Handyman and Contractor Taxes in Canada 2025

Tax guide for Canadian handymen, tradespeople, and independent contractors — HST, tools, vehicles, and T2125.

T5018 — Subcontractor Reporting: If you hire subcontractors for construction or renovation work and pay them more than $500/year, you may be required to file T5018 slips. CRA enforces this in the construction sector.

Handyman and Contractor Tax Basics

Self-employed handymen, carpenters, electricians, plumbers, painters, and general contractors report all income on Form T2125. Revenue includes cash, cheque, e-transfer, and credit card payments from clients. The CRA increasingly cross-references contractor income with permit applications, supply invoices, and client-claimed home renovation credits.

Keep thorough records. The underground economy is a CRA enforcement priority.

HST/GST for Contractors

Construction and renovation services are taxable supplies. Register for HST once your revenue exceeds $30,000. Active contractors often hit this threshold in their first year. Once registered, charge HST on labour and materials supplied as part of your service, and claim ITCs on business purchases (tools, supplies, truck).

New Home Construction: If you build new homes, there are complex HST New Housing Rebate rules. Consult a CRA-specialized accountant.

Deductible Expenses for Handymen

ExpenseNotes
Tools and equipmentCCA Class 8 (20%) or immediate expense if under $1,500
Vehicle expenses70¢/km or actual costs × business-use %
Truck / van paymentsCCA Class 10 or 10.1; lease payments deductible
FuelBusiness-use % of all fuel costs
Materials and suppliesMaterials purchased for specific jobs (COGS)
Work clothing / PPESafety boots, hard hat, hi-vis vest
PhoneBusiness-use % — client calls, quoting, scheduling
Business insuranceLiability insurance 100% deductible
AdvertisingKijiji, HomeStars, flyers, website
Subcontractor paymentsDeductible; T5018 may be required
Accounting fees100% deductible
Home officeIf you manage the business from home

Vehicle Deductions for Contractors

Contractors are among the heaviest vehicle expense claimers in Canada. If you drive a truck or van primarily for work, your business-use percentage may be 80–90%+. Track total km and business km with a mileage log. Deductible actual costs include: fuel, insurance, registration, repairs, maintenance, loan interest, and CCA (depreciation).

A dedicated work vehicle used only for business (no personal trips) can be claimed at 100% business use.

T2125 for Contractors

Business type: "Construction / Home Renovation Contractor." NAICS: 236118 or similar construction code. Enter gross revenue (all jobs billed), then deduct materials, subcontractor costs, and other business expenses. Net income flows to line 13500 of your T1. CPP contributions are calculated on Schedule 8.

CPP and Quarterly Installments

Pay CPP at 11.9% on net self-employment income up to ~$71,300. If taxes owing exceed $3,000, quarterly installments apply. Many contractors owe significant CPP — often the largest single payment surprise at tax time. Actively set aside 30–35% of gross revenue for taxes and CPP throughout the year.

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Informational only. Not tax or legal advice. Consult a CPA for your specific situation, especially if you hire subcontractors or build new homes.