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Canadian Medical Residency Guide - Taking control of your future medical career and financial life

Section B

Medical Student Money Management

Your Financial Life

The Keys to Successful Money Management

You may be wondering — why focus on money management so early in your medical career? The answer is simple — successful money management is essential to help you reach the personal and financial goals you hope to achieve. As a resident, this is the ideal time to develop financial strategies that will start you on the road to long-term financial security.
These strategies can help you make decisions that enable you to balance your immediate financial needs with repaying the student debt you have accumulated — and at the same time start saving for the future.

There are five steps that will form the foundation for successful money management:

• Controlling the outflow (budgeting);
• Maximizing the inflow;
• Consolidating accounts to keep things simple;
• Consolidating debt to reduce your cost of borrowing; and
• Minimizing the tax you pay.

We’ll go through each one in detail.

As a medical student or resident, you may be entitled to a number of tax-saving opportunities. Review the following strategies to make sure you’re not overlooking deductions and credits that could save you hundreds or even thousands of dollars each year. The following reflect the federal rules; however, provincial rules are generally comparable.

  • Claim tuition, education and textbook credits. You are entitled to a tax credit of 15% of the following amounts: eligible tuition fees incurred, an “education amount” of $400 for each month you attend medical school full time, plus a textbook amount of $65 for each month that you qualify for the $400 education amount.

If you don’t need to claim the total of these amounts to reduce your federal tax to zero, you can carry forward the unused amounts to claim a tax credit in future years, or transfer up to a maximum of $5,000 of the unused amounts to a supporting relative, such as your spouse, parent or grandparent. Keep in mind that if you carry forward any portion of the unused amounts, you cannot transfer it to someone else in a future year.

  • Claim moving expenses. If you move within Canada to be at least 40 kilometres closer to a new work location to complete your residency, you can deduct many of your moving expenses from the income you will earn in that new location.

Eligible expenses include personal travel costs associated with the move, meals and accommodation costs while en route, moving and storage charges, and temporary accommodation costs for up to 15 days. You can also carry forward these deductions to a future year.

Download Section B, Your Financial Life, in its entirety.

Download the complete 2011/2012 Canadian Medical Residency Guide for FREE.

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