Generally, transportation and airline passes you provide to your employees are a taxable benefit. Depending on your situation, there may not be a taxable benefit for certain passes provided to employees of transit or airline companies under the CRA's administrative policy .
Situation: You are an airline company and you provide standby airline passes or space-confirmed airline passes
Under the CRA's administrative policy, if you provide standby airline passes or space-confirmed airline passes, the benefit is not taxable in the following situations:
If the standby airline passes or space-confirmed airline passes are not provided in one of the situations above, the benefit is taxable.
For example, if you provide space-confirmed airline passes to a current employee for their personal travel, the benefit is taxable.
Situation: You are a transportation company and you provide free or discounted passes
Under the CRA's administrative policy, if you provide free or discounted passes, the benefit is not taxable if all of the following apply:
If the free or discounted passes do not meet all of the conditions above, the benefit is taxable.
If you provide free or discounted passes to a current employee who works in an area other than the transportation business or its operations, the benefit is also taxable.
If the benefit is taxable, the value of the benefit is equal to:
A municipal transit authority provides its employees and their families with discounted passes. Employees receive a 50% discount on monthly passes, while family members of the employee receive a 20% discount on the same passes. The cost of the pass is $150 per month for the general public. A married employee buys two discounted passes each month. The cost to the employee is $75/month for their pass (50% discount) and $120/month for their spouse's pass (20% discount). The total discount is $1,260: $900 ($75 discount x 12 months) for the employee passes and $360 ($30 discount x 12 months) for the spouse's passes.
The discounted passes for the employee are not a taxable benefit under CRA's administrative policy, but the discounted passes for the spouse of the employee are a taxable benefit to be included on the T4 slip of the employee. The taxable benefit is calculated as follows:
The amounts must be included in the pay period they were received or enjoyed.
Example 2 – Calculations
A ferry service offers free walk-on fares to its employees and a 20% discount when ferrying an employee with a vehicle. The cost to the general public is $25 for walk-on fares and $75 for vehicles. Over the course of the year, an employee takes advantage of the free walk-on fares 12 times and brings a vehicle onto the ferry on four other occasions. The total discount is $360: $300 ($25 x 12 trips) for the free walk-on fares and $60 ($15 discount x 4 trips) for the vehicle fares.
The discounted walk-on fares for the employee are not a taxable benefit under CRA's administrative policy, but the discounted fares for ferrying a vehicle are a taxable benefit to be included on the T4 slip of the employee. The taxable benefit is calculated as follows:
The amounts must be included in the pay period they were received or enjoyed.
Example 3 – Calculations
An airline offers standby passes to its current employees and one travel companion. Regardless of the price of the ticket, employees pay a $50 service fee for each boarding pass they obtain using their standby pass. An employee successfully gets on three flights during the year. Each time they bring a companion. All flights are domestic (subject to GST/HST). The airline determines the fair market value of the three flights combined is $800 for each of the employee and the companion. After factoring the service fees paid, the employee receives a discount of $1,300: $650 ($800 - $150 service fee) for the employee's trips and $650 ($800 - $150 service fee) for their companion's trips.
The discounted standby passes for the current employee for their personal travel are not a taxable benefit under CRA's administrative policy, but the discounted standby passes for their companion are a taxable benefit to be included on the T4 slip of the employee. The taxable benefit is calculated as follows:
The amounts must be included in the pay period they were received or enjoyed.
The withholding and remitting requirement depends on the type of remuneration: cash , non-cash , or near-cash .
You must withhold the following deductions:
The amounts must be included in the pay period they were received or enjoyed.
Learn how to calculate deductions and the GST/HST to remit on benefits: How to calculate – Calculate payroll deductions and contributions.
You must report the following amounts on the T4 slip:
ITA: 6 Amounts to be included as income from office or employment ITA: 6(1)(a) Value of benefits ITA: 6(1)(b) Personal or living expenses (allowances) CPP: 12(1) Amount of contributory salary and wages ETA: 173 Taxable benefit is considered a supply for GST/HST purposes IECPR: 2(1) Amount of insurable earnings IECPR: 2(3) Earnings from insurable employment IECPR: 2(3)(a.1) Earnings from insurable employment – amount excluded as income under 6(1)(a) or (b), 6(6) or (16) of the ITA