Short-Term Rental Income in Canada: The Tax Classification Question
The most important tax question for Airbnb hosts is whether your income is rental income (property income) or business income. CRA determines this based on the level of services you provide, and the rental income reporting guide shows how each treatment is filed:
Rental income (T776):
- Long-term tenants (monthly or multi-month agreements)
- No significant services beyond providing the space
- Tenant self-sufficient
Business income (T2125):
- Short-term guests (under 30 days per booking)
- You provide services: cleaning, linen changes, check-in/check-out assistance, supplies, meals
- Similar to a bed-and-breakfast operation
Most Airbnb hosts who actively manage their listing, clean between guests, and provide amenities will have their income treated as business income by CRA. The distinction matters because:
- Business income is subject to self-employment CPP contributions (if net income exceeds ~$3,500)
- Business income receives different deduction treatment than rental income
- Business income can offset other income with a business loss in some cases
GST/HST Registration Threshold
Short-term accommodation is a taxable supply under the Excise Tax Act — meaning GST/HST applies, unlike residential long-term rentals which are GST/HST exempt.
The $30,000 small supplier threshold:
| Situation | GST/HST Required? |
|---|---|
| Below $30,000 total STR revenue in all 4 prior quarters | No (small supplier exemption) |
| Exceeds $30,000 in a single quarter | Register immediately |
| Exceeds $30,000 cumulatively in last 4 quarters | Register within 29 days |
| Already registered for other business activity | Charge GST/HST from $1 |
Once registered, you must:
- Collect GST/HST on all accommodation fees (5% GST or applicable provincial HST rate)
- File regular GST/HST returns (quarterly for most small hosts)
- Remit net GST/HST (collected minus input tax credits on expenses)
Airbnb’s role: Since July 2022, Airbnb collects and remits federal GST/HST on accommodation fees for certain hosts in Canada. Check your Airbnb tax summary annually — if Airbnb is remitting, you do not double-collect, but you may still need to register if you are over the threshold from other sources.
Provincial Accommodation Taxes
Several provinces and municipalities have separate accommodation levies on short-term rentals:
| Province | Tax | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Columbia | PST on accommodation + MRDT | 8% PST + up to 3% MRDT | Airbnb remits on platforms |
| Ontario | Varies by municipality | 4% in Toronto (MAT) | Airbnb remits for some municipalities |
| Quebec | QST on accommodation | 9.975% QST | Airbnb remits |
| Alberta | No provincial tax | — | Some municipalities charge local levy |
| Nova Scotia | PST 10% on accommodation | 10% | Airbnb remits |
Review your Airbnb host payout summary — Airbnb provides a breakdown of which taxes were collected and remitted on your behalf.
Deductible Expenses for Short-Term Rental Hosts
If your STR income is business income (T2125):
| Expense | Deductible | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Airbnb service fees (platform %) | Yes | Deductible as cost of earning income |
| Professional photography | Yes | 100% if solely for listing |
| Cleaning fees (third-party) | Yes | Documented invoices/receipts |
| Cleaning supplies | Yes | Proportionate to STR use |
| Linens, towels, toiletries | Yes | Current use items deductible; durable items = CCA |
| Breakfast/snacks for guests | Partial | 50% meal limitation applies |
| Furniture and appliances | No (CCA) | Class 8 or 10; depreciated over time |
| Utilities (electricity, gas, internet) | Proportionate | Based on rental room % of total home |
| Mortgage interest | Proportionate | Based on days/rooms rented |
| Property taxes | Proportionate | If mixed personal/rental use |
| Insurance (STR-specific policy) | Yes | Standard home insurance may not cover STR |
| Property management/co-host fees | Yes | If you hire someone to manage the property |
| Lock boxes, smart locks | CCA | Capital item |
| STR licensing/permit fees | Yes | Municipal compliance costs |
Proportionality for shared homes: If you rent one room in your primary residence, expenses are allocated by:
- Percentage of the home rented: (rented floor space ÷ total floor space) × annual expense
- Or time-based if the whole home is rented seasonally: (days rented ÷ 365) × annual expense
The HST Self-Supply Trap: Converting Long-Term to Short-Term Rental
This is one of the most significant and overlooked tax issues for Canadian landlords converting to Airbnb:
The rule: Under the Excise Tax Act, when a property changes use from a residential exempt supply (long-term rental) to a taxable commercial supply (short-term accommodation), the owner is deemed to have repurchased the property at fair market value. HST is payable on this deemed acquisition.
Example:
- Condo purchased in 2018 for $400,000
- Long-term rented until 2025 — no HST, exempt supply
- Switches to Airbnb in 2025, FMV now $700,000
- Self-supply: HST applies on $700,000 × applicable rate
- In Ontario: 13% × $700,000 = $91,000 HST liability
This rule catches many hosts off guard. Before converting any long-term rental to a short-term rental, consult an HST/GST advisor. There may be planning opportunities to reduce the impact, but they require advance structuring.
Municipal Licensing and Short-Term Rental Bylaws
Most major Canadian cities now require short-term rental licenses, and many restrict STRs to principal residences:
| City | Restriction | License Required | Fine for Non-Compliance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | Principal residence only | Yes ($50/year) | Up to $100,000 |
| Vancouver | Principal residence only | Yes ($109/year) | Up to $10,000/day |
| Calgary | Principal residence only | Yes ($175/year) | Up to $10,000 |
| Ottawa | Primary residence only | Yes ($77/year) | Up to $100,000 |
| Edmonton | No principal residence restriction | Yes | Varies |
| Montreal | Owner must be present in unit | Registration required | Up to $100,000 |
If you cannot license your STR because you do not live in the property (or your municipality prohibits investor-owned STRs), operating without a licence creates liability risk separate from the tax issues.
Income Reporting Summary
| Income Type | CRA Form | GST/HST | CPP (Self-Employment) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short-term rental (with services) | T2125 | Yes (if over $30K) | Yes (on net income) |
| Short-term rental (property only, no services) | T776 | Yes (if over $30K) | No |
| Long-term rental (monthly tenants, no services) | T776 | No (exempt) | No |
Platform Reporting to CRA
Starting in 2024, platforms like Airbnb are required to report host income directly to CRA:
| Platforms Must Report | Details |
|---|---|
| Your info | Name, address, SIN |
| Income | Total paid to you |
| Property | Address of rental |
If you do not report your Airbnb income and CRA receives platform data showing payments, an automatic mismatch is flagged. Audit risk for unreported short-term rental income is high and not worth taking.
Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) for STR Hosts
CCA lets you depreciate capital assets used in your rental operation over time rather than deducting the full purchase price in one year:
| Asset | CCA Class | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Building (rental) | 1 | 4% |
| Furniture | 8 | 20% |
| Computer/equipment | 50 | 55% |
| Appliances | 8 | 20% |
CCA warning: Claiming CCA on a property that is also your principal residence is one of the most common — and costly — mistakes Airbnb hosts make. CCA reduces your rental income today, but when you sell, CRA will “recapture” the depreciation as taxable income and you may lose part of your principal residence exemption. If the property is purely an investment rental, CCA makes sense. If you live there and rent it part-time on Airbnb, skip CCA entirely — the tax savings now are not worth the complications on sale.
Principal Residence Impact
Partial use for short-term rental does not automatically eliminate the Principal Residence Exemption, but the rules are nuanced:
| Scenario | PRE Available? |
|---|---|
| Primarily your home, rent a room part-time | Yes — full PRE generally preserved |
| Convert home to full-time rental | Limited — deemed disposition triggers |
| “Ordinary inhabitation” test | Required for PRE |
Change in use: If you convert your home to a full-time Airbnb (you no longer live there), a deemed disposition occurs. You may elect to defer the gain for up to 4 years under subsection 45(2), but the rules are complex — consult a tax professional before converting.
Record Keeping for Airbnb Hosts
| Record | Details |
|---|---|
| Income | Each booking: dates, guest, amount received |
| Expenses | Receipts for all deductions |
| Calendar | Days rented vs personal use |
| Improvements | Capital vs current expense distinction |
| Communications | Tax-related correspondence |
Software options: Download your Airbnb annual tax summary, track income and expenses in a spreadsheet or accounting software (Wave, QuickBooks), and use a receipt scanner to keep digital copies. CRA requires you to retain records for 6 years.
Multiple Properties
If you operate more than one short-term rental:
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Separate T776 for each property | Track income and expenses independently |
| Rental loss from one property | Can offset income from another rental property |
| Different rules may apply | Municipal licensing, insurance, and zoning vary per property |
Airbnb vs Long-Term Rental: Tax Comparison
| Factor | Airbnb / Short-Term | Long-Term Rental |
|---|---|---|
| Income potential | Often higher per night | Stable and predictable |
| Expenses | Higher (turnover, cleaning, supplies) | Lower ongoing costs |
| GST/HST | Applies if over $30K | Usually exempt |
| PRE impact | More risk if also your home | Less risk |
| Admin burden | More work (bookings, turnovers) | Less ongoing management |
| CRA form | T2125 (business) or T776 | T776 |
Related Reading
- Short-Term Rental Tax Canada: Airbnb, VRBO & CRA Rules
- Tax Changes Canada 2027 | What You Need to Know
- Airbnb & Short-Term Rental Taxes Canada 2026
→ Back to: Complete Canadian Tax Guide