Fortunately for Canadian taxpayers, most individual income tax returns filed with the Canada Revenue Agency result in payment of a tax refund to the taxpayer. Last year, out of nearly 34 million returns filed, just over 19 million resulted in payment of a refund to the taxpayer, with the average refund being $2,000. Just over 8 million taxpayers owed money on filing to the CRA, and the remainder of returns were nil returns, resulting in neither tax owing nor payment of a refund.
The minority of taxpayers who are assessed as having tax owing have a lot of options when it comes to the available methods by which such tax can be paid, but no choice at all when it comes to the deadline by which such payment must be made. In all cases, individual income tax owed by a taxpayer for a tax year must be paid on or before April 30 of the following year. This year, that means any balance of income tax owed for the 2025 tax year must be paid on or before Thursday April 30, 2026. No exceptions and, absent unusual circumstances, no extensions.
Failing to pay one’s tax bill in full and on time can result in a significant financial cost, as the result of the CRA’s practices and policies with respect to interest charges. Interest will be levied on any outstanding amount owed for the 2025 tax year beginning on May 1, 2026. By law, the CRA charges interest at rates which are higher than current commercial rates. For the second quarter of 2026 (April 1 – June 30) the interest rate charged on overdue or insufficient tax amounts owed is 7%, and all such interest charges are compounded daily, meaning that each day interest is charged on interest levied on the previous day.
Just as it’s in the taxpayer’s interest to pay tax amounts owed on or before the April 30 payment deadline, it’s also very much in the CRA’s interest to make paying taxes as simple and straightforward as it can be. To that end, the Agency offers individual taxpayers a wide range of choices when it comes making that payment. This year there are no fewer than eleven separate options available to individual residents of Canada in paying their taxes for the 2025 tax year. The rules and procedures for the methods most frequently used by individual taxpayers are outlined below: the first four options involve payment by electronic means, while the last three describe those available to taxpayers who would prefer to make their payments in person, or by sending a cheque to the CRA.
Pay using online banking
Millions of Canadians transact most or all of their banking using the online services of their particular financial institution. The list of financial institutions through which a payment can be made to the Canada Revenue Agency is a lengthy one (available at Pay online with your bank or credit union - Payments to the CRA - Canada.ca), and includes all of Canada’s major banks and credit unions.
The specific steps involved in making that payment will differ slightly for each financial institution, depending on how their online payment systems are configured. What’s important to remember is that the nature of the payment – i.e., tax balance owed on filing, as distinct from current year tax instalment payments – must be specified, and the taxpayer’s social insurance number must be provided, in order to ensure that the payment is credited to the correct account, for the correct taxation year.
It’s not necessary to access any particular CRA form in order to make an online payment of taxes through one’s financial institution.
Using the CRA’s My Payment
The CRA also provides an online payment service called My Payment. There is no fee charged for the service, and it’s not necessary to be registered for any of the CRA’s other online services in order to use My Payment.
What is necessary is that the taxpayer have an activated debit card with a VISA Debit or Debit MasterCard logo from a participating Canadian financial institution, as My Payment is set up to accept payment using only those cards. It’s not possible to use a credit card to make a payment on My Payment; in addition, cards bearing only the Interac Debit logo, which were formerly eligible, have not been accepted for purposes of My Payment since September 2024.
Anyone intending to use My Payment should also confirm that the amount of any payment to be made is within any transaction limits imposed by their particular financial institution.
A list of participating financial institutions for each type of card, and more details on this payment method, can be found at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/e-services/payment-save-time-pay-online.html.
Payment by credit card, PayPal, or Interac e-transfer
While it’s possible to pay one’s taxes using a credit card, PayPal, or Interac e-transfer, such payments can be made only through third-party service providers (that is, payments by those methods cannot be made directly to the Canada Revenue Agency), and such third-party service providers will impose a fee for the service.
There are currently only three service providers through which individual income tax amounts owed can be paid – Pay Simply, Plastique, and TelPay – and each such service provider offers different payment methods. Links to each such service are available at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/about-canada-revenue-agency-cra/pay-credit-card.html.
Payment by pre-authorized debit
It’s possible to set up a pre-authorized debit (PAD) arrangement with the CRA, authorizing the Agency to debit a specific bank account for an amount of taxes owed, on dates specified by the taxpayer.
Individuals who make instalment payments of tax throughout the year may already have such an arrangement in place and can certainly use that existing arrangement to schedule a PAD of any balance of taxes owed for the 2025 tax year. However, any such payments must be scheduled at least five business days before the date the payment is to be made – i.e., April 30, 2026. A taxpayer who makes a payment of taxes only once a year is likely better off using another of the available payment methods.
There is also another option for taxpayers who have their return prepared and E-FILED by an authorized electronic filer. Such taxpayers can have that E-FILER set up a PAD agreement on their behalf in order to make a “one-time” payment for a current year tax amount owed. Such an arrangement is only for the payment of a current year tax balance and can’t be used for other payments like instalment payments of tax. Details on how to set up a pre-authorized debit arrangement, whether for a single payment or for recurring payments, are outlined on the CRA website at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/about-canada-revenue-agency-cra/pay-authorized-debit.html.
Paying in person at your financial institution
For those who don’t use online banking, or simply prefer to make a payment in person, it’s possible to pay a tax amount owed at a bank or credit union. Doing so, however, requires that the taxpayer have a specific remittance form – the T7DR, Amount owing Remittance Voucher.
It’s possible to download and print that remittance form from the CRA website. Instructions on how to do so can be found on the website at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/request-payment-forms-remittance-vouchers.html.
Paying at a Canada Post outlet
All Canada Post outlets can receive payments of individual income tax balances owed, in cash or by debit card, but will charge a fee for doing so. A specific form is needed to make tax payments at Canada Post outlets.
For such payments, the taxpayer must have a QR code which contains the information needed for the CRA to credit the amount paid to the taxpayer’s account.
While a QR code is sometimes included on remittance forms sent to the taxpayer by the CRA, it’s also possible to generate a QR code online through the CRA website. A link to instructions on how to do so can be found on that website at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/corporate/about-canada-revenue-agency-cra/pay-canada-post.html.
Paying by cheque
While it’s not as common anymore, it’s still possible to pay any tax balance owed on filing by cheque, as outlined on the CRA website at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/about-canada-revenue-agency-cra/pay-cheque.html.
Such cheques are made payable to the Receiver-General for Canada and are mailed, together with the required remittance voucher, to the Canada Revenue Agency, using the address found on the CRA website. As is the case with payments made at a financial institution, the taxpayer can print such a remittance form from the CRA’s website. Instructions on how to do so can be found at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/forms-publications/request-payment-forms-remittance-vouchers.html.
Even where the taxpayer does not have a remittance form, it’s possible to pay taxes owed by cheque. The CRA suggests that, where payment of taxes owed is made by cheque, the taxpayer should include their social insurance number on the memo line found on the front of the cheque and, in addition, provide information about the tax account (that is, 2025 income tax balance owed on filing) to which the payment should be applied. Alternatively, that information can be provided on a separate piece of paper sent in the same envelope as the cheque. Taking these steps will help ensure that the payment is credited to both the correct taxpayer and the correct tax account of that taxpayer.
A decision on what method to use to pay one’s taxes includes another very important consideration of which most taxpayers are unaware. Under longstanding Canada Revenue Agency policy, the CRA considers that a payment is actually made on the date on which it is received by the Agency. However, depending on the payment method chosen, that date of receipt usually isn’t the same day the payment is made by the taxpayer, and it can be as much as several days later. And, of course, where payment is made close to the payment deadline, that delay can mean the difference between a timely payment and one that is late and incurs interest charges.
Helpfully, the Canada Revenue Agency provides information, for each payment method, on both which types of tax payments can be made using that method and how the date of receipt is determined for that particular method. That information can be found on the CRA’s website at Canada Revenue Agency https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/payments-cra/individual-payments/make-payment.html.
Finally, once payment has been made, by any payment method, the CRA provides taxpayers with an online method for confirming that a payment has been received and applied to the taxpayer’s account, through the Agency’s My Account service. That service is available at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/payments-cra/confirm-payment.html. Taxpayers who have not signed up for My Account can confirm that their payment has been received and applied to their 2025 tax account by calling the CRA’s Individual Income Tax Enquiries line, where an automated service at 1-800-959-8281, option 4, can provide that information.