Use Montreal.tax to submit your tax situation and get matched with an independent licensed professional when your request is eligible. This page is designed for people searching for a tax accountant in Montreal across personal, self-employed, and small business situations.
Tax Accountant Montreal
This page targets common tax accountant search intent in Montreal and helps visitors organize a request before follow-up.
Annual returns, reassessments, missing slips, notices, filing delays, and family tax questions.
Income and expense organization, freelancer tax context, deadlines, and mixed personal and business issues.
Corporation questions, GST/QST, compliance concerns, year-end planning, and filing context for owners.
Notice of assessment, reassessment, payment deadlines, balances due, and tax process questions in Quebec.
Share your tax situation in a short form. No account needed.
Many visitors do not actually need to search for dozens of firms before taking a first step. What they need first is a clear way to explain their tax situation, identify the main issue, and understand whether their request is personal, self-employed, or business related.
Montreal.tax is built for that stage. Instead of asking you to know every technical detail in advance, the platform helps you structure a request around your tax year, your profile, your deadlines, and the main problem you want to solve.
This is particularly useful when your situation crosses categories, for example when you are both a salaried individual and a freelancer, or when you manage a small corporation and also have personal tax questions.
Describe your tax year, your profile, and your main issue in a short request.
Your submission is reviewed to understand whether and how it can be routed.
When eligible, the request can be connected to an independent licensed tax professional.
Before you submit
A clear request helps route your case faster and improves follow-up quality for both personal and business tax situations in Montreal.
People searching for a tax accountant in Montreal are often not looking for one narrow service. They may have a personal return problem, a self-employed question, a small business issue, or a sales tax problem that overlaps with year-end filing. In Quebec, that usually means the situation may involve both CRA and Revenu Quebec, and that distinction matters more than many people expect.
A request becomes much more useful when it explains which tax year is involved, whether a notice has already been received, and whether the issue is personal, business, or mixed. Many Montreal tax situations are not purely one category. A person may be employed, freelance on the side, and also need help understanding GST/QST or a late slip. That is why generic “I need a tax accountant” messages tend to slow things down.
The better first step is to describe the actual trigger: a deadline, a missing document, a reassessment, an overdue return, uncertainty about GST/QST, or confusion between federal and Quebec tax obligations. Those details are what turn a broad search into a clear request.
Often the first issue is not choosing a professional title. It is understanding what the notice, reassessment, or missing document actually means. If the trigger is a CRA or Revenu Quebec letter, include the year, notice type, and whether any deadline is already approaching.
Yes, and in Montreal that is common. A business owner, freelancer, or incorporated professional may have overlapping personal and business concerns. It is better to explain both together than to split the situation artificially and leave out the connection.
At minimum, have the tax year, your profile, your main issue, and any notice or deadline ready to mention. You do not need to send sensitive documents immediately. A clear summary is more valuable than a rushed upload of incomplete records.
No. Montreal.tax is a referral platform that helps connect requests with independent licensed professionals.
Yes. You can submit your context and mention whether your request is personal, self-employed, or business related.
You can submit in a few minutes by sharing your tax context and contact details through the form.
Prepare your tax year, your profile, your main issue, and any deadlines or notices linked to your request. Avoid sending sensitive numbers in first contact.