Airbnb Tax Rules Canada 2025 — Short-Term Rental Guide

If you earn income from Airbnb, VRBO, or other short-term rental platforms in Canada, you have both federal income tax and potentially GST/HST obligations. The rules tightened significantly in 2024, including the requirement for platforms to report host income to the CRA. Here's what you need to know to stay compliant and minimize your tax bill.

Airbnb Income Tax Estimator

Is Airbnb Income Taxable in Canada?

Yes — all income earned from short-term rentals is taxable in Canada. You must report it on your T1 personal tax return. The income is generally treated as rental income (T776) unless you provide hotel-like services (daily cleaning, meals, concierge), in which case it becomes self-employment income (T2125) — a distinction that can affect which deductions are available and whether you pay CPP contributions.

GST/HST Registration for Short-Term Rentals

Unlike long-term residential rentals, short-term accommodation (less than 30 consecutive days) is subject to GST/HST. If your total short-term rental revenue exceeds $30,000 in any 12-month period, you must:

  1. Register for a GST/HST account
  2. Charge GST/HST on rent
  3. File GST/HST returns and remit collected tax

Once registered, you can claim Input Tax Credits (ITCs) on the GST/HST you paid for eligible expenses related to your rental.

Platform Reporting (2024): As of 2024, digital platforms like Airbnb and VRBO are required to report the income of Canadian hosts to the CRA. Assume the CRA knows your rental income. Accurate reporting is essential.

Provincial Short-Term Rental Regulations

ProvinceKey RegulationsTax Notes
OntarioMunicipal licensing (Toronto, Ottawa require registration)HST 13% if over threshold
British ColumbiaSTR must be primary residence in most municipalitiesGST 5% if over threshold
QuebecClass C tourism establishment registration requiredQST + GST if over threshold
Nova ScotiaTourism accommodation regulations applyHST 15% if over threshold

What Expenses Can You Deduct?

For the portion of the year/property used for short-term rental:

Impact on Principal Residence Exemption

If you convert part of your principal residence to short-term rental use and claim CCA on the rental portion, this triggers a "change in use" and can affect your principal residence exemption when you eventually sell. It is generally advisable to avoid claiming CCA on your primary residence rental portion to preserve the full exemption.

Airbnb and Non-Residents

Non-residents of Canada who earn rental income from Canadian property must withhold and remit 25% of gross rents to the CRA (or file under Section 216 to pay tax on net income instead). Airbnb may withhold taxes for non-resident hosts under the non-resident withholding rules.

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