Home office deductions for employees and self-employed, T2200 requirements, working from a different province, and cross-border remote work rules
Remote work has fundamentally changed where Canadians do their jobs — and it has created a new set of tax questions. Whether you're an employee working from home, a self-employed contractor with a home office, or a Canadian working remotely for a foreign employer, the tax rules differ significantly. This guide covers all remote work tax scenarios for Canadians in 2025.
The single most important distinction in remote work taxation is whether you are an employee or self-employed. The rules for claiming home office expenses are completely different:
| Worker Type | Home Office Claim Method | Form |
|---|---|---|
| Employee (T4) | Employment expense deduction — requires T2200 from employer | T777 |
| Self-employed / contractor | Business expense deduction — no employer approval needed | T2125 |
Employees who work from home can deduct home office expenses only if their employer certifies that they were required to work from home and were not reimbursed for those expenses. The employer signs Form T2200 (Declaration of Conditions of Employment), which you keep on file (you do not submit it, but the CRA can request it).
The detailed method on T777 allows employees to deduct: rent (renters), utilities (heat, electricity, water), home internet, minor repairs and maintenance, and for commissioned salespeople, property taxes and insurance. Employees cannot deduct mortgage interest or capital cost allowance on their home.
The simpler flat rate method (introduced during COVID) allowed $2/day up to $500 without T2200 — but this was a temporary pandemic measure. For 2025, the detailed method with T2200 is the standard approach for employees.
Self-employed Canadians with a home office have more flexibility and can claim more expenses. The workspace must be used exclusively and regularly for business, or be where you principally meet clients. Eligible expenses include:
Calculate your business-use percentage as: home office area ÷ total home area. Home office expenses cannot create or increase a business loss — any excess carries forward.
If you are employed and relocate to a different province while keeping the same remote job, your provincial income tax is based on your province of residence on December 31 of the tax year. This can have significant tax implications — moving from a low-tax province (Alberta, 10% flat) to a high-tax province (Nova Scotia, top rate ~21%) mid-year means you'll pay the destination province's rates on your full-year income come tax time.
For self-employed contractors, provincial tax is similarly based on residence at year-end. However, if you have significant business activity in another province (e.g., a permanent establishment there), provincial allocation rules may apply.
Many Canadians work remotely for US-based employers. If you are a Canadian resident working in Canada for a foreign employer, you are still fully subject to Canadian income tax on your worldwide income. Key considerations:
If your employer reimburses you for home office expenses (internet, office supplies, equipment), these reimbursements are generally non-taxable if they represent a reasonable amount for actual expenses incurred. However, you cannot also claim a home office deduction for expenses that were reimbursed — you can only deduct what you actually paid out of pocket without reimbursement.
Internet costs are one of the most commonly claimed remote work expenses. Employees can claim the business-use portion of internet through T777 with T2200. Self-employed workers claim it on T2125. For most dedicated remote workers, 50–80% business use is a reasonable and defensible claim. If your employer provides or pays for your internet, you generally cannot claim the deduction.
Employees who purchase equipment required for their remote work may be able to claim it on T777 — specifically, commission employees have broader deduction rights. Non-commission employees can claim supplies and small tools used for work. Self-employed workers can claim all work equipment through T2125 and CCA.
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