If you are navigating the complexities of dual-country filings, residency rules, or cross-border tax planning, you don’t need generic advice. You need a specialist.
Tell us a little about your Canada–U.S. situation and we will use that context to guide the next conversation.
Cross-border taxation is rarely just about filing a standard return. When a Canada–U.S. tax situation is handled by a generalist, the issue isn’t just a lack of paperwork—it’s the massive risk of moving forward blindly.
Crucial filing and reporting obligations are often misunderstood or delayed.
Delicate residency and international treaty rules are treated too casually, leaving you exposed.
You are left without a clear roadmap, creating unnecessary anxiety and friction.
When cross-border rules apply, your next step must be guided by technical judgment, not assumptions.
Review
At TMP, we fully support our clients in all their endeavors. Starting as a family business, we have grown into a team of Chartered Professional Accountants (CPA) with locations in the Toronto Area and the United States.
About
Depending on your specific scenario, our cross-border intervention can expertly handle:
Residency position analysis
Treaty tie-breaker logic
Foreign bank and financial asset reporting (FBAR & Form 8938)
Departure returns and dual-status issues
Property-related considerations, including FIRPTA
Problem
This consultation is designed strictly for qualified Canada–U.S. cross-border cases that require specialist review and a clear direction.
We are the right fit if:
You are dealing with a complex Canada–U.S. tax situation and need to know exactly where you stand.
You need to confirm which residency, reporting, or treaty rules actually apply to you.
You value compliance-first guidance over exaggerated, risky tax-saving claims.
You want a concrete, actionable next step.
Steps
Faqs
We review the information you share, assess case fit, and guide you toward the most practical next step with clearer expectations about scope and direction.
No. This service is focused on Canada–U.S. cross-border cases that need specialist handling rather than broad, catch-all tax support.
No. The purpose of the first conversation is to bring clarity to the situation and identify what may apply before the case gets more complicated.
Yes, where relevant to the case. Depending on the situation, cross-border matters may involve items such as FBAR, Form 8938, treaty rules, departure returns, dual-status issues, or FIRPTA-related considerations.
If you need absolute clarity on a Canada–U.S. cross-border tax issue, the next step should be straightforward. Start the conversation today and move forward with confidence.
Built for qualified Canada–U.S. cross-border cases that need specialist handling.