Renting Out Your Cottage in Canada 2026

Rental income reporting, pro-rated deductions for mixed personal/rental use, GST/HST registration thresholds, and the capital gains implications of cottage rentals

Renting out a Canadian cottage is one of the most popular ways to offset ownership costs — a well-located waterfront property can generate $20,000–$70,000 in rental income during peak summer season. But cottage rental income is fully taxable, the deduction rules for mixed-use properties are complex, and the decision to rent can affect your capital gains tax position when you eventually sell. This guide explains everything cottage owners need to know about the tax treatment of rental income in Canada.

Rental Income Must Be Reported

All rental income from a Canadian cottage must be reported to the CRA on your T1 personal income tax return. There is no threshold below which rental income is exempt — even $1,000 in cottage rental must be declared. The income is reported on Form T776 (Statement of Real Estate Rentals) and flows onto your Schedule 4 and ultimately your T1 return.

Pro-Rating Expenses for Mixed Personal/Rental Use

Most cottage owners use the property personally for part of the year and rent it out for the rest. The CRA requires that expenses be pro-rated based on the number of days the property was rented versus total days available. The formula is:

Deductible portion = (Rental days ÷ Total available days) × Total expense

Cottage Rental Income vs Expenses Calculator

Deductible Cottage Rental Expenses

Expense TypeDeductibilityNotes
Property taxesPro-rated to rental daysFull year tax ÷ rental ratio
InsurancePro-rated to rental daysConfirm policy covers commercial use
Utilities (hydro, water, internet)Pro-rated to rental daysHydro directly traceable to rental may be fully deductible
Maintenance & repairsPro-rated (or fully if rental-specific)New dock for rental guests = full deduction
Advertising / platform fees100% deductibleAirbnb/VRBO commissions, listing fees
Mortgage interestPro-rated to rental daysInterest only, not principal
Capital Cost Allowance (CCA)Pro-rated — use with cautionCreates tax consequences on sale
CCA Warning: Claiming CCA (depreciation) on a mixed-use cottage reduces your ACB for capital gains purposes. It can also disqualify certain principal residence exemption years. Most tax advisors recommend NOT claiming CCA on a cottage used personally — the long-term capital gains cost exceeds the short-term tax savings.

Rental Loss Restrictions

If your deductible cottage rental expenses exceed your rental income, you have a rental loss. The CRA applies the "reasonable expectation of profit" test — if your cottage is primarily a personal-use property with incidental rental, the CRA may deny the rental loss and refuse to allow it to offset your other income. A genuine commercial rental operation with a reasonable expectation of profit over time does not face this restriction.

GST/HST on Cottage Rentals

Short-term cottage rentals (less than one month per booking) are subject to GST/HST once your total annual taxable supplies exceed $30,000. If your cottage rental revenue crosses this threshold, you must register for GST/HST and charge/remit tax on rental income. Long-term residential rentals (one month or more) are generally exempt from GST/HST.

Airbnb Tax Note: Airbnb now collects and remits GST/HST on behalf of hosts in most Canadian provinces. However, you are still responsible for reporting rental income on your T1 and for understanding whether additional HST registration obligations apply to your total rental activity.

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