or a corporation resident in Canada that is licensed or otherwise authorized under the laws of Canada or a province to carry on in Canada the business of offering to the public its services as trustee, or that is not an excluded trust and maintained at that time for the sole purpose of funding the reclamation of a qualifying site in Canada or in the province that is, or may become, required to be maintained under the terms of a qualifying contract, or a qualifying law, and that had been used primarily for, or for any combination of:
Under the definition, the trust is, or may become, required to be maintained under the terms of a contract entered into with the federal or provincial Crown or if the trust was established after 2011, by an order of a tribunal constituted under a federal or provincial law. Certain conditions exist that may exclude a trust from being a QET. For more information, please see the definition of a QET in subsection 211.6(1). |
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Real estate |
A trust is a REIT for a tax year, if it is resident in Canada throughout the year and meets a number of other conditions, including all of the following:
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Registered |
An RDSP trust has to complete and file a T3 return if the trust has borrowed money and subparagraph 146.4(5)(a)(i) or 146.4(5)(a)(ii) of the Act applies. If this does not apply and the trust carried on a business or held non-qualified investments during the tax year, you have to complete a T3 return to calculate the taxable income from the business or non-qualified investments, determined under subsection 146.4(5). If the trust is reporting capital gains or losses, it has to report the full amount (that is, 100%) on line 1 of the T3 return. |
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Registered |
If an RESP trust held non-qualified investments during the tax year, you have to complete and file a T3 return to calculate the taxable income from non-qualified investments, determined under subsection 146.1(5) of the Act. If the trust is reporting capital gains or losses, it has to report the full amount (that is, 100%) on line 1 of the T3 return. |
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Registered |
An RRSP, or RRIF trust has to complete and file a T3 return if the trust meets one of the following conditions:
If the trust does not meet one of the above conditions and the trust held non-qualified investments during the tax year, you have to complete a T3 return to calculate the taxable income from non-qualified investments, determined under subsection 146(10.1) or 146.3(9). If the trust is reporting capital gains or losses, it has to report the full amount (that is, 100%) on line 1 of the T3 return. If the trust does not meet one of the above conditions and the trust carried on a business, you have to complete a T3 return to calculate the taxable income of the trust from carrying on a business. Do not include the business income earned from qualified investments for the trust. |
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Retirement |
This arrangement exists when an employer makes contributions for an employee's retirement, termination of employment, or any significant change in services of employment. For more information, see Retirement Compensation Arrangements Web page at canada.ca/retirement-compensation-arrangements. Note: If a trusteed arrangement is comprised of both an RCA and an employee benefit plan, you must file a T3 return for the portion of the arrangement that is treated as an employee benefit plan. Form T3-RCA, Retirement Compensation Arrangement (RCA) Part XI.3 Tax Return, has to be filed for the RCA portion. |
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Salary deferral |
Generally, this is a plan or arrangement (whether funded or not) between an employer and an employee or another person who has a right to receive salary or wages in a year after the services have been performed. For more information, see archived Interpretation Bulletin IT-529, Flexible Employee Benefit Programs. Note: If a salary deferral arrangement is funded, we consider it a trust, and you may have to file a T3 return. The deferred amount is deemed to be an employment benefit, so you report it on a T4 slip, not on a T3 slip. The employee has to include the amount in income for the year the services are performed. The employee also has to include any interest, or other amount earned by the deferred amount. For more information, see Guide RC4120, Employers' Guide - Filing the T4 Slip and Summary. |
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Specified |
This is a trust (other than a trust that is a real estate investment trust for the tax year or an entity that is an excluded subsidiary entity) that meets all of the following conditions at any time during the tax year:
For more information, go to canada.ca/cra-sift-trust. |
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Specified trust |
This is a trust that is: an amateur athlete trust; an employee life and health trust; an employee trust; a master trust; a trust governed by a deferred profit sharing plan, an employee benefit plan, an employee profit sharing plan, a foreign retirement arrangement, a pooled registered pension plan; a registered disability savings plan; a registered education savings plan, a registered pension plan, a registered retirement income fund, a registered retirement savings plan, or a registered supplementary unemployment benefit plan; a tax-free savings account trust; a related segregated fund trust; a retirement compensation arrangement trust; a trust whose direct beneficiaries are one of the above mentioned trusts; a trust governed by an eligible funeral arrangement or a cemetery care trust; a communal organization; and a trust where all or substantially all of the property is held for the purpose of providing benefits to individuals from employment or former employment. |
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Tax-free savings |
A TFSA trust has to complete and file a T3 return if the trust meets one of the following conditions:
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Unit trust |
This is a trust for which the interest of each beneficiary can be described at any time by referring to units of the trust. A unit trust must also meet one of the three conditions described in subsection 108(2) of the Act. |
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Bare trust |
The term "bare trust" is not defined in the Act. A "trust" for the purposes of the Act is defined in subsection 104(1) of the Act. That subsection provides that, if the arrangement is one in which the trust can reasonably be considered to act as agent for all the beneficiaries under the trust with respect to all dealings with all of the trust's property and the trust is not a trust described in paragraphs (a) to (e.1) of the definition of "trust" in subsection 108(1) of the Act, the arrangement is deemed not to be a trust for the purposes of the Act, with certain exceptions including the filing of a return of income. These arrangements are generally known as "bare trusts." A trustee can reasonably be considered to act as agent for a beneficiary when the trustee has no significant powers or responsibilities, the trustee can take no action without instructions from that beneficiary and the trustee's only function is to hold legal title to the property. In order for the trustee to be considered as the agent for all the beneficiaries of a trust, it would generally be necessary for the trust to consult and take instructions from each and every beneficiary with respect to all dealings with all of the trust property. |
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Land settlement |
The term "land settlement trust" is not defined in the Act. Generally, a land settlement trust is a trust created to hold the settlement funds paid for a First Nation's land claim. |
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