If you are new to Canada and preparing your first return, this page helps you submit a request with the right context.
First-year filing often includes questions about eligibility, timeline, and how to prepare basic information for personal tax filing.
Provide high-level details about your first filing situation.
We review your submission to determine possible next steps.
Eligible requests may be connected to an independent professional.
New arrivals in Montreal often ask about residency timelines, first-year benefits, and basic filing responsibilities.
A clear newcomer summary helps avoid confusion around first-year filing rules.
Understanding a few common terms can make your request clearer and speed up follow-up.
A first tax return in Montreal is often confusing because the questions are not only about one form. Newcomers usually need to understand what period of the year they are reporting, whether federal and Quebec filing expectations both apply, and how arrival timing affects benefits, residency context, and first-year records. People often search for quick answers, but the real issue is usually how their personal timeline fits into Quebec and Canadian tax rules.
The most common problems come from missing timeline details. Arrival month, first employment income in Canada, marital status, dependants, and whether there was income before arriving can all change what needs to be explained. Many newcomers also confuse residency questions with immigration questions, even though tax residency is its own issue and often depends on factual context rather than a single label.
That is why a useful request should clearly state when you arrived, whether this is your first Canadian return, whether you live in Quebec now, and whether your main concern is benefits, filing status, deadlines, or uncertainty about what to declare.
In many Quebec resident situations, yes. The important detail is your residence in Quebec at year end and the broader timeline of your first year in Canada.
Possibly, but eligibility depends on your situation, dependants, marital status, and arrival timeline. That is why ?I am new in Canada? is not enough context on its own.
That uncertainty is common and should be stated directly. Your dates, living arrangements, and family context usually matter more than a guessed label.
Yes. Add your details and mention that you need newcomer first-return guidance.
Yes. Share your arrival timeline and context, and your request can still be reviewed.
No. Do not include SIN or sensitive documents in the initial form submission.