Updated for 2025 · Flat rate $2/day · Detailed method T2200 · Employer allowances
Millions of Canadians work from home, either full-time or in hybrid arrangements. Two separate questions arise: (1) Can you deduct home office expenses from your personal taxes? (2) Are employer-provided remote work allowances taxable? Both questions have clear answers that can save or cost you hundreds of dollars annually.
Employees who work from home can claim home office expenses under one of two methods: the flat rate ($2/day) or the detailed method. The temporary flat-rate method introduced during COVID-19 remains available in a modified form for 2025.
The flat rate method allows a deduction of $2 for each day you worked primarily from home, up to a maximum of $500 (250 working days x $2). No T2200 from your employer is required for the flat rate method, and no receipts are needed.
Eligibility:
Maximum claim: $500/year (250 days x $2)
The detailed method allows you to deduct your actual home office expenses proportioned to the work space. This method requires a signed T2200 (Declaration of Conditions of Employment) from your employer.
Eligible expenses under the detailed method (salaried employees):
Eligible for commissioned salespersons (additional deductions):
Not eligible: capital expenditures (furniture, major renovations), internet service provider setup fees, primary phone plan.
The work space must be used regularly and exclusively for work (or used regularly to meet clients). Calculate the percentage:
Work space % = Square footage of work space / Total square footage of home
For a home with 1,200 sq ft total and a dedicated 120 sq ft home office: work space % = 10%
Then apply this percentage to eligible home expenses. Heat + electricity = $2,400/year x 10% = $240 deductible.
| Scenario | Better Method |
|---|---|
| Small home, low utility costs, low rent | Flat rate (simpler, guaranteed $500) |
| Large home office in high-cost city with expensive rent | Detailed method (potentially $1,000-$3,000+) |
| Renting expensive apartment in Toronto/Vancouver | Detailed method almost always better |
| Homeowner with commissioned sales role | Detailed method (includes mortgage interest and property tax) |
Some employers provide a monthly or annual remote work stipend (e.g., $50/month for home internet, $500 for home office setup). The tax treatment depends on whether the allowance is accountable or non-accountable.
If your employer provides a flat cash stipend for remote work without requiring receipts, this is a taxable benefit — it's essentially additional salary. It will appear in T4 Box 40 and Box 14.
If your employer reimbursements specific work-from-home expenses (home internet, office supplies, ergonomic equipment) against actual receipts, these are generally non-taxable — the employer is reimbursing a work cost, not providing a personal benefit.
A portion of home internet used for work is deductible under the detailed method. Cell phone plans are generally not deductible by employees (they are primarily personal in the CRA's view) unless a separate work phone line is required. Employer-paid cell phones or plans for work are not taxable if the primary use is for work.
Employer-provided work-from-home equipment (laptop, monitor, keyboard, headset) is not a taxable benefit if the equipment is used primarily for work and ownership remains with the employer. If the employee keeps the equipment after leaving, the FMV at that point may be a taxable benefit.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAYes, if the 2 days at home represent more than 50% of your time in at least some periods. For hybrid workers, the flat rate method is easiest. For the detailed method, you'd prorate eligible expenses based on the percentage of time at home. A hybrid worker spending 40% of time at home uses 40% of work space % in their deduction calculation.
Yes. Your employer must certify on Form T2200 that you are required to work from home and that expenses are not reimbursed. Some employers provide a standardized T2200 to all remote employees in January; if yours does not, request one specifically.
If you work remotely from a different province than your employer is in, your province of employment may differ from the province your employer's head office is in. Generally, employment income is taxable in the province where you perform the work — so your provincial tax is based on your residence province. Discuss with your employer's payroll team to ensure T4 provincial allocations are correct.
This guide is for informational purposes. CRA rules on remote work expenses continue to evolve. Consult a CPA or visit canada.ca for the most current guidance.