Planning a staycation? You can claim a tax credit if you travel in Ontario this year - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:08 AM | Calgary | -17.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Planning a staycation? You can claim a tax credit if you travel in Ontario this year

If you have a getaway within Ontario this calendar year, youll be able to claim a tax credit thats aimed at boosting business in the province.

Credit to support local tourism applies to overnight stays between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2022

Barry Choi, pictured here with his daughter Scarlett and wife Carla Salvosa, says the new tax credit comes too late for him and his family because they finished their Ontario travel in 2021 and will go abroad in 2022. (Barry Choi)

Theprovincialgovernment's "staycation tax credit"is now in effect forOntarianswho plan getawayswithin the province this year.

Announced Nov. 4, the credit aims to boost local business byofferingpeople who book overnight stays in Ontario for anytime in2022a return of 20 per centonaccommodation expenses of up to $1,000 per person or $2,000 per family.

Some businesses welcomedthe incentive which works out to a maximum return of $200 per person or $400 per family saying they hope it can help thosehit hardest during COVID-19 restrictions.

"Everybody suffered," saidRenda Abdo, owner of the Lakeside Motel in Prince Edward County, about 200 kilometres northeast of Toronto."People are still very unsure about travelling on planes and too far away from home, so I think it's perfect timing."

Geoffrey Wild (left), shown with his partner Dominique Wild at The Wild Tart in Elora, Ont., says he hopes the province's new tax credit will boost business. (Submitted by Geoffrey Wild)

Geoffrey Wild, owner ofThe Wild Tart pastry shop in Elora, just northwest of Guelph, said the credit could help boost local tourism, which would help a variety of businesses.

"The recent [Omicron] variant, the virus,things like that remind us it's nice we can travel locally, travel around our province," he said

Too late for some

But for some, the credit comes too late.

"They should have introduced it way long ago," said Barry Choi, creator of Moneywehave.com, apersonal finance andbudget travel blog."[Businesses] could have used those dollars in 2021 when things were really hurting."

Choi said he and his family have done theirOntario travellingalready, having just returned home to Toronto from a trip to Ottawa.

"I'm going to be looking to travel outside Canada," he said. "And I can think of a lot of people who are in the same boat."

In October,Canadalifted a blanket advisory that had been in place since March 2020 against all non-essential travel outside the country.

More recently, to prevent travel-related infections amid mounting case counts and spread of the omicron variant of the coronavirus, the federal government has beenadvisingCanadians to avoid all non-essential international travel.

'This province is the same size as many countries'

The Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) says it supports Ontario's 2022 travel tax credit.

"It makes sense to delay it to a time where Ontarians could comfortably and confidently take advantage of it," said Ryan Mallough, senior director of provincial affairs for Ontario with the CFIB.

Wild said Ontario offers something new to see, even for those who have already done some exploring in the province.

"To everybody that says, 'I spent my Ontario travel money,' my God, this province is the same size as many countries," he said. "Soyou can't tell me you've done all your travel yet."

Eligible expenses

On its website, the provincial government lays out the details aroundeligibility, including that Ontarians can claim the credit for accommodation expenses for "a leisure [not business-related]stay of less than a month," at a short-term accommodation,such as a: hotel,motel, resort, lodge, bed-and-breakfast establishment, cottage or campground.

The stay must occur between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2022, the provincesays, "regardless of timing of payment."