Home Office Deduction Canada: Full Guide for 2025

Calculate your eligible home office deduction, understand CRA's rules, and claim every dollar you're entitled to as a self-employed Canadian.

The home office deduction is one of the most valuable tax write-offs available to self-employed Canadians, contractors, and remote workers. If part of your home is used regularly and exclusively (or primarily) for business, you can deduct a proportionate share of your housing costs. Here's how to calculate it correctly and claim it confidently.

Home Office Deduction Calculator

Calculate Your Home Office Deduction

Business Use Percentage
Deductible Rent/Mortgage Interest
Deductible Utilities
Deductible Internet (100%)
Deductible Insurance
Total Annual Home Office Deduction

CRA Rules for the Home Office Deduction

To qualify for the home office deduction as a self-employed person, at least one of the following must be true:

A spare room you use for business most of the time qualifies even if you occasionally use it personally — "exclusive use" is a stricter standard than what the CRA typically enforces for sole proprietors. However, a couch or kitchen table does not qualify.

What Costs Can You Deduct?

The following costs are eligible for the home office deduction, prorated by the percentage of your home used for business:

What You CANNOT Deduct

The Loss Restriction: Your home office deduction cannot create or increase a loss from self-employment. If your business income is $100 and eligible home office expenses are $12,000, you can only deduct $100. The remaining $2,000 carries forward to offset business income in future years.

Calculating Your Business Use Percentage

The most straightforward method is square footage:

  1. Measure the area of your dedicated workspace in square feet
  2. Measure the total livable area of your home (exclude garages, unfinished basements)
  3. Divide workspace by total: 150 sq ft / 1,000 sq ft = 15%
  4. Apply 15% to each eligible housing cost

Alternatively, you can use number of rooms: if you use one room out of eight for business exclusively, that's 12.5%. The CRA accepts both methods.

Home Office for Employees vs. Self-Employed

Self-employed Canadians use Form T2125 to claim home office expenses. Employees working from home (remote workers, T4 employees) use Form T2200 (Declaration of Conditions of Employment) signed by their employer and claim expenses on Form T777. The rules differ significantly — employees cannot deduct mortgage interest, property taxes, or home insurance regardless of the T2200.

Capital Gains Risk for Homeowners

If you own your home and claim the home office deduction, you may face a partial capital gains tax when you sell. The principal residence exemption may not cover 100% of your gain if part of the home was used for business. Consult a tax accountant before aggressively claiming home office deductions if you expect to sell.

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