[QUOTE=entropicman;1328982]Hi all, my question is this: Say I have a side project unrelated to my proprietorship/business and it brings in a small monthly revenue but this revenue puts my overall income above 30,000 - do I need to get an HST number?
Any income you make from whatever source has to be reported. Any Income that is earned by either sweat or brain that is not T4 Income is Business Income. If you do not Incorporate then you can report on multiple T2124s for what you want to consider separate businesses or you can do it all on one and report it as a business that has various types of endevors. If you are making money with a "hobby" it is reportable and taxable. Not hard to realize when you are "making money". Unless you support the "underground" economy as something good for the country.
It is totally beyond my conprehension as to why anyone wants to "escape" reporting GST/HST. This just means you are willing to give CRA your hard earned money. Everyone is used to paying GST/HST on virtually everything they buy. If you charge your customers $1500 (GST on $30,000) and have $ $400 GST on receipts for things you had to buy to run your business, then you send only $1100 to CRA and keep the $400. This is absolutly a desireable result!
If you chose Annual reporting it is not an overly burdening bit of bookkeeping. You also get to calculate GST on the value of preowned assets that you will be using exclusively for business and will be either amortizing or writing off. So if you have an old truck worth say $10,000 that is used just for the business you get to claim $476.19 GST.