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Tax-Loss Harvesting in Canada 2026 — Superficial Loss Rule Explained

Tax-loss harvesting (TLH) is a strategy that uses investment losses to offset capital gains, reducing your tax bill in the current year or carrying losses forward to future years. For Canadians investing in non-registered accounts, TLH can save thousands in taxes annually — but Canada's superficial loss rule creates a critical trap that catches many investors off guard.

How Tax-Loss Harvesting Works

When you sell an investment for less than you paid (your adjusted cost base), you realize a capital loss. In Canada, capital losses can:

Capital gains in Canada are taxed at a 50% inclusion rate (in 2026, after the 2024 budget changes apply a 2/3 rate on gains over $250,000 annually). So a $100 capital gain adds $5,000 (or $6,667 above the threshold) to your taxable income. Harvesting a $100 capital loss eliminates this entirely.

The Superficial Loss Rule — Canada's Wash Sale Equivalent

Canada's superficial loss rule (section 54 of the Income Tax Act) is the most important rule to understand before harvesting losses. The rule disallows a capital loss if:

  1. You (or an affiliated person, including your spouse/common-law partner) sell the investment at a loss
  2. You (or an affiliated person) acquire an "identical property" within the period beginning 30 days before the sale and ending 30 days after the sale

If the superficial loss rule triggers, the loss is disallowed and added to the ACB of the repurchased security instead of being deductible today.

Example: You own 100 shares of Royal Bank (RY) with an ACB of $130/share. RY drops to $110. You sell at $110 to realize a $2,000 loss. If you rebuy RY within 30 days of the sale, the $2,000 loss is disallowed. Your new ACB becomes $110 + $20 = $130 (the disallowed loss is added to ACB). You haven't lost the loss permanently — it's deferred to the eventual sale of the repurchased shares.

How to Harvest Losses Without Triggering the Superficial Loss Rule

The solution is to sell the losing security and buy a similar but not identical replacement that maintains your market exposure during the 30-day window:

Original HoldingAcceptable TLH Substitute (Not Identical)
Royal Bank (RY)TD Bank (TD) or Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS)
VFV (Vanguard S&P 500 ETF)ZSP (BMO S&P 500 ETF) — both track S&P 500 but are different ETFs
XEQT (iShares all-equity)VEQT (Vanguard all-equity) — same asset class, different issuer
ZAG (BMO bond ETF)VAB (Vanguard bond ETF)
XIU (TSX 60 ETF)VCN (Vanguard Canada All-Cap) — different index

After 30 days, you can switch back to your original holding if you prefer. The key is that the replacement security tracks the same general market but is not the same financial instrument. Two ETFs that track the same index (like VFV and ZSP, which both track the S&P 500) are generally considered identical property by CRA, so you cannot use VFV/ZSP as a TLH pair — you must switch to a different index.

What Counts as "Identical Property"?

CRA considers securities identical if they have the same legal rights and represent the same underlying asset. Practically:

Tax-Loss Harvesting Calculator

TLH Tax Savings Calculator

When Tax-Loss Harvesting Makes Sense for Canadians

TLH is most valuable in these situations:

  1. You have realized capital gains in the same year from selling real estate, a business, or investments — the harvested loss can directly offset these
  2. You're in a high tax bracket — the value of the deduction is proportional to your marginal rate
  3. You hold investments in a non-registered account — TLH has no value in registered accounts (TFSA, RRSP) since gains/losses have no tax consequence there
  4. Year-end tax planning (November/December) — review your portfolio for losses before December 31 to capture them in the current tax year

TLH is generally not worth the transaction costs and complexity for small portfolios (under $100,000 in non-registered accounts) or for investors who primarily invest inside registered accounts.

ACB Tracking After TLH

After a TLH transaction, your adjusted cost base for the replacement security becomes its purchase price. If the superficial loss rule was triggered on your original sale, the disallowed loss is added to the ACB of the repurchased security. Proper ACB tracking is essential for accurate tax reporting. Tools like Adjustedcostbase.ca help Canadian investors track ACB across multiple buy/sell transactions and DRIP reinvestments.

TLH in Registered Accounts: Don't Bother

Tax-loss harvesting only applies in non-registered (taxable) investment accounts. There is no concept of capital gains or losses inside a TFSA or RRSP — gains are sheltered and losses provide no tax benefit. If you sell at a loss inside a TFSA, that loss is gone forever with no tax benefit. This is another reason to hold your most volatile, highest-expected-return assets in registered accounts — you never have to think about TLH.

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Last updated: March 2026. For informational purposes only. Not financial advice.