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by phone using our Individual Income Tax Enquiries line at 1-800-959-8281. (The CRA will ask you for your name, address, social insurance number, date of birth, and other information from your tax return or notice of assessment.)
If you were in Canada for fewer than 183 days in the tax year or more and you did not have docHub residential ties with Canada throughout the year, you may be considered a non-resident.
If you were in Canada for fewer than 183 days in the tax year or more and you did not have docHub residential ties with Canada throughout the year, you may be considered a non-resident.
To become a non- resident of Canada, you must sever most if not all of your primary residential ties with Canada. Having your spouse and dependants leave Canada with you or soon after. In addition to primary residential ties, certain secondary residential ties should be severed.
Residency status normally, customarily, or routinely live in another country and are not considered a resident of Canada. do not have docHub residential ties in Canada and any of the following applies: You live outside Canada throughout the tax year. You stay in Canada for less than 183 days in the tax year.
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People also ask

The 183-day rule is used by the majority of countries to determine whether someone should be considered a resident in a certain country for tax purposes. It states, that if a person spends more than half a year (183 days or more) in a single country, then this person will become a tax resident there.
Generally, you were a non-resident of Canada in 2021 if you normally, customarily, or routinely lived in another country and were not considered a resident of Canada for tax purposes.
If you were in Canada for fewer than 183 days in the tax year or more and you did not have docHub residential ties with Canada throughout the year, you may be considered a non-resident.
First, you must have been physically present in the United States for 31 days of the current year. If so, count the full number of days present for the current year. Then, multiply the number of days present in year 1 by 1/6 and the days in year 2 by 1/3. Sum the totals.
The 183-Day Rule in Canadian Tax Residency The 183-day rule refers to people who sojourn in Canada for more than 183 days in a year. Where this is the case, they are deemed to be a Canadian resident for tax purposes throughout the whole year.

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