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In Canada you will have to pay provincial sales tax and also the GST. In some provinces this has been combined into the HST or Harmonized Sales Tax. The best plan is to contact the CRA through their website and find out what taxes need to be paid in your province.
Yes, I have been paying DC taxes for 12 years now.
No is the basic answer they pay tax in the country they are earning in, although if they work for a British company or HM government and are liable for CSA, then deductions can be made.
If you are planning on renting a car from Budget in the near future, you should consider finding a Budget coupon code. There is no reason to pay full price if you don't have to, and you might be surprised by all of the savings you can benefit from if you use a coupon code. The best way to find these codes is to search on the Internet.
Prepaid rent received is money "your company" has "received" from a customer to pay rent for "x" amount of time, or prepaid.Prepaid Rent Received is actually an "income" or "revenue" if you are renting out a building, home, apartment, whatever.This is just the opposite of Prepaid Rent that is used in the expense. Instead of paying rent, you are receiving it.Say you own a house you are renting out and the tenant decides to pay 6 months rent in advance, you get the money, but it is recorded as a prepaid rent received, as you now still owe him the full six months rent, you are now obligated to the tenant for the next six months and therefor prepaid rent received (similar to unearned revenue) is a liability for you until the rent is used up.
British Columbia has a public health program called British Columbia Medical Services Plan. Visit this website for details http://www.health.gov.bc.ca/msp/
no. absolutely not.
If you are renting them you do have to pay for them.
no. absolutely not.
no it would be cheaper to pay rent for the car
They wanted to join Canada because: ~they wanted Canada to pay for the colonies debts. ~they wanted Canada to make payments to the new province every year.they wanted to!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
It depends...
you have to pay for petrol, insurance, and if you brake anything you have to pay to get it replaced.
In British Columbia, you will pay between 12 and 15 percent tax on a used car. The exact amount you pay will all depend on where you purchased the car and what the value of it is.
LOL no! :D
The taxes that you pay at the pump vary depending upon which country as well as which province/state you are in. In Canada, you pay a 10.0% federal excise tax, GST/HST (5.0% except in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland and Labrador where it is 13.0%), a provincial tax (varies between 6.2% - 16.5%), carbon tax (British Columbia only, 2.34%), transit tax (varies between provinces), and a provincial sales tax (Quebec only, 7.5%).
Depends where you are.