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How to Report Rental Income in Canada (T776 Guide)

Updated

Short Answer

Rental income is reported on Form T776, which separates gross rents from eligible expenses to calculate the net amount taxable. Filing accurately requires organizing records annually and understanding the difference between deductible expenses and capital improvements.

Step 1: Calculate Gross Rental Income

Start with total rents received during the calendar year (January 1 – December 31):

Income source Include?
Monthly rent payments received Yes
First and last month upfront (received this year) Yes
Damage deposit you kept this year Yes
Parking, storage, laundry revenue Yes
Damage deposit held (not yet applied) No
Loan to tenant (not rent) No

Cash basis: Most Canadian landlords use the cash basis — income is included in the year received regardless of when it is “earned.” Expenses are deducted in the year paid.

Step 2: Gather Deductible Expenses

Collect receipts and records for all eligible expenses paid during the year:

Expense category What to collect
Mortgage interest Year-end mortgage statement showing interest paid
Property taxes Property tax bill or municipal receipt
Insurance Annual renewal statement
Maintenance and repairs All receipts — contractor invoices, hardware store receipts
Utilities Hydro, gas, water bills paid on behalf of units
Property management Monthly statements or annual summary from management company
Advertising Rental listing receipts, signage
Legal and accounting fees Lawyer invoices for lease disputes, accountant fee for T776
Travel Log of trips to property for inspection/repair (date, km, purpose)

Step 3: Complete Form T776

Part 1: Rental Income

T776 line Enter
Line 8141 Gross rents received
Line 8299 Total income

Part 2: Operating Expenses

T776 line Expense type
8340 Advertising
8360 Insurance
8430 Interest (mortgage interest)
8450 Office expenses
8480 Legal, accounting, professional fees
8500 Management and administration fees
8520 Motor vehicle expenses
8550 Travel expenses
8600 Salaries and wages (if you employ a superintendent/manager)
8690 Property taxes
8810 Repairs and maintenance
8860 Other expenses (itemize)
9180 Capital cost allowance (from CCA schedule)

Part 3: Net Income Calculation

Step Calculation
Gross income (line 8299) $________
Minus total expenses (sum of above) $________
= Net income before CCA $________
Minus CCA (optional, cannot create loss) $________
= Net rental income/loss (line 9946) $________

Step 4: Transfer Net Income to T1

Form Line Amount
T1 General 12600 Net rental income (or loss) from all T776s

Rental income is added to your total income and taxed at your marginal rate. A rental loss reduces your total income.

If You Have Multiple Properties

If you own more than one rental property:

  • Complete a separate T776 for each property
  • Each T776 calculates its own net income/loss
  • All net amounts from all T776s are combined and entered at line 12600

Partial-Year Rental

If you rented only part of the year (seasonal rental, moved in mid-year, purchased mid-year):

  • Report only the income received during the rental period
  • Prorate expenses proportionally to the rental period
  • Document clearly which months were rented vs personal use

Common Mistakes on T776

Mistake Consequence
Claiming principal repayment as interest CRA will disallow the overstated deduction
Claiming 100% of expenses on a partially personal-use property CRA will reassess the personal-use percentage
Omitting first/last month rent received in the year Underreporting income — audit risk
Confusing capital improvements with repairs Capital improvements cannot be expensed; must be added to ACB
Not keeping receipts CRA audits require receipts; unsubstantiated expenses are disallowed
Forgetting to file T776 Omitted rental income can result in CRA reassessment plus interest and penalties

Bottom Line

T776 is straightforward once your records are organized. Track gross rents and all expenses through the year, keep every receipt, and distinguish repairs from improvements. The biggest risk for most landlords is a CRA audit triggered by inconsistent or poorly documented expenses — organized records make audits manageable.