If you hold, trade, or earn cryptocurrency in Canada, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) expects you to report it — and the rules are more detailed than many holders realize. Whether you bought Bitcoin on Coinbase, swapped tokens on a decentralized exchange, or earned staking rewards, each of those events may trigger a tax obligation under Canadian law. This guide breaks down how the CRA treats crypto in 2026, what counts as a taxable event, how gains are calculated, and what records you need to keep to stay compliant.
How the CRA Classifies Cryptocurrency
The CRA does not treat cryptocurrency as legal tender. Instead, it is classified as a commodity, meaning crypto transactions are generally subject to either capital gains rules or business income rules, depending on your activity. This distinction matters enormously because the two are taxed at different rates.
Capital Gains vs. Business Income
- Capital gains: If you buy and hold crypto as an investment and occasionally sell, the CRA typically treats profits as capital gains. Only 50% of the gain (the “inclusion rate”) is added to your taxable income under the standard rule — though see the 2024 budget changes below.
- Business income: If you trade frequently, run a mining operation for profit, or act in a commercial manner, the CRA may classify your crypto activity as a business. In that case, 100% of your net profit is taxable as ordinary income.
The CRA outlines this classification in its guidance document IT-479R — Transactions in Securities and has supplemented it with specific crypto guidance published on the CRA’s official website under “Guide for cryptocurrency users and tax professionals.”
The 2024 Capital Gains Inclusion Rate Change
A critical update that carries into 2026: the federal government’s 2024 budget proposed raising the capital gains inclusion rate from 50% to 66.67% for gains exceeding $250,000 CAD in a tax year (for individuals). For corporations and trusts, the higher rate applies to all capital gains with no threshold. As of 2026, this remains the operative framework. If your crypto gains exceed $250,000 in a calendar year, two-thirds of the excess is included in your taxable income rather than one-half.
Always verify the current inclusion rate with the CRA’s official guidance or a qualified tax professional, as legislation can be amended.
What Counts as a Taxable Event in Canada
Many Canadians assume that taxes only apply when they cash out to Canadian dollars. That is incorrect. The CRA identifies a “disposition” as any event where you give up ownership or control of a crypto asset. The following all trigger a taxable event:
- Selling cryptocurrency for Canadian or US dollars (or any fiat currency)
- Trading one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., ETH for SOL)
- Using crypto to purchase goods or services
- Gifting crypto to another person (excluding a spouse or common-law partner in some cases)
- Converting crypto to a stablecoin such as USDC or USDT
Events That Are Generally Not Taxable
- Buying cryptocurrency with fiat currency (the purchase itself is not a disposition)
- Transferring crypto between your own wallets
- Holding crypto with no sale or swap
Staking, Mining, and Airdrops
Income earned from staking rewards, mining, or airdrops is treated as income at the time of receipt, valued at the fair market value (FMV) in CAD on the date received. When you later sell those tokens, you pay capital gains (or business income) tax on any increase in value from that original FMV. The CRA has addressed this in its published crypto guidance, noting that whether staking constitutes business or investment income depends on the level of activity and commerciality involved.
Calculating Your Gain or Loss
Your taxable gain or loss is determined by subtracting your adjusted cost base (ACB) from your proceeds of disposition, then subtracting any reasonable expenses (trading fees, for example).
Understanding the Adjusted Cost Base
The ACB is the average cost of all identical crypto units you hold. Canada uses a pooling method — unlike the US, which allows FIFO or specific identification. When you acquire more of the same cryptocurrency, you recalculate the average cost across your entire holding. When you dispose of units, you use that average cost to determine your gain or loss.
Example: You buy 1 BTC at $40,000 CAD, then 1 more BTC at $60,000 CAD. Your ACB per BTC is now $50,000. If you later sell 1 BTC for $70,000, your capital gain is $20,000. At the 50% inclusion rate (for gains under $250,000), $10,000 is added to your taxable income.
The Superficial Loss Rule
If you sell a crypto asset at a loss and reacquire the same or identical asset within 30 days before or after the sale, the CRA’s superficial loss rule (Income Tax Act, Section 54) denies the loss deduction. The denied loss is added back to the ACB of the reacquired asset.
Record-Keeping Requirements
The CRA requires you to keep records for at least six years from the end of the tax year to which they relate. For each crypto transaction, you should document:
- Date of the transaction
- Amount of cryptocurrency received or disposed of
- Fair market value in CAD at the time of the transaction
- The exchange or platform used
- Wallet addresses involved
- Transaction fees paid
- Purpose of the transaction
Blockchain explorers, exchange transaction histories, and crypto tax software can help compile this data. The CRA’s published guidance on record-keeping for crypto specifically notes that the onus is on the taxpayer to maintain adequate records.
Reporting Crypto on Your Tax Return
Capital gains and losses are reported on Schedule 3 — Capital Gains (or Losses) of your T1 personal income tax return. Business income from crypto is reported on Form T2125 — Statement of Business or Professional Activities.
If you hold crypto on foreign exchanges and the total cost of your foreign-held property exceeds $100,000 CAD, you are also required to file Form T1135 — Foreign Income Verification Statement. Non-compliance with T1135 carries significant penalties.
What This Means for You
Canada’s crypto tax rules are comprehensive and actively enforced. The CRA has confirmed it obtains data from Canadian exchanges and uses it to identify unreported income. Here is a practical summary of what to do before filing your 2025 return (due April 30, 2026):
- Download your full transaction history from every exchange you used — Coinbase, Kraken, Newton, Shakepay, and any others.
- Track wallet-to-wallet transfers separately so they are not confused with taxable dispositions.
- Calculate your ACB correctly using the pooling method — crypto tax software such as Koinly, CoinTracker, or TaxBit can automate this for Canadian rules.
- Report staking and mining income in the year you received it, not when you sell.
- Check your T1135 obligation if you hold assets on foreign platforms exceeding $100,000 CAD in cost.
- Consult a CPA who specializes in Canadian crypto tax if your situation involves DeFi, NFTs, or significant trading volume — the rules in those areas involve judgment calls the CRA has not fully codified.
The cost of getting crypto tax Canada CRA 2026 compliance right is far lower than the cost of an audit, late-filing penalties, or gross negligence charges. Document everything, report accurately, and keep your records for six years.
