It’s tax season – and for people who own their own businesses, use service animals or attend post-secondary institutions, there are new rules in place this year that could affect their returns.

Many of the most notable tax changes for the 2018 tax year affect small business owners, such as the decreasing of the federal small business tax rate from 10.5 per cent to 10 per cent.

Among the tax changes unrelated to small businesses, one of the most prominent is the expansion of a tax credit for expenses related to service animals.

The credit already applies to service animals trained to help people with blindness, deafness, autism, severe diabetes, severe epilepsy and significant, long-term restrictions on the use of their arms or legs. The 2018 tax year is the first in which the credit will be available for service dogs trained to help with severe mental health issues.

This means that taxpayers can receive a credit for the cost of obtaining the animal, its food and veterinary care, and its training. Animals that provide comfort and emotional support, but do not have training to assist people living with PTSD or other mental health conditions, do not qualify for the credit.

The person must be diagnosed with a condition, and the animal [must be] specifically trained to cope with this anxiety disorder,” Lisa Gittens, a senior tax expert at H&R Block Canada, told CTVNews.ca.

Another change affects people who have to move for work-related reasons. While moving expenses can still be claimed in a tax return, there is no longer a tax deduction for home-relocation loans.

Post-secondary students in Saskatchewan and Ontario are no longer eligible to receive provincial tax credits for their tuition. A similar change was introduced in New Brunswick in 2017. Tuition is still eligible for federal tax credits in all three provinces.

Back on the business side, the government has introduced accelerated capital cost allowances – essentially allowing businesses to claim deductions for capital purchases made after Nov. 21, 2018 sooner than they could before.

Gittens says this could make a difference even to people who rent out a property via Airbnb, as it would apply to furniture purchased for that property.

Income-splitting rules have also changed, with business owners no longer allowed to pay dividends to family members as a means of reducing their tax burden. Relatives of business owners can still receive dividends at a lower tax rate if they can prove they contributed to the business within the past five years.

“In general terms, if you’re going to pay your family members for working in the business, they have to have an active role working in the business,” Dave Walsh, a partner and tax service line leader at BDO Canada, told CTVNews.ca.

Carbon tax impact

Four provinces which did not create carbon pricing schemes of their own will have programs imposed on them by the federal government as of April 1 – but the programs come with a tax rebate for 2018.

People in Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario and Saskatchewan can apply for the rebate, which the federal government says will result in minimum tax credits of $128 for a single person in New Brunswick, $154 for a single person in Ontario, $170 for a single person in Manitoba and $305 for a single person in Saskatchewan.

Rebate levels increase if applicants have spouses or children living with them. The rebate can only be claimed by one person per household.

When the carbon tax takes effect next month, it will drive up the prices of gasoline, natural gas and propane. The government has said the amount most households will pay in increased costs is less than what they will receive through the rebate.

“This tax credit is going to help the taxpayer to offset those extra costs,” Gittens said.

Looking into the future

Gone for 2019 is the Working Income Tax Benefit for low-income people in the workforce, which is being rebranded as the Canada Workers Benefit. The government says the new benefit will be enhanced, with most recipients receiving a 26-per-cent top-up of their earned income over $3,000 instead of the current 25 per cent.

The federal small business tax rate will fall again for the 2019 tax year, going down from 10 per cent to 9 per cent.

Small businesses will also have to abide by tighter restrictions on passive income – money coming into a corporation from investments, dividends and other activities not directly related to its core business.

Under the new rules, small businesses reporting more than $50,000 in passive income will start to lose access to the small business tax rate for their active income.

“The way the math works is once you get to $150,000 of passive income, the small business deduction would be gone entirely,” Walsh said.

Further changes affecting 2019 tax returns could be announced later in the year, Walsh said – especially because this is an election year, meaning every party looking to form a government may use tax policy as a way to woo voters.

When should you file?

CRA started accepting electronic tax returns Monday. Anyone who owes money has until April 30 to file and pay your personal income tax return for 2018 without being penalized. People who are self-employed have until June 17 to file, although if they have a balance owing, interest will start to accrue on their accounts as of April 30.

The deadline may be more than two months away, but experts say there’s no reason to wait until April to get that return ready.

“The earlier you file your tax return, the quicker it’ll get processed and the quicker you’ll get your refund,” Walsh said.

Gittens says people who file well before the deadline might receive their refunds in two weeks or less, in contrast to the months it can take if they file last-minute. She sees other benefits to getting an early start on tax returns as well, including additional time to track down proof of medical expenses and other claims.

“People are often struggling to find those receipts,” she told CTVNews.ca.

“If you file early, it gives you time to sit down, get your receipts … [and] get everything laid out in an orderly way.”

People who want to make RRSP contributions and have them reflected as part of the 2018 tax year have until March 1 to do so.