Transportation and airline passes

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 .

Situations

Situation: You are an airline company and you provide standby airline passes or space-confirmed airline passes

Non-taxable situation

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:

Taxable situation

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

Non-taxable situation

Under the CRA's administrative policy, if you provide free or discounted passes, the benefit is not taxable if all of the following apply:

Taxable situation

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.

Not taxable : Option 1
Taxable : Option 2

Calculate the value of the benefit

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.

Withhold payroll deductions and remit GST/HST

The withholding and remitting requirement depends on the type of remuneration: cash , non-cash , or near-cash .

You must withhold the following deductions:

Non-cash and near-cash : Option 1

Cash : Option 2

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.

Report the benefit on a slip

You must report the following amounts on the T4 slip:

Non-cash and near-cash : Option 1

Cash : Option 2

References

Legislation

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