Guide

Canadian tax deadlines: T1, T2, GST/HST, and payroll dates

CRA due dates for small businesses: the April 30 and June 15 personal deadlines, T2 corporate dates, GST/HST by reporting period, and payroll remittances.

By ExpenseFlow team
· 11 June 2026 · 6 min read

Canada’s deadline structure has a recurring theme: payment dates arrive before filing dates. Self-employed individuals can file in June but owe in April; corporations can file six months after year end but owe in two or three. Treating the filing date as the real deadline is the most common (and most expensive) calendar mistake in Canadian small business, because CRA interest runs from the payment date. The dates below are verified against the CRA sources in the Sources section.

Personal income tax (T1)

WhoFiling deadlinePayment deadline
Most individualsApril 30April 30
Self-employed (and spouse/common-law partner)June 15April 30 [1]

The June 15 filing extension does not move the money: a sole proprietor who waits until June to compute their balance owing has been accruing interest since April 30 [1] . Individuals who owe instalments pay them on March 15, June 15, September 15, and December 15 [1] .

GST/HST

Deadlines depend on the reporting period [2] :

Reporting periodFilePay
Monthly1 month after period endSame date
Quarterly1 month after period endSame date
Annual (most registrants)3 months after fiscal year endSame date
Annual, self-employed with December 31 year endJune 15April 30 [2]

Annual filers with net tax of $3,000 or more in both the previous and current year also make quarterly instalments, due one month after each fiscal quarter: April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31 on a calendar year [2] . When a due date lands on a weekend or holiday, the next business day counts as on time [2] .

Corporations (T2)

WhatDeadline
File the T2 return6 months after tax year end [2]
Pay the balance of tax2 months after year end (3 months for eligible CCPCs) [2]
Corporate instalmentsMonthly or quarterly when total tax exceeds $3,000 [2]

A corporation with a December 31 year end files by June 30 but pays by the end of February (or March for an eligible Canadian-controlled private corporation). As with the T1, the return has to be substantially prepared months before its official deadline simply to know what to pay.

Employers: remittances and slips

Remitting frequency follows remitter type, set by average monthly withholding from two calendar years ago [3] :

Remitter typeFrequencyDue
Quarterly (eligible small employers, perfect compliance)QuarterlyApril 15, July 15, October 15, January 15
Regular (AMWA under $25,000)Monthly15th of the following month
Accelerated (AMWA $25,000 and above)Up to twice monthly or fasterPer half-month period; see CRA remitter schedule

T4 and T4A information returns for a calendar year are due by the last day of February following it [2] .

If a deadline slips

The CRA’s structure makes the consequences asymmetric. Filing late when you owe triggers a late-filing penalty calculated as a percentage of the unpaid balance plus a monthly add-on, so the same lateness costs more the bigger the bill. Paying late, even with an on-time return, accrues arrears interest compounded daily at the prescribed rate, which the CRA resets quarterly. Payroll remittances carry their own graduated penalty scale and are treated severely because the amounts are deducted from employees. The standing advice mirrors the other side of the border: when a date is going to slip, contact the CRA and arrange terms before it does. And remember the weekend rule works in your favour: a due date on a Saturday, Sunday, or CRA-recognised holiday rolls to the next business day [2] .

One calendar, one set of books

A Canadian small business with employees and quarterly GST/HST faces monthly remittances, four GST/HST events, February slips, and the April/June personal or two-stage corporate sequence. All of it reads off the same ledger, and the ledger is only as good as its slowest receipt. ExpenseFlow shortens that path: expenses and supplier bills are captured at the moment they exist, coded with the correct sales tax treatment (including the recoverable/non-recoverable split that provincial taxes create), and synced into QuickBooks Online or Xero with the document attached. The returns still get filed from the accounting platform; they just stop waiting on data entry.

References

Sources and references

Every figure, threshold, deadline, and regulatory rule cited in this guide is traceable to an official government publication. URLs are reproduced in full so any reader can verify the claim at source. Numbers are subject to change at each fiscal event; we re-check this list at every quarterly refresh of this guide.

  1. [1]

    CRA · Due dates and payment dates: personal income tax

    https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/individuals/topics/important-dates-individuals.html

    April 30 / June 15 filing, April 30 payment, instalment dates.

    Retrieved 2026-06-11

  2. [2]

    CRA · Businesses have different filing and payment deadlines: a quick reference

    https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/news/newsroom/tax-tips/tax-tips-2025/businesses-have-different-filing-payment-deadlines-quick-reference.html

    GST/HST by reporting period, instalments, T2 filing and payment, T4/T4A dates.

    Retrieved 2026-06-11

  3. [3]

    CRA · When to remit (pay) payroll deductions

    https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/payroll/remitting-source-deductions/how-when-remit-due-dates.html

    Remitter types: quarterly 15ths, regular 15th of next month, accelerated half-month dates.

    Retrieved 2026-06-11

Questions, answered

Common questions on this guide

When is the Canadian personal tax deadline?

April 30 for most people. Self-employed individuals and their spouses have until June 15 to file, but any balance owing is still due April 30, so interest starts then regardless of the later filing date. Source: CRA, due dates and payment dates for personal income tax.

When are GST/HST returns due?

Monthly and quarterly filers file and pay one month after the end of the reporting period. Annual filers generally file and pay three months after fiscal year end, except self-employed individuals with a December 31 year end, who pay by April 30 and file by June 15. Source: CRA, GST/HST reporting requirements and deadlines.

When is a T2 corporate return due?

Six months after the corporation's tax year end. The balance of tax, however, is generally due two months after year end, or three months for eligible Canadian-controlled private corporations, so payment comes well before filing. Source: CRA.

When are payroll remittances due?

Regular remitters (average monthly withholding under $25,000) pay by the 15th of the following month. Eligible small employers with a perfect compliance record can remit quarterly by April 15, July 15, October 15, and January 15. Larger employers remit up to twice a month or faster. Source: CRA, when to remit.

Do GST/HST instalments apply to annual filers?

Yes, when net tax is $3,000 or more in both the previous and current fiscal year. Instalments are due within one month after each fiscal quarter end: April 30, July 31, October 31, and January 31 for a calendar fiscal year. Source: CRA.

Keep exploring

Put this guide to work

Start a free trial. Connect Xero or QuickBooks Online and process your first receipts in minutes. No credit card required.

Start free trial