Please complete your profile to unlock commenting and other important features.

Please select your date of birth for special perks on your birthday. Your username will be your unique profile link and will be publicly used in comments.
MTL Blog Pro

This is a Pro feature.

Time to level up your local game with MTL Blog Pro.

Pro

$5/month

$40/year

  • Everything in the Free plan
  • Ad-free reading and browsing
  • Unlimited access to all content including AI summaries
  • Directly support our local and national reporting and become a Patron
  • Cancel anytime.

quebec tax credit

Quebec residents still have time to claim the Cost of Living tax credit through Revenu Québec to help mitigate the cost of groceries, rent and day-to-day necessities.

On January 25, 2024, Revenu Québec announced the extension of the Cost of Living credit, giving you up until this summer to claim the refundable tax credit.

Keep readingShow less

With the rising cost of living affecting Canadians, managing a paycheck has become more challenging, especially for those with lower incomes.

Quebec residents may be eligible for several government benefits and credits offered in February to ease financial strain.

Keep readingShow less

Amid their province's heinous cost-of-living era, Quebecers might be looking for some extra cash. Luckily for some of us, the Quebec Solidarity Tax Credit, supplied by Revenu Québec, can give you as much as $800, spread out in multiple payments across 2023 and 2024.

Revenu Québec considers the tax credit as a form of social assistance, using direct deposit or mailed checks to give back to Quebecers a portion of what is taken from us in income tax.

Keep readingShow less

So the Quebec government is sending $500 to millions of residents. The goal is to help offset the effects of record inflation. But reactions are mixed.

More than a few groups are questioning whether cheques are the best way to help households, especially low-income Quebecers, deal with rising prices in the long term. Opposition parties were quick to criticize the governing CAQ party for announcing the measure just months ahead of the next provincial election.

Keep readingShow less

After promising to help Quebecers deal with a meteoric rise in inflation, the government announced it would send payments of $500 to millions of residents.

Finance Minister Eric Girard outlined the measure in a presentation of the CAQ's proposed budget to the National Assembly. On Facebook, Premier François Legault celebrated the payments as an example of his government's willingness and ability to give direct aid to Quebecers.

Keep readingShow less

Quebec is set to give $500 to adult residents with an income of $100,000/year or less. The government says 6.4 million people will benefit from the payment, which will be made automatically through Revenu Québec.

The announcement is part of Quebec's 2022-23 budget presented by Finance Minister Eric Girard in late March.

Keep readingShow less

This year, like every year, you probably owe the government money. But the sum you pay might be a little different. Revenu Québec has shared a list of major changes affecting the 2021 tax year.

The changes mean that some households could end up with more money in their pockets.

Keep readingShow less

2022 is about to get a little better for some people in La Belle Province. As part of the fall 2021 Economic and Fiscal Update, certain people will be receiving a tax credit from Revenu Québec for up to $400 in January 2022.

Those who are eligible for the solidarity tax credit will benefit from this one-time tax credit. According to Quebec's Minister of Finance, Éric Girard, that means 3.3 million people in Quebec are about to get some extra cash.

Keep readingShow less