
06-06-2022 10:48 AM
Posting as a new topic purely for visibility, hoping other sellers benefit from this.
Come July 1st, we (sellers) will no longer have to pay taxes on our selling fees (fvf's and $0.30 transaction fee). If you are charged taxes on your selling fees after July 1st, you can get a full refund of those taxes from the CRA using form GST189. This info comes straight from the rulings department.
Hopefully, this helps some people... not sure how many already knew about this.
Cheers.
06-06-2022 11:43 AM
Hi! Just clarifying that this pertains to folks who are not registered to collect GST/HST today because for those registered, we "get them back" as ITCs anyway.
06-06-2022 11:52 AM
@ricarmic wrote:Hi! Just clarifying that this pertains to folks who are not registered to collect GST/HST today because for those registered, we "get them back" as ITCs anyway.
Very good point @ricarmic . For registered folks it doesn't really matter because you get them back anyways, but for unregistered folks (e.g. myself) it has a bit more of an impact.
06-06-2022 02:01 PM
06-06-2022 02:12 PM
@canada_goose_whisperer wrote:Posting as a new topic purely for visibility, hoping other sellers benefit from this.
Come July 1st, we (sellers) will no longer have to pay taxes on our selling fees (fvf's and $0.30 transaction fee). If you are charged taxes on your selling fees after July 1st, you can get a full refund of those taxes from the CRA using form GST189. This info comes straight from the rulings department.
Hopefully, this helps some people... not sure how many already knew about this.
Cheers.
Do you have a copy of the ruling or link to the D-Memo that you can post?
I've looked at the form you referenced but I don't see anything specific to the "platform" collection of GST/HST on fees.
06-06-2022 02:18 PM
we all want that in writing, please , in triplicate...
06-06-2022 03:01 PM
Since charging fees on payment processing of payments to merchants is a Standard Practice in the financial industry , and has been for decades, either this is not a change (because those fees are deductible from our profits) or we would need further confirmation.
06-06-2022 03:20 PM
@reallynicestamps wrote:Since charging fees on payment processing of payments to merchants is a Standard Practice in the financial industry , and has been for decades, either this is not a change (because those fees are deductible from our profits) or we would need further confirmation.
Actually payment processing (stand alone like PayPal) IS a financial service and is zero-rated for GST/HST (PayPal do not charge GST and never have).
Now that eBay is charging both fees for services (non-financial) and payment processing in a combined fee the entire amount is no longer exempt.
06-06-2022 03:58 PM - edited 06-06-2022 03:59 PM
@kawartha-ephemera @recped @mrdutch1001 @reallynicestamps
The CRA rulings department for digital economies. They don't provide written rulings, only over the phone. Ask them yourself if you don't believe me. Literally talked to them on the phone this morning.
06-06-2022 04:05 PM
What is said over the phone cannot be verified unless recorded...you have that recorded , right?
06-06-2022 04:30 PM
I am not in the habit of secretly recording government employees on the phone.
I have given everyone the important info, and the means to verify it officially by contacting the CRA rulings department should they wish. What people do with this information and whether they believe it or not - all due respect - is not a pressing concern for me. I have done my part to inform everyone, and I now have other things to move on and deal with.
06-06-2022 07:40 PM
I'm not sure which thread was about charging tax to residents of Reserves but..
Upon the launch of this sales tax implementation, eBay won’t be able to support and accept exemptions for buyers who qualify for the First Nations or resale exemptions. First Nations buyers can apply for a rebate to the CRA on exempt purchases. For provincial exemptions, buyers can go to the respective tax authority for a refund.
From today's email from eBay.
06-06-2022 11:09 PM
06-06-2022 11:35 PM
06-07-2022 05:39 AM
06-07-2022 09:45 AM - edited 06-07-2022 09:46 AM
AZ switched on sales tax for all Canadian sellers last year (July 1, 2021).
As a comparison, this is how does AZ approaches the same issue:
If not registered for GST/HST amazon does not charge sales tax on selling fees (1).
If registered, AZ charges GST/HST on selling fees (since those are ITCs).
ebay should be taking the same approach to keep things simple for sellers.
...
Side note 1: I expect AZ does some behind the scenes fancy accounting. Sales tax on transaction minus what would have been charged on selling fees equals amount paid to the government. In other words, an automatic ITC adjustment for non-registered sellers.
Side note 2: AZ selling fees are separate from their FBA service fees (which are always taxed).
Side note 3: ITC is short for Input Tax Credit
-;-
06-07-2022 09:55 AM - edited 06-07-2022 09:56 AM
If you use GST189 to file for a rebate, the following also applies:
"persons who make an application for a rebate, have to keep adequate books and records, including original invoices, for six years from the end of the year to which they relate..."
From: RC4033 Guide for GST/HST Rebates
06-07-2022 10:01 AM - edited 06-07-2022 10:04 AM
@byto253 wrote:
It makes sense since hst is being collected from people with under $30k in sales, there should be a mechanism for unregistered to claim back hat paid on eBay.
Under this new arrangement, eBay is collecting and remitting sales taxes on the behalf of sellers, not from the sellers
Or are you referring to the HST on seller fees?