Updated for 2025 · Employment benefit calculation · 50% deduction rules
Employee stock options (ESOs) give you the right to purchase shares of your employer's stock at a predetermined price (the exercise price or strike price) for a defined period. When the stock price rises above the exercise price, options have value. Canadian tax law treats the benefit from exercising options as employment income — but special rules can reduce the effective tax rate significantly.
For most Canadian companies, the taxable employment benefit arises when you exercise (use) your options — not when you receive them or when you sell the shares.
The employment benefit = (Fair Market Value of shares at exercise) minus (Exercise price paid)
After you exercise and acquire shares, any further increase (or decrease) in value is treated as a capital gain or loss when you sell. Your cost base for the shares is the FMV at the date of exercise.
If the share price continues to rise after exercise: capital gain = (sale price - FMV at exercise) x shares. Only 50% of capital gains are included in income (the inclusion rate).
Canadian tax law provides a deduction (Section 110(1)(d) of the Income Tax Act) equal to 50% of the employment benefit from exercising stock options, if conditions are met. This effectively means only 50% of the option benefit is included in taxable income — the same as the capital gains inclusion rate.
For non-CCPC companies (public companies), all three conditions must be met:
If these conditions are met, the effective tax rate on the option benefit is roughly half your marginal rate.
If your employer is a Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC — a private Canadian company), different rules apply:
The CCPC rules are more generous and are one reason startup equity compensation in Canada can be very tax-efficient.
Since 2021, the 50% stock option deduction for employees of large public companies (non-CCPCs with revenues over $500M) is subject to an annual vesting limit of $200,000 in option value (based on FMV at grant date). Options above this limit are taxed as fully taxable employment income without the 50% deduction.
This change affects employees at large tech companies and corporations but has minimal impact on most employees of smaller public companies or CCPCs.
When you exercise stock options, your employer reports:
Box 39 is deducted on line 24900 of your T1 return.
Employers are required to withhold income tax when employees exercise stock options. The withholding is based on the employment benefit amount. For cash-settled options or same-day sales, withholding is typically straightforward. For options where you receive shares, employers often require employees to sell a portion of shares to cover the tax.
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAYes, but not against employment income. If you sell shares for less than your cost base (FMV at exercise), you have a capital loss. Capital losses can only be offset against capital gains, not regular employment income.
Unvested options typically expire on termination. Vested options usually must be exercised within a short window (often 30-90 days after termination). Review your stock option plan document carefully before resigning.
Canada doesn't use the U.S. distinction between incentive stock options (ISOs) and non-qualified options. All employee stock options in Canada follow the Section 7 rules described in this guide, regardless of how the employer labels them.
This guide is for informational purposes. Tax rules are complex and individual circumstances vary. Consult a CPA or tax lawyer for advice on your specific situation.