Free CRA-compliant capital gains estimator. Covers all 13 provinces and territories, the 50%/66.7% inclusion split, and full federal bracket math.
Three inputs, one accurate result — here's what happens under the hood.
Input your total capital gain (sell proceeds minus your adjusted cost base and fees), or let the calculator compute it from a single trade.
The CRA inclusion rule is applied: 50% on gains up to CA$250K, then 66.7% on the amount above. Only this included portion is taxable.
The included gain is added to your other annual income. Federal and provincial marginal rates are then applied bracket by bracket.
You see federal tax, provincial tax, total tax owed, and your net after-tax proceeds — broken down clearly.
The CRA does not tax your full gain — only the "included" portion is added to taxable income.
| Annual Capital Gain | Inclusion Rate | Taxable Amount on CA$50,000 | Tax-Free Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| CA$0 – CA$250,000 | 50% | CA$25,000 | CA$25,000 |
| Above CA$250,000 (on excess only) | 66.7% | CA$33,333 | CA$16,667 |
These rates apply to your total taxable income (base income plus included gain). Provincial rates are added on top. Note: the bottom bracket dropped from 15% to 14% effective January 1, 2026.
| Taxable Income (CA$) | Federal Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $58,523 | 14% |
| $58,523 – $117,045 | 20.5% |
| $117,045 – $181,440 | 26% |
| $181,440 – $258,482 | 29% |
| Over $258,482 | 33% |
Essential facts every Canadian crypto investor should know before filing.
Only half of capital gains up to CA$250,000 are added to your taxable income. The other 50% is completely tax-free.
Up to CA$250KThe inclusion rate rises to two-thirds for the portion of gains that exceeds CA$250,000 in a single tax year.
Above CA$250KFederal marginal rates range from 14% to 33%, applied to the taxable portion of your gain stacked on your other income.
14% – 33%Each province and territory adds its own marginal rates on top. Quebec and Nova Scotia have the highest combined rates.
~6% – 26%Swapping one cryptocurrency for another is a taxable disposal in Canada. You must report the gain or loss at fair market value at the time of the swap.
Always taxableLosses can offset gains in the same year, be carried back 3 years, or carried forward indefinitely. They can only offset capital gains.
Carry forward ∞Your ACB is the average total cost of all units you hold in a coin, including acquisition fees. Canada uses the average cost method — not FIFO or LIFO.
Average costFrequent traders may be assessed as running a business, making 100% of gains taxable as income. The CRA considers frequency, intent, and commercial activity.
CRA discretionA plain-English guide to CRA rules for cryptocurrency investors.
The Canada Revenue Agency classifies cryptocurrency as a commodity, not a currency or security. This has one key implication: every time you sell, trade, spend, or gift crypto, you trigger a capital gains event and must calculate whether you made a profit or a loss relative to what you paid (your adjusted cost base).
The following actions are all taxable disposals under CRA rules:
Simply holding crypto in a wallet, transferring between your own wallets, or buying crypto with fiat are not taxable events.
Canada's capital gains system taxes only a fraction of your profit. For most investors with gains under CA$250,000 per year, only 50% of the gain is added to taxable income — the rest is exempt. For the portion of gains above that threshold in a year, the excess is included at 66.7% (two-thirds).
This included portion is then taxed at your combined federal and provincial marginal rate, which depends on your total income for the year. This is why our calculator asks for your other annual income — it determines which tax brackets your crypto gain falls into after stacking.
The CRA requires you to calculate your capital gain as: proceeds of disposition − adjusted cost base − selling expenses. The ACB is the average total cost — purchase price plus fees — of all units of a particular cryptocurrency you own. Every time you buy more of the same coin, the ACB is recalculated as a weighted average across all holdings. Canada does not allow FIFO, LIFO, or specific identification.
Capital gains from cryptocurrency are reported on Schedule 3 of your T1 personal income tax return. You report the proceeds, your ACB, and the resulting gain or loss for each disposal during the year. Keeping detailed records — including dates, amounts in CAD, and exchange rates at the time of each transaction — is essential for accurate reporting and to defend your filing in the event of a CRA review.
Common questions about crypto taxes in Canada, answered plainly.
The CRA treats cryptocurrency as a commodity. Every time you sell, trade, or dispose of crypto, you trigger a capital gains event. Only a portion of that gain — called the inclusion rate — is added to your taxable income and taxed at your marginal rate. For gains up to CA$250,000, the inclusion rate is 50%. For gains above CA$250,000, it rises to 66.7%.
The CRA applies a 50% capital gains inclusion rate for annual gains up to CA$250,000 — meaning only half of your profit is added to taxable income and the rest is completely tax-free. For gains that exceed CA$250,000 in a year, a 66.7% (two-thirds) inclusion rate applies to the excess. This threshold is per individual, per year, and applies to all capital gains — not just crypto.
Yes. The CRA considers swapping one cryptocurrency for another a taxable disposal. You must calculate the fair market value in Canadian dollars of the crypto you gave up at the time of the trade, subtract your ACB, and report the resulting gain or loss. This applies to all swaps, including DeFi trades, wrapped tokens, and NFT purchases paid with crypto.
For most individual investors, crypto is taxed as capital gains — the 50%/66.7% inclusion rule applies. However, if the CRA determines you are trading crypto as a business (due to high frequency, commercial intent, or specialized knowledge), your gains may be treated as business income and taxed at 100%. The CRA looks at factors like trading frequency, intent at purchase, and whether your activity resembles a commercial enterprise.
Your adjusted cost base (ACB) is the average total cost of all units of a particular cryptocurrency you own, including acquisition fees paid at purchase. When you dispose of crypto, your capital gain equals proceeds minus ACB minus selling fees. Each time you buy more of the same coin, you recalculate the ACB as a weighted average across all holdings. Unlike some countries, Canada does not allow FIFO or specific identification — it is always the average cost method.
Yes. Capital losses from crypto can be used to offset capital gains in the same tax year. If your losses exceed your gains, the net capital loss can be carried back up to three previous tax years, or carried forward indefinitely to offset future capital gains. Capital losses can only offset capital gains — they cannot reduce employment income, rental income, or other types of income.
Yes. The CRA requires you to report all crypto disposals on Schedule 3 of your T1 personal income tax return. This includes selling for fiat, trading one crypto for another, using crypto to pay for goods or services, and gifting crypto. Simply holding crypto in a wallet does not create a taxable event. Failure to report can result in penalties and interest charges.
Alberta generally has the lowest combined crypto capital gains tax in Canada. It has no provincial sales tax and relatively low provincial income tax rates of 10% to 15%, compared to provinces like Quebec (up to 25.75% provincially) or Nova Scotia (up to 21%). That said, all provinces apply the same federal rates and the same 50%/66.7% CRA inclusion rule — only the provincial portion of the bill differs.
Increasingly, yes. Starting January 1, 2026, Canada adopted the OECD Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF), requiring crypto platforms to automatically report customer transactions — including crypto-to-fiat sales, crypto-to-crypto swaps, and private wallet transfers — to the CRA. This data is shared with over 60 countries. The CRA has also previously issued legal demands to Canadian exchanges for historical user data. Voluntary and accurate reporting is strongly recommended.