Bitcoin is the world's most popular crypto — and a growing source of Canadian tax obligations. Here's the CRA's full framework.
Bitcoin is not recognized as legal currency by the Government of Canada. The CRA treats it as a commodity, similar to gold or oil. Every time you dispose of Bitcoin — whether by selling, trading, spending, or gifting — you potentially trigger a taxable event.
This has been the CRA's position since 2013, and it has never changed. As Bitcoin has become more mainstream and exchanges more sophisticated, the CRA has simply become better at enforcing these rules.
For most Canadians who buy Bitcoin as an investment and hold it for months or years, gains are treated as capital gains. Only 50% of the profit is included in your taxable income.
However, if you trade Bitcoin frequently with the primary intent to profit from price fluctuations, the CRA may classify your activity as a business. In that case, 100% of gains are taxable as business income — the same rate as your employment income.
Factors the CRA considers when deciding:
| Event | Taxable? | Tax Type |
|---|---|---|
| Sell BTC for CAD | Yes | Capital gain or business income |
| Trade BTC for ETH or other crypto | Yes | Capital gain at time of trade |
| Buy goods/services with BTC | Yes | Capital gain on disposal |
| Gift BTC to non-spouse | Yes | Deemed disposition at FMV |
| Buy BTC with CAD | No | — |
| Transfer BTC between own wallets | No | — |
| Hold BTC without selling | No | — |
Canada uses the average cost method to track your Bitcoin cost basis. Unlike the US (which allows FIFO), Canadian taxpayers must maintain a running average cost across all Bitcoin purchases.
If you hold Bitcoin on a foreign exchange (such as Coinbase, Kraken, or Binance) and the total cost of all your foreign assets exceeded $100,000 CAD at any time during the year, you must file a T1135 Foreign Income Verification Statement with the CRA.
Failure to file T1135 carries penalties of up to $2,500 per year for late filing, and up to $24,000 for gross negligence.
You cannot hold Bitcoin directly in a TFSA, RRSP, or RESP. However, you can hold Bitcoin ETFs that trade on the Toronto Stock Exchange within these registered accounts:
Gains inside a TFSA are tax-free. Gains inside an RRSP are tax-deferred. This is often the most tax-efficient way for Canadians to gain Bitcoin exposure.
Capital gains from Bitcoin are reported on Schedule 3 of your T1 return. Enter:
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYABitcoin mining income is classified as business income by the CRA — not capital gains. The fair market value of Bitcoin on the day you receive it from mining is included in your income at 100%. Your cost basis in that mined Bitcoin is then the value you declared as income.
When a Bitcoin hard fork or airdrop results in you receiving new cryptocurrency, the CRA generally considers the received tokens to have a cost basis of $0 at the time you receive them. Any future sale creates a capital gain from that $0 base. Some tax professionals argue for an allocation based on fair market value — discuss with a professional.
Bitcoin taxation in Canada follows the same principles as any commodity investment. The CRA expects you to track every transaction, calculate your ACB accurately, and report gains or losses every year. With Bitcoin prices hitting new highs, the tax consequences can be significant — and so can the penalties for non-compliance.