Investments or expenditures, described in subsection 127(9) of the Act that are eligible for an ITC are:
Atlantic Canada and Atlantic region For the purposes of the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit, these expressions include the Gaspé Peninsula and the provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, as well as their respective offshore regions (prescribed in Regulations 4609).
Gaspé Peninsula For the purposes of the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit, this expression means that portion of the Gaspé region of the Province of Quebec that extends to the western border of Kamouraska County and includes the Magdalen Islands (asdescribed in subsection 127(9) of the Act).
Qualified property For the purposes of the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit, this term means a category of new assets acquired primarily for use in the Atlantic region that are mainly used for farming or fishing, logging, manufacturing and processing, storing grain, and harvesting peat. Qualified property includes new buildings, new machinery and new equipment (prescribed in Regulations 4600). Qualified property can also be used primarily to produce or process electrical energy or steam in a prescribed area (as prescribed in Regulations 4610).
Qualified property may also include new energy generation and conservation property (prescribed in Regulations 4600) if it was acquired by the taxpayer after March 28, 2012.
For more information, see the definition of qualified property in subsection 127(9) of the Act.
Specified percentages for qualified property If you acquired the property after 1994 for use in the Atlantic region, the specified percentage is 10%.
For more information on the Atlantic Investment Tax Credit, visit canada.ca and use the search bar to find the "Atlantic investment tax credit" web page.
Qualified SR&ED expenditures You can receive scientific research and experimental development (SR&ED) ITCs on qualified expenditures. You can receive them in the form of a cash refund or a reduction of tax payable or both. Unused SR&ED ITCs can be carried back three years or carried forward 20 years.
To be a qualified SR&ED expenditure, an amount has to be incurred for SR&ED carried on in Canada. For tax purposes, Canada includes the "exclusive economic zone" (as defined in the Oceans Act to generally consist of an area of the sea that is within 200 nautical miles from the Canadian coastline), the airspace, seabed, and subsoil of that zone.
Qualified expenditures can include amounts incurred in the year for SR&ED that relate to your business and are carried on by you, or on your behalf. Only current expenditures for SR&ED can be claimed. Expenses related to an SR&ED contract or a third-party payment for SR&ED must be reduced by 20%.
ITC rate for a qualified expenditure • The rate is 15%, of which 40% may be refundable.
Note For more information, see Form T661, Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) Expenditures Claim. If you are claiming an ITC for a qualified SR&ED expenditure, or you are reporting an ITC recapture for an ITC previously claimed on an expenditure for SR&ED, file Form T661 with your income tax and benefit return. For help completing the form, see Guide T4088, Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) Expenditures Claim – Guide to Form T661.
Do not file Form T661 if you are claiming a credit for contributions made to agricultural organizations, or a credit based on a credit allocated to you by a partnership on a T5013 slip, Statement of Partnership Income.
Partnership allocations An ITC earned by a partnership is usually allocated to a partner. However, an ITC earned on qualified SR&ED expenditures may not be allocated to a specified member of a partnership. If you received an allocation of ITC from a partnership, enter this allocated credit on line 67135 in Part A. For more information, see subsection 127(8) of the Act, and the SR&ED Claims for Partnerships Policy.
Contributions made to agricultural organizations for SR&ED Agricultural producers can access ITCs earned on contributions made to agricultural organizations that fund SR&ED. Enter the amount on line 67130 in Part A. The rate is 15%.
Information on SR&ED For more information on SR&ED and legislative or interpretative changes, and how to claim the SR&ED tax incentives, see Guide T4088, Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) Expenditures Claim – Guide to Form T661 or, go to anada.ca/taxes-sred.
Mineral exploration tax credit (METC) Certain renounced Canadian exploration expenses qualify for this ITC. For Canadian exploration expenses renounced by a corporation to an individual (or a partnership of which the individual is a member), excluding trusts and reported in the appropriate line in Part IV of Form T1229, Statement of resource expenses and depletion allowance, the specified percentage is 15%. The renunciation must be under a flow-through share (FTS) agreement entered into after March 31, 2024 and before April 1, 2025 with FTS financing for mineral exploration (which excludes coal deposits, tar sands, oil and gas).
Critical mineral exploration tax credit (CMETC) Certain renounced Canadian exploration expenses qualify for this ITC. The CMETC is available to individuals (or a partnership of which the individual is a member), excluding trusts who invest in flow-through shares (FTS) in mining companies that undertake exploration for certain critical minerals in Canada. To qualify for this credit, the renunciation must be under a FTS agreement entered into after April 7, 2022, and on or before March 31, 2027. The designated critical minerals are: copper, nickel, lithium, cobalt, graphite, rare earth elements, scandium, titanium, gallium, vanadium, tellurium, magnesium, zinc, platinum group metals and uranium. Eligible exploration expenses related to the exploration of lithium brine deposits qualify for CMETC if the renunciation is made under a FTS agreement entered into after March 27, 2023, and on or before March 31, 2027. For Canadian exploration expenses renounced by a corporation to an individual (or a partnership of which the individual is a member), excluding trusts and reported in the appropriate line in Part IV of Form T1229, Statement of resource expenses and depletion allowance, the specified percentage is 30%.
Note For the exploration expenses eligible for the CMETC, you can choose to claim them for the CMETC (at 30%) or METC (at 15%), but not both. You cannot change to the alternate credit later once you have chosen whether you want to earn the CMETC or the METC on your eligible exploration expenses.
ITC for child care spaces The ITC for child care spaces was repealed under budget 2017 and the transitional relief period was phased out at the end of 2019. Any unused amounts from previous years, however, can still be carried forward 20 years after the year the expenses were incurred. For more information see "Carryforward to future years" below.
How to calculate and claim your ITC The ITC is based on a percentage of the investment cost (the cost of the property you bought or the expenditures you made). If you received, are entitled to receive, or can reasonably expect to receive any reimbursement, inducement, or government or non-government assistance (including grants, subsidies, forgivable loans, or deductions from tax and investment allowances) or a contract payment that can reasonably be considered to relate to the property or expenditure, you have to decrease your investment cost by the amount you received, are entitled to receive, or can reasonably expect to receive (for SR&ED, this decrease is made on Form T661). If you repay any of this assistance, add the amount of assistance repaid as follows:
Determine your ITC at the end of 2024. If the fiscal year-end of your business is in 2024, include any ITC you earn on the property you buy during the calendar year. Investments and expenditures are eligible for an ITC only when the income from the related business is subject to Part I of the Income Tax Act.
Properties acquired are eligible for an ITC claim only when the properties are considered to be available for use. For an explanation of available for use, see any of the following guides:
You can use the ITC that you earn in 2024 to reduce your federal tax for a previous year, for the 2024 tax year or for a future year. A portion of the unused refundable ITC may be refundable.
Current-year claim: To calculate your ITC to reduce your federal income tax for 2024 complete parts A to D of this form. Enter the amount of your credit on line 41200 of your income tax and benefit return. If a partnership or trust made the investments, enter only your share of the credit on line 67135 in Part A.
Carryback to previous years: You can carry back the ITC you earn in 2024 for up to three years and use it to reduce your federal tax in those years by completing Part E of this form. If you are a trust and were subject to a loss restriction event, special rules may apply to limit the ITC carryback.
Carryforward to future years: You can carry forward unused ITCs earned in tax years that end after 1997 for up to 20 years (see Part D to calculate your claim). For information on loss restriction events, see subsection 251.2(2) of the Act.
Refund of ITC If you do not use all of your current year ITC to reduce your federal income tax in the year or in the three previous years, we may refund to you 40% of your unused ITC. You can only claim this refund in the year you buy property or make an expenditure that qualifies for the credit, unless the available for use rules (or other rules deeming the expenditure to have been made in a later year) apply. To claim a refund of an ITC, complete Part E of this form. Enter your refund amount on line 45400 of your income tax and benefit return. If a partnership or trust made the investments, enter only your share of the amount.
Enter the amount as other income on line 9600 if you are filing any of the following forms:
If you are filing Form T2125, Statement of Business or Professional Activities, enter the amount on line 8230.
An ITC deducted or refunded for SR&ED will reduce the pool of deductible SR&ED expenditures, the adjusted cost base (ACB) of an interest in a partnership, and the ACB of a capital interest in a trust in the next tax year.
For more information on ITCs and their recapture, visit canada.ca/revenue-agency or see the SR&ED Investment Tax Credit Policy, and Interpretation Bulletin IT411, Meaning of "Construction", Information Circular IC78-4, Investment Tax Credit Rates, and IC78-4, Special Release – Investment Tax Credit Rates.
The amount of the recovery will be: