Rental Income Tax Guide Canada (2025–2026)

Rental Income Tax Guide Canada (2025–2026): Deductions, Repairs vs Capital, CCA, and CRA Red Flags

Owning a rental property can be a great wealth-building strategy—but it also comes with tax rules that can trip up even careful landlords. The biggest issues we see are:

  • Under-reporting rental income (especially cash, “in-kind,” or Airbnb-style income)
  • Misclassifying expenses (repairs vs capital improvements)
  • Claiming CCA without understanding long-term consequences
  • Short-term rental compliance issues
  • Weak documentation if CRA reviews the return

This guide breaks it down in clear, client-friendly language, aligned with CRA’s rental reporting framework (Form T776 and Guide T4036).

 

What counts as rental income?

CRA expects you to report gross rents and certain other income related to the rental. Rental income can be received in cash, in kind (goods), or as services, not just by e-transfer or cheque.

Examples of rental income that people forget:

  • Parking, storage locker, laundry income
  • “Extras” charged to tenants (where applicable)
  • Reimbursements that are really part of rent (fact-dependent)
  • Short-term rental platform payouts (Airbnb/VRBO-style)

Where it’s reported: most individual landlords report rental income and expenses on Form T776, Statement of Real Estate Rentals.

 

The #1 CRA concept: deductible expenses must be reasonable and must be earned to earn rental income

CRA’s baseline rule: you can deduct reasonable expenses you incur to earn rental income.

But the type of expense matters a lot, because CRA splits expenses into:

  • Current expenses (generally deductible in full in the year), and
  • Capital expenses (generally added to the property’s cost and deducted over time—often through CCA).

 

Repairs vs capital improvements: how CRA usually draws the line

This is the classification that most often causes problems.

Current expense (usually deductible now)

Generally, ordinary maintenance on a property already in use to earn rental income is treated as a current expense.

Examples (typical):

  • Fixing a leak, patching drywall, painting between tenants (often)
  • Replacing a broken doorknob, minor plumbing repairs
  • Servicing a furnace or replacing small components

Capital expense (generally deducted over time)

CRA notes an important rule: if you buy a used property and do repairs to put it into a suitable condition for use, those costs are treated as capital even if they feel like “repairs.”

Examples (typical):

  • Major renovations that improve the property beyond its original condition
  • Big upgrades (e.g., significant kitchen remodel, adding a new bathroom)
  • Work done to “bring it up to rentable condition” right after purchase (often capital per CRA’s guidance)

Practical tip: When in doubt, ask:

  • Does it restore (repair/maintain) or improve (betterment)?
  • Is it recurring/ongoing or a one-time major?
  • Was the property already rent-ready before the work?

 

Common deductible rental expenses (the “safe list”)

CRA provides a structured list of rental expenses you can deduct (when they’re reasonable and properly supported).

Common categories include:

  • Mortgage interest (not principal)
  • Property taxes
  • Insurance
  • Utilities (if paid by landlord)
  • Advertising
  • Management/admin fees
  • Office expenses (related to rental operations)
  • Professional fees (e.g., accounting, legal)
  • Repairs & maintenance (minor; not capital)
  • Travel (limited and must be directly related)
  • Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) (optional; see next section)

 

Capital Cost Allowance (CCA): the deduction that many landlords misuse

CCA is depreciation for eligible depreciable rental property. CRA explains how CCA works and that it applies to depreciable property in rental operations.

  • CCA is optional, not mandatory.
  • It can reduce your rental net income in the year.
  • But it can create a future tax cost when you sell (because depreciation can be “recaptured” depending on circumstances).

Practical guidance: CCA is often most useful when:

  • You’re in a high tax bracket now and expect a lower bracket later, and
  • You’re planning to hold the property long term, and
  • You understand the sale/recapture implications.

If you’re unsure, it’s usually worth a quick review of your plans before claiming CCA.

 

Renting part of your home (basement apartment, shared space): allocate carefully

If you rent out part of a home you also live in, your expenses usually need to be reasonably allocated between personal and rental use (e.g., based on square footage and/or time used). CRA’s rental reporting framework (T4036/T776) is built around reporting net rental income after relevant expenses.

What to track:

  • Total home expenses (interest, taxes, insurance, utilities)
  • Rental portion basis (area/time)
  • A clear method you can explain if asked

 

Co-ownership: don’t accidentally file as a partnership

Many rental properties are owned by spouses, family members, or friends. CRA’s rental guide specifically helps taxpayers determine whether they are co-owners or in a partnership, because the reporting can differ.

Best practice: Keep written documentation of:

  • Ownership percentage
  • Who pays which expenses
  • How income is split
  • Who manages the property

 

Short-term rentals: a major 2024+ rule change that still matters now

If you rent a residential property for less than 90 consecutive days, CRA treats it as a short-term rental for these deduction rules.

CRA has stated that changes to the income tax rules deny income tax deductions for non-compliant short-term rentals after 2023 (i.e., rentals that do not comply with applicable provincial/municipal requirements).

What this means for landlords:
If you operate a short-term rental, compliance (permits/registration where required) is no longer just “administrative”—it can directly impact your ability to deduct expenses.

 

CRA “review triggers” we see with rental properties

CRA doesn’t publish a simple “audit checklist,” but in practice, rental files get flagged when:

  • Repairs look like capital renovations, but were fully expensed
  • Expenses seem high relative to rental income
  • Repeated rental losses are claimed year after year (withouta  clear commercial rationale)
  • Short-term rental expenses are claimed in a non-compliant jurisdiction (per the new rules)
  • Records are thin or inconsistent (missing invoices, unclear allocations)

 

Recordkeeping that makes your return defensible

Keep (digitally is fine):

  • Lease agreements and rent ledger
  • Invoices/receipts (materials + labour)
  • Proof of payment (bank/credit statements)
  • Mortgage interest statements
  • Property tax bills, insurance policies
  • Utility bills
  • Allocation worksheet (if you rent part of your home)
  • Platform payout statements (short-term rentals).

 

FAQ

Do I report rental income on my personal return in Canada?

Most individual landlords report it on Form T776 (Statement of Real Estate Rentals) to calculate net rental income or loss.

Are repairs fully deductible?

Minor repairs/maintenance are generally deductible, but CRA says you cannot deduct repairs that are capital in nature—those are typically handled as capital costs (often through CCA).

If I bought a used property and renovated it before renting it out, is that a repair?

CRA indicates repairs made to put a used property into suitable condition for use are treated as capital (even if similar work would be current in other circumstances).

Can short-term rental hosts still deduct expenses?

CRA says deductions can be denied for non-compliant short-term rentals after 2023. If you operate short-term rentals, compliance with local rules matters.

Source: CRA

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