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Short-Term Rental Tax Canada: Airbnb, VRBO & CRA Rules

Updated

Short Answer

Short-term rental income is fully taxable in Canada, is subject to GST/HST once you exceed $30,000 in revenue, and platforms like Airbnb share income data with CRA. Reporting accurately and understanding the deduction rules is increasingly important as CRA data-matching of platform income expands.

Property Income vs Business Income

How your short-term rental is classified changes your tax obligations:

Classification Characteristics Tax form CPP on net income?
Property income Basic shelter + utilities T776 No
Business income Hotel-like services (meals, cleaning, reception, tours) T2125 Yes — both halves (11.9%)

Most residential Airbnb hosts fall into property income. Once you hire cleaners, provide breakfast, or offer services resembling a bed-and-breakfast, CRA may reclassify as business income.

GST/HST Registration: The $30,000 Threshold

Short-term rentals (under 30 consecutive days) are GST/HST taxable supplies:

Revenue Action
Under $30,000 in last 4 quarters Small supplier — can register voluntarily (allows input tax credits)
$30,000 crossed in single quarter Must register immediately — effective that quarter
$30,000 crossed over 4 quarters Must register — effective day you exceed the limit

Important: The $30,000 threshold combines all your taxable commercial activities — not just Airbnb. If you also freelance or sell goods, those revenues count toward the threshold.

Once registered:

  • Charge GST/HST on each short-term rental booking (add to booking price or absorb in your listing)
  • Claim input tax credits on GST/HST paid on related expenses
  • File GST/HST returns quarterly or annually depending on revenue level
  • Long-term rentals (30+ days booked in advance) remain exempt

Deductible Expenses for Short-Term Rentals

Expense Notes
Mortgage interest (proportional) Rental use % × total interest
Property taxes (proportional) Rental use % × annual tax
Insurance Must have STR-specific or landlord policy; standard home insurance often won’t cover Airbnb
Platform fees Airbnb host service fees are deductible
Cleaning costs Cleaning between guests — deductible
Linens and consumables Toiletries, paper products, coffee, welcome gifts
Utilities Proportional to rental use
Photography and listing optimization Advertising costs
Locks, security systems Reasonable portion
Accounting and legal fees Including GST/HST filing costs
Repairs and maintenance Routine upkeep only
Capital improvements Depreciated via CCA

Proportional vs Full Deductions

If you rent only part of your home, or only part of the year:

Scenario Proration method
Renting entire home for partial year Days rented ÷ 365 × total annual expenses
Renting one room in home you live in Room sq ft ÷ total sq ft × annual expenses
Renting all year for short-term, home fully dedicated Full expenses deductible

Example: 900 sq ft home, 250 sq ft room rented = 27.8% rental use. Mortgage interest $18,000 × 27.8% = $5,004 deductible.

What Airbnb Reports to CRA

Under the OECD platform reporting rules effective in Canada:

Data shared What CRA receives
Host name and SIN Identity verification
Annual gross earnings Total payout before fees
Number of rental nights Basis for verification
Property address Cross-references with title data

CRA matches this against T1 filings. Hosts who underreport receive automated reassessment notices.

Provincial Restrictions and Loss Disallowance

Several provinces introduced restrictions on short-term rental deductions:

Province Rule
British Columbia STR expense deductions disallowed if property not a principal residence and not in a designated STR area — effective November 2023
Ontario Municipal licensing requirements in major cities; no provincial expense ban currently
Quebec Province-wide registry; hosts must register; municipalities can restrict
Nova Scotia Registration system introduced; operating without registration affects deductibility

Always verify current rules in your province and municipality before listing — the STR regulatory landscape continues to evolve.

Converting Between Principal Residence and STR

Event Tax consequence
Convert principal residence to STR entire home Change-in-use — deemed disposition at FMV, potential capital gain
Convert STR back to principal residence Second change-in-use — deemed re-acquisition at current FMV
Rent only a room while still living there No change-in-use if no structural changes and “ancillary” to personal use
Rent entire home for 6 months, live there 6 months PRE applies to the 6 months you lived there; other 6 months gains are taxable

Bottom Line

Short-term rental income is one of CRA’s most active enforcement areas as platform income reporting expands. Report all rental income, register for GST/HST if you exceed $30,000, and understand your province’s specific rules before listing. The deduction framework is generous for legitimate rental activity, but only if you track expenses and keep proper records.