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Is a Work From Home Allowance Taxable in Canada? | CRA 2026 Rules

Updated

Is a Work From Home Allowance Taxable in Canada?

With hybrid and remote work now common, many Canadians receive some kind of work-from-home support from their employer — whether a stipend, a supply reimbursement, or equipment. CRA treats these differently depending on how the payment is structured.

Core Rule

Payment type Taxable?
Employer reimburses specific, documented home office expenses ❌ Not taxable
Employer pays a flat “WFH allowance” not tied to receipts ✅ Taxable
Employer provides equipment (laptop, monitor — work use only) ❌ Not taxable
Employer provides equipment employee uses personally ✅ Personal use portion taxable
Employer pays home internet (employment-use portion) ❌ Not taxable
Employer pays full home internet including personal use ✅ Personal portion taxable

The $2/Day Flat Rate: Now Expired

Period CRA flat rate available?
2020, 2021, 2022 ✅ Yes — $2/day up to $500; no T2200 needed
2023 onward (including 2026) ❌ No — expired; detailed method only
From 2023 forward Must use T2200 + detailed method

If you’ve been claiming the flat rate and haven’t updated your approach, this is important — you now need a signed T2200 from your employer and must calculate actual eligible expenses.

Claiming Home Office Expenses in 2026: Detailed Method

Requirement Details
T2200 signed by employer ✅ Required — employer certifies you were required to work from home
Dedicated workspace Must be a space used exclusively and regularly for employment or to meet clients/customers
Use Form T777 Statement of Employment Expenses — filed with your return
Keep all receipts CRA may request; do not file but retain for 6 years

Eligible Expenses by Employee Type

Expense Salaried employees Commissioned employees
Supplies (paper, pens, etc.)
Internet (employment-use %)
Home maintenance (employment-use %)
Heat, electricity, water (employment-use %)
Rent (employment-use %)
Mortgage interest
Capital cost allowance on home
Property taxes (employment-use %)
Home insurance (employment-use %)

How to Calculate the Employment-Use Percentage

Formula Example
Step 1: Home office area ÷ total home area 120 sq ft ÷ 1,200 sq ft = 10%
Step 2: Hours used for employment ÷ total hours in year 1,500 ÷ 8,760 = 17.1%
Step 3: Employment-use % 10% × 17.1% = 1.71%
Annual internet bill $1,440
Claimable internet $1,440 × 10% (area) = $144 (since internet is area-only for some purposes)

CRA’s approach to the two-step calculation varies by expense type — some are area-only, some use the combined area × time calculation. Form T777 guides the calculation.

What Employers Can Pay Tax-Free

Employer payment Tax-free? Conditions
Specific internet bill reimbursement (receipt required) ✅ Yes Employment-use portion
Office supplies reimbursed with receipts ✅ Yes Work-related only
Ergonomic equipment (chair, desk) ✅ Yes If used primarily for work
Computer / monitor / phone ✅ Yes If used primarily for work
Flat monthly “WFH stipend” ❌ Taxable No specific expense tie
Reimbursement for personal home expenses (rent, mortgage) ❌ Taxable Not employment-related

What Appears on Your T4

Situation T4 Box 40 impact
Employer reimburses actual documented expenses Nothing — not taxable
Employer pays flat monthly WFH allowance ✅ Amount in Box 40
Employer pays for internet including personal use ✅ Personal portion in Box 40
Employer provides work-use-only equipment Nothing

Double-Dipping: Taxable Allowance + Personal Claim

Scenario Can you claim home office expenses?
Employer pays taxable WFH stipend AND you have unreimbursed expenses ✅ Yes — claim actual expenses with T2200
Employer pays tax-free reimbursement for all your costs ❌ Nothing left to claim
Employer pays nothing for WFH costs ✅ Yes — claim with T2200 if required to WFH

Bottom Line

A work-from-home allowance is only tax-free if structured as reimbursement of specific, documented employment expenses. A flat WFH stipend — common as employers try to streamline benefits — is taxable income in Box 40 of your T4. For 2026, the COVID-era $2/day flat rate is gone; employees who want to claim home office deductions must get a T2200 from their employer, calculate actual eligible expenses, and file Form T777. The eligible amounts are often modest — $300–$600/year for most remote workers — but still worth claiming, especially at higher marginal rates.