Benefit as a % of spend | 30.00 |
Financial cap per production | - |
Do I have to register/set up a company? | Yes |
Does foreign cast/crew paid in their home country/region qualify as expenditure? | No |
Do foreign cast/crew have to pay tax in the host country/state/region? | Yes |
Does travel to/from country/region qualify as expenditure? | No |
Can a production qualify for other national incentives such as cultural programmes if it qualifies for this incentive? | Yes |
Criteria to access the benefit | - - Minimum percentage of the film that must be shot in the region: 75.00%
- - Use Local cast & Crew
- - Cultural Test
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When will the benefit/incentive be received? | - - End of national fiscal year
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Additional incentives or advantages | - - Sales Tax is not recoverable.
Behind the scenes personnel, ie crew, are taxed at 15% of gross (23% for cast and in-front-of-camera personnel). Under the legislation, 23% tax must be withheld on the gross income earned from acting in a film or video production, including residuals and contingent compensation, with no deductions permitted. Non-resident actors can either: Have 23% of their gross acting income withheld and not have to file a return; Or have 23% of their gross acting income withheld, file an elective return, and pay tax at marginal rates on their net income instead of 23% on the gross amount. If the non-resident tax withheld by the payer is more than the amount of tax payable calculated on the return, the excess will be refunded. The legislation applies to non-resident actors in film or video production, such as feature films, movies of the week, television series, documentaries, video productions, and commercials. The legislation applies only to acting income earned by non-resident actors providing services in Canada. If a non-resident person earns other income in Canada (for services as a producer or director, or income from stage acting, for example), this income is subject to withholding at the rate of 15% and the person is required to file a tax return.
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