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Corporate Credit Cards & the Digital Transformation – Several Steps to Follow

March 12, 2026 by Serge Vanier, CPA Leave a Comment

To successfully execute the digital transformation of the corporate credit card process, there are seven key tasks that must be addressed.

1) Tax Rules: Monthly Credit Card Statements Are Not Valid Supporting Documents

When designing the process, it is important to consider the tax rule that a credit card statement (i.e., VISA, Mastercard, or American Express) is not considered a valid supporting document for either income tax or sales tax purposes. Each individual invoice associated with the transactions appearing on the credit card statement is the proper document that must be retained for tax purposes.
For example, Section 65 of the GST/HST Memorandum 8.4, entitled “Documentary Requirements for Claiming Input Tax Credits”, states:

“A registrant should be aware that a monthly credit-card statement does not constitute sufficient documentary evidence to claim an ITC. Whether the registrant uses the factor approach to calculate the ITC or the actual tax paid or payable method, the credit-card statement must be supported by another document (e.g., a credit card receipt, an invoice) to entitle the registrant to claim an ITC.”

2) Sales Tax: The Cost of Non-Compliance on Corporate Credit Card Expenses

From a sales tax perspective, the financial impact of non-compliance can be significant.
For example, if your organization incurs $1 million in annual credit card expenses, and the average recoverable sales tax is 10%, failing to retain the supporting invoices for those expenses could result in an annual loss of $100,000, before penalties and interest.
Assuming a four-year tax audit period, an assessment could easily exceed $500,000.
In the Canadian tax environment, it is therefore essential to implement a system that allows employees to easily attach the appropriate invoice to each credit card expense.

3) Monthly Credit Card Statements in an Electronic Format

The administrator of an Advataxes account can upload a single electronic file containing all corporate credit card transactions for all employees. There is no need to change credit card issuers, provided that the required information is included in the file.
Each transaction record includes key information such as:
• The transaction date
• The supplier name
• The transaction amount
This provides an excellent starting point for the tax compliance process, but it is only the beginning.
Each employee will automatically receive a notification that their monthly credit card statement has been uploaded to their account.

4) Attaching Receipts to Each Transaction Using a Smartphone or Desktop

Employees can use their smartphone or desktop computer to attach a digital image of the corresponding receipt to each transaction appearing on their electronic credit card statement.
Each employee can access their Advataxes account through the iOS/Android mobile application or via the web platform.
These tools allow employees to quickly and efficiently attach a digital copy of the receipt to every credit card transaction, ensuring that proper supporting documentation is maintained.

5) The Sales Tax default Setting in the Employee’s Profile

Advataxes stores a default province in each employee’s profile, which automatically determines the applicable sales tax rules.
For example, an employee located in Ontario will have the 13% HST applied to their expenses, while an employee located in Quebec will have both GST and QST applied to their expenses.
If an expense is incurred outside the employee’s usual province, the employee or an approver can easily modify the applicable tax rule for that specific transaction

6) Tax configuration at the organization level

Advataxes also includes sales tax configuration settings at the organizational level.
For example, if your organization is a non-profit organization, the system can be configured to reflect situations where GST/HST and QST are only partially recoverable according to provincial rebate rules. Similarly, if certain expenses such as meals and entertainment allow only partial recovery of GST/HST or QST, these parameters can also be configured.
These settings are established during the initial account configuration, ensuring that sales tax calculations remain accurate and compliant with applicable tax rules.

7) Link to the GL

The last step is to ensure a link to the GL and to upload all corporate credit card transactions in an accounting software. For further details, see our page Accounting Integration.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Cartedecredit, Creditcardstatement, datedetransaction, exactmethod, GST, gst/hst, HST, itc, mastercard, montant, nomdufournisseur, OCR Expense Report, qst, suppliername, transactionamount, transactiondate, visa

Are your invoices in an electronic format stored outside Canada?

July 14, 2025 by Serge Vanier, CPA Leave a Comment

Canada Revenue Agency General Requirements for Record Keeping

The Canada Revenue Agency published last month a revised version of their guidelines regarding how books and records EDM9-1-1 entitled “General requirements for Records”, such as sales invoice, purchase invoice, and other accounting documents should be maintained by taxpayers.

Location of Accounting Records

The general rule is to the effect that a person must keep their books and records in Canada in either English or in French. Yet, a person may seek written authorization from the CRA to keep records outside of Canada as explained in section 10 of that guide;

“10. To seek written authorization from the CRA to keep records outside Canada, a person or their authorized representative must make a written request to their regional excise office and provide the following information:

• a clear identification of the records requested to be kept outside of Canada, including the format of those records
• the complete address of the location where the records are requested to be kept
• a signed undertaking by the person making the request that they will be responsible for ensuring that any records kept outside Canada will be made available within 30 days for review or audit by the CRA upon request
• details of the circumstances that may justify keeping the records at a location outside Canada
• any other information considered pertinent to the request”

Electronic-Keeping Method and Imaging
The CRA supports the digital transformation of accounting documents. Here is an abstract of their rules:

“22. Persons that must keep records are responsible for keeping them in a manner that will ensure the reliability and readability of the information recorded.

23. All records and supporting source documents originally produced in paper format must be kept in that format, unless they are saved in an acceptable electronic format.

24. All records and supporting source documents originally produced in electronic format must be kept in an electronically readable format, even if printouts are available.

25. “Records are considered to be kept in an electronic format when information is entered directly into any device for electronic processing, manipulation, or storage on electronic or optical media.”

Comments

Advataxes ‘clients’ data is stored in datacenters located in Canada. Furthermore, clients can extract expense reports as well as all receipts attached to them in a readable PDF format (see our video here).

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Creditcardstatement, exactmethod, Expensereport, GST, gst/hst, HST, Meal, OCR Expense Report, qst, SAAS

Dark Clouds on the Horizon for the GST/HST/QST Factors Method?

November 17, 2023 by Serge Vanier, CPA Leave a Comment

In recent years, new sales tax registration programs have been created for GST/HST/QST purposes allowing non resident vendors of the digital economy to collect the GST/HST and the QST under a simplified program. These entities are now tagged since July 1, 2023 with the last 6 digits of their GST program number as “RT9999”. Under the QST regime, the letters “NR” are at the beginning of the 10-digit QST registration number and identifies registrants under the specified system. A company operating in the digital economy that is located in Canada but outside Quebec could qualify and apply to the Quebec designated registration.

Under the rules of those 2 specified programs, non resident suppliers should not collect GST/HST/QST from clients that would acquire those goods and services that would otherwise give rise to an input tax or a rebate. Indeed, registrants are not allowed to claim that kind of tax neither as an input tax nor as a rebate. Therefore, clients have to provide their tax registration number to these non resident vendors of the digital economy under this compliance process so these companies don’t collect the tax.

It is more difficult to qualify to the factors method due to the rules governing the digital economy

For those using the factors method to handle GST/HST/QST recoveries on employee expenses, they should know that they are only entitled to claim taxes on a given expense report when that report is subject to tax at a ratio of at least 90% (see our page for further details). Since there will now be a growing number of suppliers who are providing supplies that can be used in the course of commercial activities and that will no longer qualify for the 90% rule, the use of the factor methods is now more difficult that ever to comply with. As of November 13th 2023, there were 1352 entities registered under that program at the federal level and 1594 at the Québec level. Both of these numbers are up from a week ago.

This is a series of examples of entities that are registered to the specified program at the federal level: Airbnb Ireland UC, Amazon (12 entities), DropBox, Expedia, Google LLC, LinkedIn Corporation, Meta Payment Inc., Monday.com, TeamViewer Germany GmbH, etc…

This is a series of examples of entities that are registered to the specified program for QST purposes: Digital River GmbH, Expedia, GoDaddy.com LLC, Google LLC, Indeed Ireland Operations Ltd., Upwork Global Inc, TikTok, Toronto Star Newspaper Inc., Twitter, VistaPrint Canada Coproration, Zoho Corporation, etc…
(Note: you will find at the end of this posting a larger sampling).

Any of these suppliers in your employee’s expense reports ?

Organizations who are questioning the use of their GST/HST/QST factors method could notably compare if these suppliers are found in expense reports submitted by their employees.

In conclusion, although there is a trend for organizations to revisit their employee expense process using the Excel spreadsheet and paper documents to embrace the digital transformation, they should also revisit the use of the factors method. The exact method may be the one to embrace in light of the detrimental impact that the new simplified GST/HST/QST programs and the expansion of the digital economy are having on the factors method.

Simplified GST/HST Registry

There are 1352 entries as of November 13th 2023 that includes the following:

• Airbnb Ireland UC
• Alibaba.com Private Singapore E-commerce Private Limited
• Amazon (12 different legal entities)
• Bloomberg Index Services Limited
• Booking.com B.V.
• British Broadcasting Corporation
• DropBox
• Ebooks.com
• Expedia
• GitHub
• Godaddy.com LLC
• Google LLC
• Hotels.com L.P.
• Hotwire Inc.
• Indeed Ireland Operation Limited
• LinkedIn Corporation
• McAfee Consumer Affairs North LLC
• Meta Payments Inc.
• Monday.com
• Priceline.com LLC
• Shutterstock Inc
• Slack Technologies Inc
• TeamViewer Germany GmbH
• TikTok Inc
• Trello Inc
• Twillo
• Twitter Inc.

The federal registry is available here:

https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/digital-economy-gsthst/confirming-simplified-gst-hst-account-number.html#wb-auto-4

Suppliers Outside Québec That Are Registered for the QST Under the Specified System

The registry is made of 1594 entries as of November 13, 2023 and includes the following:

• Airbnb Ireland UC
• Amazon.com Services LLC
• Digital River GmbH
• DropBox Inc.
• Expedia Inc.
• GitHub, Inc.
• GoDaddy.com LLC
• Google LLC
• Hotels.com LP
• Indeed Ireland Operations Ltd.
• LinkedIn Corporation
• (Mailchimp) The Rocket Science Group LLC
• Meta Payments, Inc.
• Priceline
• Shutterstock, Inc.
• Sync.com Inc.
• Toronto Star Newspapers Limited
• Trello, Inc
• Twilllo Inc.
• Twitter Inc.
• Upwork Global Inc.
• Vimeo.com Inc.
• Vistaprint Canada Corporation
• Zoho Corporation

The Quebec registry can be accessed here:

https://www.revenuquebec.ca/en/businesses/consumption-taxes/gsthst-and-qst/special-cases-gsthst-and-qst/suppliers-outside-quebec/suppliers-outside-quebec-that-are-registered-for-the-qst-under-the-specified-system/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: digitaleconomy, exactmethod, expensereports, factorsmethod, GST, HST, qst

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About Advataxes

Advataxes is an online accounting software for employee expenses that automates recoverable GST/HST and QST for small, medium and large businesses. Employees can fill out and submit their expense reports to their supervisors from anywhere using their PC, tablet or smartphone in no time. This online software is available in English and French. Advataxes is a product of Ad Valorem which is a member of Antea an internationnal association of independent firms.

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