The following information will help answer your questions about the B.C. Employer Health Tax:
You are required to register if your B.C. remuneration reaches a certain amount for a calendar year.
Generally, if your B.C. remuneration is greater than $1,000,000 in a calendar year, you must register. If you are part of an associated group of employers or if you have a part-year, you may still have to register for and pay the employer health tax even if your B.C. remuneration is $1,000,000 or less.
Registration requirement for 2023 and prior years
For employer health tax returns for 2023 and prior years, you must register if your B.C. remuneration is greater than $500,000. For those years, employers with B.C. remuneration of $500,000 or less may still have to register for and pay the employer health tax if the employer is part of an associated group of employers or if the employer has a part-year.
You must register by December 31 of the first calendar year you’re required to pay the employer health tax. Learn when instalment payments are due.
You will first need to register for an employer health tax account using eTaxBC. The registration process will take approximately 10 to 20 minutes. Once your registration is processed, you will receive an employer health tax account number. An employer health tax account number is 11-characters long and will be in the following format: EHT-1234-5678.
Once you have registered for an employer health tax account you can enrol for access to eTaxBC, or if you already have an eTaxBC account, you can log on to add access to your employer health tax account. You can learn more about adding your employer health tax account to eTaxBC by reviewing our eTaxBC help guide. For more information on employer health tax registration see Register for employer health tax.
You’re required to pay instalments in a calendar year if the employer health tax amount you must pay was greater than $2,925 for the previous calendar year. If the employer health tax amount you must pay is less than $2,925 you can choose to pay in instalments or make one payment when you file your employer health tax return for March 31.
If an employer is required to make instalments for a calendar year, instalments are calculated as 25% of the lesser of:
An employer that is new to B.C. and starts to have a permanent establishment in B.C. in 2020 or a later calendar year is not required to make instalments for that year.
For example, if an employer starts to have a permanent establishment in B.C. in 2023, the employer will not be required to make instalments for the 2023 year. The employer may be required to make instalments for the 2024 year if the employer’s employer health tax amount is greater than $2,925 for the 2023 calendar year.
For additional information on calculating instalments, please refer to the question above.
For more information on employer health tax instalments, see File & Pay Your Employer Health Tax.
No. For the purpose of the employer health tax, a partnership calculates and pays its employer health tax - as the employer. The employer health tax is not similar to the Income Tax Act (Canada), which calculates taxable income at the partnership level and then allocates that taxable income to be taxed at the partner level.
A joint venture is not considered to be an employer for purposes of the employer health tax. Rather, it is the venturers individually that are considered to be the employers. The remuneration paid through the joint venture must be allocated to the individual venturers on the same basis otherwise used to allocate their revenues and expenses and is considered remuneration paid directly by the individual venturers. Each venturer is subject to the employer health tax on the venturer’s total remuneration paid in the year (including the remuneration allocated from a joint venture).
A cost-sharing arrangement (CSA) is an arrangement between two or more participants to share specific common operating costs, such as capital or lease costs for business furniture and equipment, rent, or utilities. A CSA is common in medical practices or professional services.
A CSA is not an employer for purposes of the employer health tax. Rather, it is the participants individually that are considered to be the employers. A participant includes a sole proprietor, a partnership or an incorporated professional practice.
All B.C. remuneration paid in a calendar year must be allocated to the participants according to the CSA. Any participant allocated some or all of the B.C. remuneration is responsible for paying the employer health tax on that B.C. remuneration.
This is generally what is included in payroll. For the purpose of the employer health tax, remuneration includes all payments, benefits or allowances that must be included in the income of an employee under sections 5, 6, or 7 of the Income Tax Act (Canada).
Generally, all payments, benefits or allowances that must be included in the income of an employee under sections 5, 6 or 7 of the Income Tax Act (Canada) are the same amounts that an employer is required to report on an employee’s T4 or T4A slip.
Yes, the employer health tax applies to remuneration paid to a former employee in the calendar year that the former employee was paid.
For more information on remuneration, see Employer Health Tax B.C. Remuneration.
The general rule is that if an employee reports for work at the employer’s permanent establishment that is in B.C. at any time in a year, all of that employee’s remuneration for that year should be included in the employer’s B.C. remuneration and be subject to the employer health tax.
An exception to this general rule is that if an employee reports for work at the employer’s permanent establishment that is outside of B.C. for 90% or more of a year, the employee’s remuneration is not considered B.C. remuneration and is not subject to the employer health tax.
It depends. If the time the employees work at the permanent establishment that is outside of B.C. is 90% or more of a calendar year, their remuneration is not considered B.C. remuneration. If the time the employees work at the permanent establishment that is in B.C. is more than 10% of a year, their remuneration is considered B.C. remuneration.
For example, an employee regularly works at a permanent establishment that is outside of B.C., but in 2019, the employee works at a permanent establishment that is in B.C. from January to March. The employee’s remuneration is considered B.C. remuneration because the employee works at a permanent establishment that is in B.C. for 25% of the year (in other words, the employee did not work at a permanently establishment that is outside of B.C. for 90% or more of the year).
The Employer Health Tax Act does not exempt any employers. However, there is an “exemption amount” available to all employers.
Employers with B.C. remuneration of $1,000,000 or less generally do not have to pay employer health tax. However, the exemption amount of $1,000,000 may be lower or nil where an employer is a part-year employer (began or ceased to have a permanent establishment in B.C. in the calendar year) or where an employer is part of a group of associated employers.
Employer exemption amount for 2023 and prior years
For employer tax health returns for 2023 and prior years, employers with B.C. remuneration of $500,000 or less generally do not have to pay employer health tax. For those years, the exemption amount of $500,000 may be lower or nil where an employer is a a part-year employer (began or ceased to have a permanent establishment in B.C. in the calendar year) or where an employer is part of a group of associated employers.
For more information on the employer exemption amount, see employer health tax overview.
For charitable or non-profit employers, the exemption amount is $1,500,000 and may be available for each qualifying location for a charitable or non-profit employer that has 2 or more qualifying locations.
For more information on the charitable or non-profit employer exemption amount, see employer health tax for charitable or non-profit employers.
Unlike other employers, the requirement of a charitable or non-profit employer to register for the employer health tax isn’t dependent on whether that employer must pay employer health tax.
If you’re a charitable or non-profit employer, you must register for the employer health tax if you have a total B.C. remuneration greater than $1,500,000 (in other words, the total B.C. remuneration of all qualifying locations). The $1,500,000 may be reduced for part-year employers.
For example, Charity ABC has three locations. Each location has a B.C. remuneration of $1,000,000. Since each location’s remuneration is less than the exemption amount of $1,500,000, Charity ABC doesn’t pay employer health tax. However, all charitable or non-profit employers with a total B.C. remuneration greater than $1,500,000 must still register for the employer health tax, even if each location is exempt. Therefore, Charity ABC must register for the employer health tax.
A charitable or non-profit employer has a qualifying location where:
A charitable or non-profit employer with 2 or more qualifying locations is eligible for an exemption amount of $1,500,000 million for each qualifying location.
If a charitable or non-profit employer doesn’t have a qualifying location, the charitable or non-profit employer may still be eligible for an exemption amount of $1,500,000.
A charitable or non-profit employer only has to have a qualifying location in order to claim the exemption amount for 2 or more qualifying locations. If a charitable or non-profit employer doesn’t have 2 or more qualifying locations, the charitable or non-profit employer can still claim one exemption amount of $1,500,000 as long as the charitable or non-profit employer doesn’t have B.C. remuneration that exceeds $4,500,000.
A charitable or non-profit employer with 2 or more qualifying locations can only claim an exemption amount of $1,500,000 for each qualifying location, regardless of how many locations the employer may have.
The B.C. remuneration paid to the employees at the other 3 locations must be allocated to the 2 qualifying locations.
No, an organization doesn’t need to have more than one payroll reporting number or other organization-related reporting number to claim an exemption amount for multiple qualifying locations.
Yes, an employer that is a government reporting entity as defined in the Budget Transparency and Accountability Act is not considered a charitable or non-profit employer for the employer health tax and is eligible for the employer exemption of $1,000,000, if B.C. remuneration does not exceed $1,500,000.
If you’re a charitable or non-profit employer with multiple qualifying locations you must file and pay your employer health tax on one tax return, calculate one tax amount and submit one payment, if applicable, for all your qualifying locations.
Maybe. If you’re a charitable or non-profit employer with a total B.C. remuneration (in other words, the total B.C. remuneration of all qualifying locations) greater than $1,500,000, you’re required to file a tax return, even if you don’t pay the employer health tax.
For more information on the requirement of a charitable or non-profit employer with 2 or more qualifying locations to register for the employer health tax, see the registration question above.
For more information on charitable or non-profit employers, see Employer health tax for charitable or non-profit employers.
Yes, the combined B.C. remuneration for the associated group of employers for a calendar year includes the B.C. remuneration of all the B.C. employers that are within that associated group of employers.
If an employer is associated with other employers, the exemption amount is based on the group of associated employers’ combined B.C. remuneration. If the group’s combined B.C. remuneration is between $1,000,000.01 and $1,500,000, the group of associated employers is eligible for one exemption amount as a group.
Combined exemption amount for 2023 and prior years
For employer health tax returns for 2023 and prior years, the group of associated employers is eligible for one exemption amount if the group’s combined B.C. remuneration is between $500,000.01 and $1,500,000.
If the group’s combined B.C. remuneration exceeds $1,500,000, the group is not eligible for an exemption. Each employer’s employer health tax is 1.95% of each employer’s B.C. remuneration.
The association rules don’t apply to a charitable or non-profit employer.
For more information on associated employers, see Employer health tax for associated employers.
Yes, the B.C. employer health tax is deductible from business income for income tax purposes.
An employer can exclude the remuneration of a First Nations employee from the employer health tax liability if the employee:
Any remuneration paid to that employee that’s exempt from the employer health tax does not need to be included in the remuneration used to determine:
If a First Nations individual or band is an employer doing business on a reserve, the individual or band is exempt from the employer health tax. This applies regardless of whether their employees are status or non-status Indians under the Indian Act.