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9-12Financial Citizenship

Taxes in Canada: who collects them

In Canada: In Canada, the main tax authority is the CRA.

In this lesson

Taxes in Canada: who collects them is part of What Are Taxes?. This preview shows how Financial Citizenship connects to everyday family decisions such as earning, saving, spending choices, goals, approvals, or parent-guided money conversations inside Progress Penguin.

Today’s money mission

Imagine this: Aiden in Toronto encounters a situation involving taxes in canada. The lesson gives them exactly what they need to handle it.

What you need to know

In Canada, the main tax authority is the CRA. Taxes fund roads, schools, hospitals and emergency services.

Real-life example

Aiden buys a CA$18 book at a Toronto bookshop. The receipt shows CA$16.81 base price and CA$1.19 in HST (13%). The extra CA$1.19 goes to the CRA and funds Ontario's public services. Over a week of spending, Aiden contributes roughly CA$5–8 in consumption taxes without thinking about it.

Progress Penguin connection

The next time you make a purchase in Canada, look at the receipt and find the tax line. That small percentage is your everyday contribution to Canada's schools, roads, and hospitals.

Activity preview

Choose the best money move

Use what you just learned. Do not guess — choose the option you can explain.

Quiz preview

What does this lesson teach about taxes in canada: who collects them in Canada?

In Canada, the main tax authority is the CRA
The opposite of In Canada, the main tax author...
A rule that applies everywhere except Canada
That taxes does not matter in Canada

You are in Canada. Based on this lesson, what is the smartest action?

Apply the principle: In Canada, the main tax authority is the CRA
Do nothing — taxes is not relevant in Canada
Use the Nigerian approach instead
Wait until you are older to worry about taxes