Why cash income is fully taxable, how the CRA detects unreported cash, proper record keeping for cash-based businesses, and the real penalties for non-compliance
A persistent myth in Canada is that cash payments are somehow exempt from income tax — that if no paper trail exists, the CRA has no way of knowing about the income. This is incorrect and dangerous. The Income Tax Act requires all income from all sources to be reported, regardless of the payment method. Cash income is legally identical to income received by cheque, e-transfer, or bank deposit. This guide explains the rules, the risks, and how to properly handle cash income in Canada for 2025.
Section 3 of the Income Tax Act defines income to include profit from a business or property, employment income, and other sources. There is no exclusion for cash payments. Whether a client pays you $500 in an envelope or $500 by bank transfer, the tax obligation is identical. The payment method does not change the income's taxability — only its ease of documentation.
Trades and services commonly paid in cash — contractors, landscapers, cleaners, tutors, musicians, hairdressers, babysitters — are all subject to the same tax rules as any other business. The CRA specifically targets cash-intensive industries in its audit and enforcement programs.
The CRA has multiple methods for identifying taxpayers who may be underreporting cash income:
The consequences of not reporting cash income are serious and escalate with repeat offences:
| Violation | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Failure to report income (first time) | 10% of unreported amount (federal) + provincial penalty |
| Failure to report income (repeat within 4 years) | 20% of unreported amount |
| Gross negligence penalty | 50% of understated tax |
| Tax evasion (criminal) | Fine of 50–200% of tax evaded + up to 5 years imprisonment |
| Interest on unpaid amounts | CRA prescribed rate (currently 9%/year) compounding daily from original due date |
In addition to penalties, you owe the original tax plus interest from the date it should have been paid. A CRA reassessment can go back 3 years normally, and further back in cases of fraud or misrepresentation.
Cash income should be recorded and reported exactly like any other income. Best practices for cash-paid businesses:
Once you are registered for HST/GST, you must collect HST on all taxable supplies — including cash payments. A common scheme in cash-intensive trades is quoting a lower "cash price" that excludes HST. This is tax evasion. If you are registered and provide a taxable service, HST applies regardless of the payment method. The CRA can and does assess HST on cash transactions where the registrant failed to collect it.
If you have previously failed to report cash income, the CRA's Voluntary Disclosures Program (VDP) allows you to come forward, correct past returns, and pay back taxes without facing the normal penalties or criminal prosecution — provided you apply before the CRA contacts you about those years. The VDP is a genuine opportunity for people who have been non-compliant to get back on track. A tax lawyer or accountant can help you navigate the process.
These industries attract heightened CRA scrutiny because of their cash-payment culture. Workers in these fields should be especially diligent about reporting:
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