Last updated: June 27 2024
It’s not just the newly increased capital gains inclusion rate that is now law, but another significant tax change which has received less fanfare – the AMT or Alternative Minimum Tax – has now been passed into law under Bill C-59, passed on June 20, 2024. The provision in effective, however, on January 1, 2024. The big issue is that the AMT can affect the very people grappling with the capital gains inclusion rate increases. The result is more retroactivity and more complexity. Here’s what you need to know:
The Backdrop. The AMT is an alternate tax calculation to the regular tax calculations on the personal tax return. It does not apply to trusts including GREs (Graduated Rate Estates) and it does not apply to terminal T1 returns. You will pay AMT when the tax resulting from its calculation is higher than the regular taxes payable. So, two tax calculations are required by taxpayers who fall into an AMT profile, described below, and that increases both planning and compliance costs.
In addition, if the AMT is payable, it may be fully or partially recovered as a minimum tax credit against regular taxes payable over the next 7 years. Therefore, it’s a prepayment of high taxes on specific sources in one particular year; then an averaging down of those taxes against future regular income.
But, aside from occasional high income earners, this tax also targets people with higher incomes who claim certain tax deductions or have high non-refundable tax credits – generous donors, for example. It is intended to impute at least a minimum level of tax in situations where taxpayers significantly reduced their taxable income by claiming otherwise legitimate provisions.
The AMT computation used prior to 2024 was made on Form T691 Alternative Minimum Tax for individuals.
The New Rules. The rules for the new AMT were first introduced in the 2023 federal budget, with further changes occurring in the April 16, 2024 budget, which reacted to the significant outcry that occurred with the clawback of donation credit benefits. Here are the primary components of the new AMT calculation
Remember: If taxable income is under the new threshold of $173,205 in 2024, alternative minimum taxes payable at 20.5% can be reduced or avoided in some cases. Also note that with a few exceptions (including Graduated Rate Estates and Qualified Disability Trusts) most intervivos trusts will be subject to the new AMT but without the benefit of the $173,205 exemption).
Make a Difference. Do the new complex tax math to help high income earners, investors and business owners understand the net effects of the new AMT and capital gains inclusion rules. Remember, for AMT purposes, the taxable gain is the “non-taxable part of the capital gain” added to the T691 adjusted income calculation. This will have to be adjusted to include the 33.33% tax free capital gains over $250,000 that occurred on or after June 25 in 2024. That number is then reduced by mortgage foreclosures and conditional sales repossessions, gifts to qualified donees and capital gains from GREs, as well as income exempt by treaty on Line 25600.