31 May 2026

What to Do If You Filed Taxes Late in Canada

Missing a deadline feels worse than it usually is—if you act. The most important step in any late tax filing Canada what to do situation is simple: file the outstanding returns as soon as possible, because most penalties are tied to how late you are and whether you owe a balance. This guide walks through CRA late-filing penalties, interest, voluntary disclosure, and a practical catch-up plan for individuals and corporations.

Catch-up game plan

Filing late is fixable—penalties grow with delay

For individuals, the personal return is generally due April 30 (June 15 for self-employed, but any balance owing is still due April 30). The longer a balance sits unfiled and unpaid, the more the late-filing penalty and compounding interest add up. Filing stops the late-filing penalty clock even if you cannot pay in full yet.

5% + 1%/month Common first-time late-filing penalty: 5% of the balance owing plus 1% per full month late (up to 12 months).
Higher for repeat Repeat late-filing within a few years can roughly double the penalty rates—verify current CRA figures.
Daily interest CRA charges compound daily interest on unpaid balances at the prescribed rate, which changes quarterly.

What to do first when you file late in Canada

People searching late tax filing Canada what to do often freeze because they fear a bill they cannot pay. Separate two problems: filing and paying. Filing late triggers the late-filing penalty; not paying triggers interest. You can—and should—file even if you cannot pay the full amount immediately, then arrange a payment plan.

File immediately

Each full month reduces the additional 1% monthly penalty exposure. Filing now caps the late-filing penalty even before you pay.

Gather slips

T4, T5, T3, RRSP, and receipts. CRA's My Account often holds copies of slips that were filed by issuers.

Set a payment plan

If you cannot pay in full, CRA can arrange instalment-style arrangements; interest still accrues, but enforcement risk drops.

Consider VDP

The Voluntary Disclosures Program may reduce penalties/interest if you come forward before CRA contacts you and conditions are met.

Penalties and interest, illustrated

Assume you owe $10,000 and file three full months late for the first time. A typical calculation is 5% ($500) plus 1% per month for 3 months ($300), so roughly $800 in late-filing penalty, with daily compound interest on the unpaid balance on top. If you owe nothing, the late-filing penalty is often nil—but filing still matters for benefits like the GST/HST credit and Canada Child Benefit.

SituationPenalty exposureWhy
Refund or nil balance, filed lateOften no late-filing penaltyPenalty is a % of balance owing; benefits may still be delayed.
Balance owing, first-time late5% + 1%/month (max 12 months)Standard CRA late-filing penalty structure.
Repeat late filerOften 10% + 2%/monthHigher rates can apply if penalized in prior years.
Unfiled for yearsCompounding penalties + interestVDP or professional help is usually the right path.

A practical catch-up sequence

Step 1

List every missing year for each entity—personal, corporate, GST, payroll.

Step 2

Pull slips and statements from CRA My Account / My Business Account.

Step 3

Prepare oldest-to-newest so carryforwards (losses, RRSP, capital) flow correctly.

Step 4

File, then negotiate payment terms and confirm penalty relief options.

Don't wait for a “perfect” return. CRA can file an arbitrary assessment on your behalf that often overstates tax. A reasonable, documented return filed now usually beats a notional assessment later.

Related reading: expenses without receipts and bookkeeping basics to keep future filings on time.

Frequently asked questions

Behind on filings? Let's get you current.

J. Wang Chartered Professional Accountant helps individuals and corporations catch up on late returns, deal with CRA, and reduce penalties where relief applies—so you know exactly what to do next.

Back-filing VDP submissions Payment arrangements CRA representation

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