19 Side-Hustle Tax Mistakes Canadians Make on Marketplace, Etsy, and Uber
Side hustles feel casual until tax season arrives. Selling crafts, driving passengers, or flipping items online seems simple at first.
Side hustles feel casual until tax season arrives. Selling crafts, driving passengers, or flipping items online seems simple at first.
Tax season has a way of turning confident people into amateur accountants overnight. Friends share tips. Social media offers shortcuts.
January paycheques often feel different, even when your salary has not changed. New year resets trigger payroll updates, government thresholds,
Tax season rarely starts when the deadline hits. It starts months earlier, when small choices quietly lock in bigger outcomes.
Every spring, Canadians rush through their tax returns with one goal. Get it done. In that hurry, many miss credits
Most Canadians assume CRA reviews only happen when someone bends the rules. That is not always true. Many reviews start
Over the past few years, small fees began appearing on Canadian restaurant bills without much warning. They often show up
Subscriptions are supposed to save time and make life easier. Instead, many quietly drain bank accounts month after month. Canadians
Most Canadians think they understand their bank accounts. Statements arrive, balances look familiar, and nothing seems off at first. The
Tax season already comes with enough stress. Deadlines, forms, refunds, and confusing rules make people rush decisions. Scammers know this.
Income changes quietly reshape your tax situation in Canada. A layoff, career shift, reduced hours, or parental leave can open
Filing taxes online feels faster and easier than ever. That convenience can hide costly mistakes. Many Canadians assume software catches
Every tax season, Canadians focus on the obvious deductions and rush to file on time. What often gets missed are
Every tax season, Canadians rush to file, hoping for a bigger refund. Along the way, many assume certain everyday expenses
Telecom complaints in Canada are climbing, and frustration is spreading across cities, suburbs, and rural areas. Customers report billing shocks,
Canadians are used to hearing about big price shocks, like housing or groceries. What catches many people off guard are
Canadians have long suspected they pay more for everyday items than Americans, and that instinct is usually right. Prices can
CRA (Canada Revenue Agency) audits make people nervous because myths spread faster than facts. Many Canadians believe reviews happen randomly
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