Brand deals, AdSense, Patreon, TikTok gifts as income, GST/HST thresholds, and every deduction available to Canadian creators
Canadian content creators — YouTubers, TikTokers, Instagramers, podcasters, Twitch streamers, and bloggers — earn income in more ways than most professions: brand sponsorships, AdSense, affiliate commissions, Patreon subscriptions, merchandise sales, fan gifts, and speaking fees. Every single revenue stream is potentially taxable, and the CRA increasingly scrutinizes creator income as digital platform reporting requirements expand. This guide covers everything Canadian creators need to know.
If you are creating content with the intention of earning income — or earning income consistently from content — the CRA treats this as self-employment income reported on T2125. There is no minimum threshold below which creator income becomes non-taxable (though practically, small amounts below your basic personal amount result in no tax owing). Revenue streams include:
| Revenue Source | Tax Treatment | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube AdSense / Google | Self-employment income | Google issues a 1042-S (US) or statement; report in CAD |
| Brand sponsorship deals | Self-employment income | Full contract value regardless of payment method |
| Affiliate commissions | Self-employment income | Amazon, Impact, ShareASale payouts all taxable |
| Patreon / membership income | Self-employment income | Report gross before Patreon's fee; deduct fee as expense |
| TikTok Creator Fund / gifts | Self-employment income | TikTok live gifts converted to diamonds then cash = income |
| Twitch subscriptions and bits | Self-employment income | Twitch pays in USD — convert at Bank of Canada rate |
| Merchandise sales | Self-employment income (+ inventory) | Gross revenue; deduct platform fees, production costs |
| Courses / digital products | Self-employment income | Revenue from digital product sales |
| Speaking fees / appearances | Professional income | T2125 — professional income section |
| Product gifting from brands | Income at FMV | See PR product section below |
This is one of the most misunderstood areas of creator taxation in Canada. When a brand sends you free products in exchange for a review, feature, or mention — even without a formal contract — the CRA's position is that the fair market value (FMV) of those products constitutes business income. You received something of value in exchange for your platform and promotional services.
In practice, many small creators don't track every free product received. However, as your audience grows and brand relationships formalize (especially with contracts), meticulous tracking becomes essential. Maintain a log of all gifted products with estimated FMV. The silver lining: if the product is used in your content creation business, its FMV (which became income) also becomes a deductible CCA asset.
The standard $30,000 small supplier threshold applies to content creators. Count ALL commercial activity revenue: AdSense + brand deals + Patreon + merchandise + affiliate income. Once you exceed $30,000 over four consecutive quarters, register for GST/HST within 30 days. Once registered:
| Expense | Deductible | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Camera, lenses, lighting equipment | CCA Class 8 (20%) | Professional equipment depreciated over time |
| Computer / editing workstation | CCA Class 50 (55%) | Primary creative tool — high CCA rate |
| Microphone, audio equipment | CCA Class 8 (20%) | Podcast/video audio gear |
| Drone | CCA Class 8 (20%) | For aerial content — business use % |
| Editing software (Adobe, DaVinci) | 100% | Monthly/annual subscription — fully deductible |
| Music licensing (Epidemic Sound, etc.) | 100% | Required for content — subscription deductible |
| Thumbnail and design tools (Canva Pro) | 100% | Business software subscription |
| Studio rental / location fees | 100% | Renting space for shoots |
| Home office / filming space | Business % | T2125 Part 7 — see home office guide |
| Props and set decoration | 100% | Items used specifically for content |
| Wardrobe (content-specific) | 100% | Costumes/uniforms specifically for content; general clothing not deductible |
| Travel for content (trips) | Business % | Must have clear business purpose — content creation; keep footage as evidence |
| Meals during content creation | 50% | Food content creators have strong justification; general meals are 50% |
| VPN and cloud storage | 100% | Business tools |
| Agency / management fees | 100% | Talent agent, MCN fees, PR retainer |
| Phone and data | Business % | Used for filming, communications, social posting |
Most creator platform payouts (YouTube, Patreon, Amazon Associates) arrive in USD. You must report all income in Canadian dollars using the Bank of Canada exchange rate on the date of each payment, or the CRA-accepted average annual rate. For frequent small payments, the average annual rate is much simpler — the CRA publishes this rate and accepts its use for business income conversion.
Canadian creators earning over $100,000 annually should seriously consider incorporating. A corporation earning creator income at the 12.2% Ontario combined small business rate versus your personal 43%+ marginal rate creates significant tax deferral on income you reinvest into equipment, content, and growth. Additionally, a corporation can provide you with tax-free health and dental benefits. See our full incorporated vs sole proprietor analysis.
KOHO's free business account helps Canadian creators keep brand deal payments separate from personal spending and track every deductible content expense automatically.