Saskatchewan Landlord with Kentucky Rental Property
A complete guide to your CRA and IRS obligations as a Saskatchewan resident who owns rental property in Kentucky.
⚠️ Important Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Tax laws change frequently — always verify with the CRA and IRS or consult a qualified cross-border tax accountant before making decisions.
⚠️ Note (updated 2026-05-18, body text corrected) — §871(d) election mechanism and Bank of Canada rate corrected in body text below. Supplemental T1135 penalty note (point 3) remains accurate.
1. Section 871(d) election is NOT made via Form 8288-B. The §871(d) election (which converts your US rental income from FDAP — 30% flat withholding on gross rent with no deductions — to ECI, where you deduct expenses on Schedule E and pay tax on net) is made by attaching a written statement to your first Form 1040-NR. Separately, to stop the 30% withholding at source, you provide your property manager with Form W-8ECI (Certificate of Foreign Person's Claim That Income Is Effectively Connected). Form 8288-B is the FIRPTA Withholding Certificate used at SALE only — applied for 90+ days before closing to reduce the default 15% gross-price withholding on a property sale. The two forms apply to entirely different scenarios.
2. 2025 Bank of Canada annual average rate is 1.3978 CAD per USD (not 1.36). Apply consistently across all USD-to-CAD conversions on T776 and T1135.
3. T1135 penalty structure. Late filing: $25/day, max $2,500. Failure to file: up to $24,000/year. False statement or omission: 5% of unreported property cost with a $24,000 minimum penalty. Failing to file T1135 also extends CRA's reassessment period from 3 to 6 years for related tax years.
US Rental Property Tax for Saskatchewan Landlords: A Kentucky-Specific Guide
Owning rental property in Kentucky while residing in Saskatchewan creates a unique tax situation. You're subject to tax compliance requirements in three jurisdictions: Canada (via the Canada Revenue Agency), the United States (via the Internal Revenue Service), and Kentucky. Understanding these overlapping obligations is essential to avoid penalties, optimize your foreign tax credits, and maintain compliant records across both countries.
This guide walks you through the specific forms, rates, and deadlines you need to know.
Why Saskatchewan + Kentucky Creates a Complex Tax Situation
As a Saskatchewan resident, you're a Canadian tax resident and must report worldwide income to the CRA. Your Kentucky rental property generates income that's taxable in Canada. However, the US also taxes you on this income, and Kentucky taxes non-residents who own rental property in the state.
The result: your rental income is potentially taxed three times (Canada, US federal, and Kentucky state) unless you strategically file elections and claim foreign tax credits. This guide helps you navigate that challenge.
Key Tax Rates at a Glance
| Jurisdiction | Rate | Application | |---|---|---| | Canada (SK) | 15–53.5% marginal | Your Saskatchewan income tax bracket applies to US rental income | | US Federal | 15–37% marginal | On Schedule E net rental income (or 30% gross under default withholding) | | Kentucky State | 4.5% flat | On net rental income for non-residents | | Kentucky Property Tax | ~0.86% avg effective rate | On assessed property value |
CRA Obligations for Saskatchewan Landlords
Report on Form T776 (Rental Income)
File Form T776 (Statement of Real Estate Rentals) annually with your T1 personal tax return. This form captures:
- Gross rental income (in Canadian dollars at Bank of Canada year-end rate: ~1 USD = 1.3978 CAD)
- Deductible expenses (mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, property management fees, utilities)
- Net rental income (or loss)
Critical point: You must convert all US-dollar amounts to Canadian dollars using the Bank of Canada exchange rate as of December 31 of the tax year. For 2024 tax year (filed in 2025), use the rate in effect on December 31, 2024. Do not use your transaction date rate or an average—use year-end only.
Form T1135 Foreign Income Verification Statement
If your Kentucky property had a fair market value exceeding CAD $100,000 at any point during the year, you must file Form T1135.
- Deadline: Same as your T1 return (June 15, 2025 for the 2024 tax year; tax is due April 30)
- Requirement: Report the property address, acquisition cost, and fair market value (converted to CAD)
- Penalty for non-filing: Up to CAD $2,500 per year, plus interest
Foreign Tax Credit for US Taxes Paid
This is your primary tool to avoid triple taxation.
File Form T2209 (Federal Foreign Tax Credit) to claim a credit for:
- US federal income tax you actually paid on Schedule E
- US state (Kentucky) income tax you actually paid
- Kentucky property tax (limited; only real property tax qualifies, not sales tax)
The foreign tax credit is limited to the lower of:
- Actual tax paid to the US/Kentucky, or
- Canadian tax on the same income
Example: If your net rental income is CAD $10,000 and you paid USD $1,500 in combined US federal and Kentucky tax (= CAD $2,040), your credit is limited to your Canadian tax on CAD $10,000. If your marginal rate is 43.5%, you owe CAD $4,350 in Canadian tax; the credit reduces this to CAD $2,310.
Deadline: Claim the credit on your T1 return (June 15, 2025 for 2024 tax year).
IRS Obligations for Non-Resident Aliens
Obtain an ITIN
You must have a US Individual Identification Number (ITIN) to file with the IRS. This is not a Social Security Number; it's specifically for non-US residents earning US-source income.
- Form: W-7 (Application for IRS Individual Identification Number)
- Submit with: Your first US tax return or mail separately to the IRS
- Processing time: 4–6 weeks
- Cost: Free
- Validity: 10 years if your return is filed every year; subject to expiration rules
File Form 1040-NR (US Non-Resident Alien Income Tax Return)
As a non-resident alien with US rental income, file Form 1040-NR-EZ or Form 1040-NR (full form if you have losses or itemized deductions).
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Key schedules:
- Schedule E (Supplemental Income and Loss): Report Kentucky rental income and deductible expenses
- Form 8288-B (Certificate of Withholding): If you've had withholding on rent (discussed below)
- Form 6251 (Alternative Minimum Tax): Generally not applicable to non-resident rental income
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Deadline: June 15, 2025 for the 2024 tax year
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Extension: File Form 4868 by June 15 for a 6-month extension (now due December 15)
Section 871(d) Election: Avoid 30% Withholding
Under default US law, your gross rental income is subject to 30% withholding as "fixed, determinable, annual or periodic" (FDAP) income. This is draconian and defeats the purpose of deductions.
File Form 8288 and elect Section 871(d) to be taxed like a US resident: on net rental income only, with deductions allowed.
How it works:
- Provide your ITIN to the property manager or tenant
- File Form 8288 (US Withholding Tax Return for Dispositions by Foreign Persons of US Real Property Interests) with the IRS and send a copy to Kentucky
- Elect to be treated as a US resident for rental property income under IRC Section 871(d)
- Your net rental income is taxed at normal rates (15–37% federal brackets), not 30% on gross
Critical: Without this election, 30% is withheld on every monthly rent check. With the election, you pay tax on net income (gross minus deductions) using your actual tax bracket—often much lower.
File Form 1040-NR by June 15, 2025
Include Schedule E showing Kentucky rental activity. Claim the Section 871(d) election result: tax on net, not gross.
Kentucky State Tax Obligations
Form IT-NR (Non-Resident Income Tax Return)
Kentucky requires non-residents with Kentucky-source income to file Form IT-NR (Non-Resident Individual Income Tax Return).
- Tax rate: 4.5% flat on net rental income
- Deadline: Same as federal: June 15, 2025
- Filing location: Kentucky Department of Revenue, Frankfort, KY
Calculate Kentucky tax:
- Start with your Schedule E net rental income
- Subtract any Kentucky-specific deductions or losses carried forward
- Multiply by 4.5%
Example: Net rental income of USD $20,000 × 4.5% = USD $900 owed to Kentucky.
Estimated Tax Payments (Quarterly)
If you expect to owe more than USD $500 in combined federal and state Kentucky tax for the year, the IRS requires quarterly estimated tax payments.
- Form 1040-ES (for federal)
- Kentucky Form ES-NR (for Kentucky)
- Due dates: April 15, June 15, September 15, December 31
Failure to pay quarterly can result in penalties and interest, even if you pay in full by the return deadline.
Converting Currency & Tracking Basis
Exchange Rate Rules
- CRA (Canada): Always use Bank of Canada year-end rate (December 31) for T776
- IRS (US): Use year-end rates or your bank's rate as of the transaction date; be consistent
- 2025 Rate (illustrative): 1 USD = 1.3978 CAD
Keep records: Document the rate used for each transaction, including supporting bank statements or Bank of Canada printouts.
Adjusted
Estimate your FIRPTA withholding at sale: Use the FIRPTA Withholding Calculator to see how much the buyer must hold back at closing, and whether filing Form 8288-B in advance would reduce it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to report my Kentucky rental income to CRA?
Yes. As a Saskatchewan resident, you must report your worldwide income to CRA, including rental income from Kentucky. You report this on your T1 return and complete Form T776 (or equivalent) for the rental income and expenses. If the property cost more than CAD $100,000, you must also file Form T1135.
What US tax forms do I need as a Saskatchewan landlord with Kentucky rental income?
You will typically need: Form W-7 (to get an ITIN if you don't have one), Form 1040-NR (US non-resident tax return), Schedule E (to report rental income and expenses), and Form 4562 (to claim depreciation on the property). You should also make a Section 871(d) election to treat the income as effectively connected so you can deduct expenses.
Will I be taxed twice on my Kentucky rental income?
Generally no. The Canada-US Tax Treaty prevents double taxation. You pay US tax first (via Form 1040-NR), then claim a foreign tax credit on your Canadian return to offset the US tax paid. The credit cannot exceed the Canadian tax payable on that income.
What exchange rate should I use to convert Kentucky rental income to CAD for CRA?
CRA accepts the Bank of Canada annual average exchange rate for the tax year. You can find the official rate on the Bank of Canada website or use BorderBird's exchange rate tool.
Do I need to withhold tax if I sell my Kentucky property?
Yes — under FIRPTA (Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act), the buyer must withhold 15% of the gross sale price when a foreign person (including Canadians) sells US real estate. You can apply for a withholding certificate (Form 8288-B) to reduce this if your actual tax liability is less than 15%.
Does Kentucky impose its own income tax on my rental income?
Yes. Kentucky has a state income tax rate of up to 4.5% on rental income. As a non-resident of Kentucky, you will need to file a Kentucky state non-resident income tax return in addition to your federal Form 1040-NR.
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