Montreal.tax helps individuals and families submit a clear request and get connected with an independent licensed tax professional in Montreal.
If you need support for an annual personal return, family tax situations, or general filing questions, this page is your starting point.
Use our quick contact form to describe your situation. No account required.
Submit RequestShare your tax year, high-level context, and any deadlines.
We review your request to understand if and how to route it.
When applicable, you are connected with an independent professional.
Common requests include first-time filing, family-status changes, and CRA/Revenu Quebec follow-up questions.
A complete request helps reduce delays and improves follow-up quality.
Understanding a few common terms can make your request clearer and speed up follow-up.
Personal tax filing in Montreal usually means dealing with both the CRA and Revenu Quebec. Many people assume one return covers everything, but Quebec residents generally file one federal return and one Quebec return. If your family status changed, if you moved during the year, or if you received a notice after filing, that detail matters because it can affect credits, installments, and what documents are still missing.
People also underestimate how often timing changes the answer. A return filed late, a slip that arrives after filing, or a reassessment notice can turn a simple personal return into a follow-up situation. In Quebec, childcare, tuition, moving details, and family credits can all create questions that do not show up in generic tax advice written for the rest of Canada.
If you are not sure whether your question is about filing, correction, benefits, or a CRA or Revenu Quebec notice, that uncertainty itself is useful context. The better first step is to explain what changed, what year is involved, and what letter or missing document triggered the problem.
Usually because information did not match, a slip was missing, or a credit needs clarification. The key details are the tax year, the exact notice type, and whether CRA and Revenu Quebec both sent something or only one agency did.
Often yes, but the right next step depends on the type of income, whether the return was already assessed, and whether Quebec and federal amounts are both affected. Missing a T4A, RL slip, or investment slip can change more than one line.
Marriage, separation, a child, shared custody, or a move can affect credits and reporting. Those are not small details. They are often the exact reason a standard personal return stops being standard.
No. Montreal.tax is a referral platform and does not provide direct tax advice.
Yes. You can submit a general request and include your context.
No. Do not submit SIN or highly sensitive documents in the initial request.