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Rental Income Deductions Canada: What Landlords Can Claim

Updated

Short Answer

Canadian landlords can deduct most operating expenses incurred to earn rental income. The key distinction is between currently deductible operating expenses and capital expenditures that must be depreciated over time. Getting this distinction right is the most important part of rental tax compliance.

Deductible Operating Expenses

These can be deducted in full in the year they are paid:

Expense T776 Line Notes
Mortgage interest 8430 Interest only — not principal. From lender statement.
Property taxes 8690 Annual municipal tax bill
Insurance premiums 8360 Landlord/rental property insurance
Repairs and maintenance 8810 Routine upkeep — see repair vs capital distinction below
Property management fees 8500 Third-party management company only
Advertising and listing fees 8340 Rental platform fees, signage, MLS listing if applicable
Legal fees 8480 Lease drafting, eviction applications, dispute resolution
Accounting fees 8480 Cost of T776 preparation
Snow removal / landscaping 8810 Maintaining the property
Utilities n/a (line 8800) Only amounts you pay — not tenant-paid utilities
Superintendent / caretaker wages 8600 Employment income paid to someone who manages the property
Bank charges 8860 Fees on a bank account used for rental activity
Condominium fees 8690 Monthly condo fees paid by landlord

Mortgage Interest Calculation

Your lender provides an annual mortgage statement. Use the interest column only:

Mortgage statement item Deductible?
Monthly payment No — split into interest + principal
Interest portion Yes — fully deductible
Principal repayment No — reduces debt, not an expense
Lender insurance premiums (CMHC) Treated as part of the property cost (added to ACB), not deducted annually
Penalty to break mortgage Deductible in the year paid if the property is still a rental

What Cannot Be Deducted

Non-deductible item Why
Mortgage principal Reduces a liability — not an expense
Land portion of the property Land does not depreciate; no CCA
Personal-use portion of expenses Mixed-use properties must prorate all expenses
Capital improvements Must be capitalized (added to ACB) or depreciated via CCA
Fines and penalties CRA policy: fines are not deductible
Personal travel costs Only rental-purpose travel is deductible
Costs to sell the property Legal and real estate fees on sale reduce the capital gain — not an operating deduction

Repairs vs. Capital Improvements

This is the most common source of CRA audit adjustments:

Scenario Repair (deductible now) Capital (add to ACB / claim via CCA)
Patching a leaky roof
Replacing the entire roof
Repainting rental unit
Adding a new deck
Fixing broken flooring
Installing hardwood throughout
Unclogging drains
Adding a second bathroom
Replacing a broken appliance
Upgrading to a new kitchen

CRA’s test: Does the work restore to original condition (repair) or does it add value, upgrade, or extend useful life beyond original (capital)?

Capital Cost Allowance (CCA)

Capital items — the building, appliances, equipment — are deducted over time via CCA:

CCA class Asset Rate
Class 1 Building (residential) 4% declining balance
Class 8 Appliances, furniture, equipment 20% declining balance
Class 10 Vehicle used for rental management 30% declining balance
Class 12 Small tools under $500, linen 100% (half-year rule still applies)

CCA rules for rental property:

  • CCA is optional — you are not required to claim it
  • CCA cannot create or increase a rental loss in the year
  • CCA claimed now reduces the UCC — creating recapture risk on sale
  • Half-year rule: Only 50% of the normal rate in the year of acquisition

Mixed-Use Properties (You Live There Too)

If you rent part of your home (a basement suite, one floor of a duplex), you must prorate:

Method How to calculate
By square footage Rental square footage ÷ total square footage = rental %
By units For identical units: 1 of 2 units rented = 50%

Only the rental percentage of shared expenses (mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, utilities, maintenance) is deductible.

Expense Your home portion Rental portion
Total mortgage interest: $24,000 $16,000 (not deductible) $8,000 (deductible if 33% rented)
Total insurance: $2,400 $1,600 $800
Total utilities: $4,800 $3,200 $1,600

Below-Market Rent to Family

If you rent to a family member at below-market rent, CRA limits your deductions:

Scenario Deduction allowed
Renting at fair market value Full expenses deductible
Renting below market value Expenses only deductible up to the rental income earned
Renting for free No deduction — the arrangement is not a rental for tax purposes

Bottom Line

The rental deduction framework is generous — mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, repairs, and management fees can substantially reduce taxable rental income. The critical discipline is distinguishing maintenance and repairs (deducted today) from capital improvements (added to cost base) and keeping receipts for every expense claimed.