6 – TAX RETURNS FOR INVESTORS: Tax & Investment Reporting Packages from Investment Advisors & Banks

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πŸ“¦ Investment Reporting Packages: Advisors vs. Self-Directed Investors (Beginner Tax Guide)

When preparing tax returns for clients with investments πŸ’Ό, the reporting requirements can vary dramatically depending on how they invest. Understanding the difference between advisor-managed portfolios and self-directed investing accounts is crucial for accurate tax filing β€” and for billing your time properly.

This guide breaks down everything a new tax preparer needs to know βœ….


🧠 Why Investment Reporting Matters

Non-registered investments (outside RRSPs, TFSAs, etc.) generate taxable events such as:

  • πŸ’° Interest income
  • πŸ“ˆ Capital gains
  • πŸ’΅ Dividends
  • 🌍 Foreign income

These must be correctly reported using slips and forms such as:

FormPurpose
T3Income from trusts / mutual funds
T5Interest & dividends
T5008Securities transactions
Schedule 3Capital gains/losses
T1135Foreign income & assets reporting (if required)

πŸ§‘β€πŸ’Ό Clients With Investment Advisors

Clients working with wealth managers / advisors often receive a complete investment tax package πŸ“‚ β€” typically early March.

What’s Included

DocumentPurpose
Summary of T-slipsShows total investment income
Dividend & interest reportsSupports T5 reporting
Realized gain/loss reportACB & capital gains for Schedule 3
Foreign reporting summaryHelps complete T1135 if needed

βœ… Huge time saver for tax preparers
βœ… ACB usually calculated for you
βœ… Advisors can answer questions or resend data

Tip: Don’t hesitate to request a missing gain/loss report β€” clients paying advisor fees are entitled to it.

πŸ‘ These clients are generally easier, faster, and safer to process.


πŸ‘€ Self-Directed Investors (DIY Traders)

These are investors who:

  • Trade through discount brokerage platforms
  • Buy stocks, ETFs, mutual funds independently
  • Do not have an advisor preparing reports

What they usually receive:

ProvidedDetails
βœ… T-slipsAnnual income totals
⚠️ T5008 slipsSale transactions only β€” usually NO ACB
❌ Gain/loss reportNot usually supplied
❌ ACB trackingClient responsibility

This means you may need to calculate capital gains manually, often using:

  • Transaction history
  • Trade confirmations
  • Brokerage statements

⏰ Requires more work
πŸ’¬ Requires asking client questions
πŸ“‚ Requires organizing raw data into Schedule 3

Pro Tip: Self-directed trading = higher workload ➜ charge accordingly


⚠️ Key Warning

ACB reporting errors are common in DIY investing.

  • Clients think brokerage provides ACB β€” not always true
  • One trade could have multiple purchase dates & prices
  • Reinvested dividends adjust ACB
  • Missing ACB = incorrect gain/loss

πŸ“Ž Always confirm ACB source before filing.


✨ Workflow Checklist

StepAction
1️⃣ Identify investor typeAdvisor vs self-directed
2️⃣ Request tax package or brokerage statementsAsk early
3️⃣ Confirm ACB sourceAdvisor report? Client? Calculated?
4️⃣ Verify T-slips match totalsCross-check income
5️⃣ Prepare Schedule 3Use gain/loss data
6️⃣ Determine if T1135 appliesForeign asset threshold

πŸ’‘ Pricing Tip

Because work varies:

βœ”οΈ Investors with advisors β†’ standard pricing
βœ”οΈ Self-directed traders β†’ extra fee for ACB + Schedule 3 prep

Let clients know upfront πŸ’¬

Example:

β€œBecause your trades require manual ACB review and capital gains calculation, there is an additional schedule preparation fee.”


πŸ“˜ Knowledge Box

Registered accounts (RRSPs, TFSAs)
No capital gains/loss reporting βœ…
No ACB tracking ❌
Only non-registered accounts require these tax steps.


🏁 Final Takeaway

Investor TypeWhat You GetWorkload
With AdvisorFull reporting package πŸ“¦βœ… Easy
Self-DirectedRaw trading data only πŸ“„β›” Manual ACB work

Understanding this upfront saves time and prevents filing errors.

As you gain experience, you’ll quickly spot which clients require extra attention β€” and appropriately bill for the additional work.

πŸ“Š Understanding Investment Reports from Advisors & Banks (Beginner Guide)

When your tax client has an investment advisor or bank-managed investment accounts, you will likely receive an Investment Tax Package. This package is a goldmine βœ… β€” it summarizes all investment income and provides key numbers you need to file investment-related taxes accurately.

As a new tax preparer, knowing how to read these reports saves time ⏱️ and helps avoid costly mistakes ❌.


🧾 What’s Inside an Investment Tax Package?

Most investment firms provide similar information, though formatting can vary. Expect to find:

Report SectionWhat It IncludesWhy It Matters
Interest Income SummaryGICs, bonds, savings interestUsed for T5 slip reporting
Dividend Income SummaryCanadian & foreign dividendsUsed for T5 slip reporting
Capital Gains/Loss ReportSold investments, ACB, proceedsUsed for Schedule 3 filing
Foreign Investment Income ReportForeign dividends & assetsUsed for T1135 Foreign Property reporting (if applicable)
Account Summary & Advisor InfoContact and plan detailsFor clarifications & verification

πŸ’‘ Key Tip

You do NOT enter each individual security into the tax return.

βœ… You enter totals from slips (T3/T5/Schedule 3)
β›” You do not disclose individual stock names


πŸ“‚ Reports You’ll Use Most

πŸ“ˆ Realized Capital Gain/Loss Report

This is the most important document when investments are sold.

It provides:

  • Date purchased & sold
  • Proceeds of disposition
  • Adjusted Cost Base (ACB)
  • Gain or loss

πŸ‘‰ These numbers go on Schedule 3 – Capital Gains or Losses.

Pro Tip: Investment advisors already calculate ACB β€” trust their data unless it appears incorrect.


πŸ’΅ Interest & Dividend Details

  • Interest income from GICs, bonds, cash balances
  • Dividends from Canadian & foreign stocks

βœ… Totals flow to T5 slips
πŸ”’ You only need summary totals, not each investment


🌍 Foreign Income & T1135

If the client holds foreign assets > $100,000 CAD in cost:

You must complete Form T1135.

Most advisor packages now include:

  • Foreign asset summary 🌐
  • Foreign income earned πŸ’²
  • Highest monthly balance πŸ“Œ
  • Year-end balance 🧾

This makes T1135 filing easy β€” use the report directly.


🧠 Why These Reports Matter

BenefitImpact
Saves time on data entryβœ… Faster tax prep
Reduces errorsβœ… Accurate ACB reporting
Includes CRA-required foreign dataβœ… Avoid T1135 penalties
Easy advisor communicationβœ… Quick corrections if needed

πŸ› οΈ What To Do If Reports Are Missing

Sometimes clients won’t send the package β€” or advisors forget.

πŸ“ž Call the client first
Clients usually get faster replies from advisors.

πŸ“§ If needed, contact the advisor directly β€” many are happy to help.

πŸ’¬ Advisors often appreciate working with tax preparers β€” it can lead to referrals.


⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Entering each investment individually
❌ Guessing ACB instead of using advisor data
❌ Ignoring foreign reporting information
❌ Filing without checking for slips (T3, T5, T5008)


βœ… Quick Checklist for New Tax Preparers

TaskDone
Request complete investment tax package πŸ“¨β˜
Confirm slips: T3, T5, T5008 πŸ“„β˜
Review capital gain/loss summary πŸ“Šβ˜
Enter totals only β€” not individual securities ✍️☐
Check foreign reporting requirements 🌍☐
Contact advisor if data unclear πŸ“žβ˜

🧱 Final Takeaway

Investment advisor reports make investment tax filing simple and accurate.

Use the totals. Trust the summary. Confirm missing info.

These reports are a huge time-saver for tax preparers and are essential for clients with investment portfolios.

πŸ“ˆ Handling ACB for Self-Directed Investors: What To Do When Records Are Missing

Self-directed investors love managing their own portfolios β€” but for tax preparers, this can create a challenge. Unlike clients with full-service advisors, DIY investors often do not receive a polished tax package that includes Adjusted Cost Base (ACB) details.

As a tax professional, your job is to report accurate capital gains & losses β€” even when the client doesn’t have the numbers neatly organized.

This guide explains how to handle missing ACB information step-by-step βœ…, without putting yourself at risk.


πŸ“Œ What Is ACB (Adjusted Cost Base)?

ACB = Original cost of an investment + additional acquisition costs (commissions, reinvested distributions, etc.)

ACB is required to calculate:

Capital Gain/Loss = Proceeds of Sale – ACB

If ACB is wrong ➜ capital gains will be wrong.


🎯 The Challenge with DIY Investors

Self-directed traders may:

  • ❌ Not track ACB
  • ❌ Only rely on trading confirmations or monthly statements
  • ❌ Sell shares purchased in prior years (records missing)
  • ❌ Forget reinvested dividends (DRIPs)
  • ❌ Guess their purchase price

πŸ“‚ Many broker trade summaries show sale proceeds only β€” not ACB
Especially when shares were purchased in a prior year.


βœ… Step-By-Step Process to Determine ACB When It’s Missing

1️⃣ Ask the Client First

Request purchase details directly:

πŸ“₯ Ask for:

  • Trade confirmations
  • Brokerage transaction history
  • Personal spreadsheets

If client knows their cost β€” get them to give you the number.

πŸ’‘ You are compiling information β€” you are NOT auditing it.


2️⃣ If Client Doesn’t Know: Ask Clarifying Questions

Examples:

  • β€œDid you make money or lose money on this sale?”
  • β€œApproximately when did you buy these shares?”
  • β€œDo you recall the rough purchase price?”

Have the client write it down or email it to you
β†’ This protects you βœ…


3️⃣ Perform Basic Market Research (Your Due Diligence)

When the client gives a date/year range, you can:

πŸ”Ž Look up historical stock prices
πŸ’» Use finance websites (e.g., quote history tools)
πŸ“Š Take an average of price range if exact day is unknown

Example approach:

  • Bought in May 2018
  • Look up price May 1 & May 31
  • Average to estimate ACB

🎯 Goal: Reasonable estimate, documented effort


4️⃣ Validate With Client

Before filing:

πŸ—£οΈ Tell the client:

β€œHere is the ACB I calculated based on available information. Does this look reasonable and accurate to you?”

βœ… Get confirmation
πŸ“ Save email or written approval for your records


5️⃣ If Still Uncertain β€” Client Must Decide

If they ask β€œWhat should I claim?”

🚫 Never decide for them
βœ… Push responsibility back

Phrase to use:

β€œYou purchased and sold the investment β€” you must provide the correct number. I cannot choose a gain or loss figure for you.”

This protects you professionally.


πŸ›‘ Never Do This

❌ Pick an ACB yourself without client input
❌ Suggest a gain/loss amount
❌ File based on a random guess
❌ Let clients say β€œjust put something”

⚠️ Your role = report information, not invent it


πŸ’Ό Professional Backup Plan β€” T1 Adjustment

If the real numbers come later:

✨ File a T1 Adjustment
πŸ“Ž Update Schedule 3
βœ… CRA updates record

This is common β€” no need to stress or delay filing.


πŸ“˜ Notes Box

πŸ“Ž Always document client-provided numbers
If CRA questions later, you need proof the client supplied the data β€” and you acted responsibly.


⭐ Pro Tips For New Tax Preparers

TipWhy It Matters
Get written confirmation of ACB βœ…Protects you legally & ethically
Use transaction histories πŸ“‚Most accurate if available
Ask for timeline & research market ⏳Helps validate estimates
Never β€œsuggest” a gain/loss ❌Avoid liability
Amend later if needed ✨Tax practice reality

🧠 Example Script to Clients

βœ… Use this when they don’t know their numbers:

β€œTo correctly report your capital gain or loss, I need your original purchase information. If you cannot locate it, please estimate based on your best knowledge and send it to me by email so I can record it.”


🎯 Final Takeaway

Self-directed investors = imperfect info βœ…
Your goal = reasonable calculation + client confirmation

You don’t guess β€” the client provides numbers

When missing, assist through research & reasoning β€” then verify with client.

This approach keeps you professional, compliant, and trusted. βœ”οΈ

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