Example: Freelance writer, rented condo, Quebec (utilities included in rent)
Item
Amount
Home office area
120 sq ft
Total apartment area
900 sq ft
Business-use percentage
13.3%
Home Expense
Annual Cost
Business Portion (13.3%)
Rent
$24,000
$3,192
Renter’s insurance
$400
$53
Total home office deduction
$3,245
Utilities are included in rent in this example — no separate utility deduction.
What’s Eligible vs Not
Expense
Owned Home
Rented Home
Mortgage interest
✅ (business %)
N/A
Mortgage principal
❌ Not deductible
N/A
Rent
N/A
✅ (business %)
Property taxes
✅ (business %)
❌ (landlord pays)
Home insurance
✅ (business %)
✅ renter’s insurance (business %)
Heat / hydro / water
✅ (business %)
✅ if you pay utilities separately
Maintenance and repairs (general)
✅ (business %)
✅ if you pay
Capital improvements (new room, renovation)
❌ (may qualify as CCA — complex)
❌
Dedicated office phone line
✅ 100%
✅ 100%
Business-only internet
✅ 100% (if separate)
✅ 100% (if separate)
Internet shared with personal
✅ (business %)
✅ (business %)
The Loss-Restriction Rule
Home office expenses for self-employed cannot create or increase a net business loss. They are limited to net income from the business before the home office deduction.
Scenario
Outcome
Business net income before home office: $5,000; home office expenses: $3,000
Claim $3,000 → net income $2,000 ✅
Business net income before home office: $2,000; home office expenses: $3,000
Claim only $2,000 → net income $0; carry forward remaining $1,000
Business has a net loss before home office
$0 home office deduction this year; carry forward entire amount
Carry-forward amounts are claimed in a future year when there is net business income to absorb them.
T2125 Part 7 — Where to Enter
T2125 Line
Description
Line A
Heat
Line B
Electricity
Line C
Water
Line D
Maintenance and repairs
Line E
Rent (rented home)
Line F
Property taxes (owned home)
Line G
Property insurance / renters insurance
Line H
Mortgage interest (owned home)
Line I
Capital cost allowance on home (complex; rarely used)
Line J
Other (telephone for business portion)
Calculate
Sum of A–J × business-use %
Apply loss restriction
Cap at net business income before home office
CRA Audit Protection Checklist
Evidence to Keep
Why It Matters
Photograph of workspace
Shows a defined, dedicated business space
Floor plan sketch with measurements
Documents your business-use percentage calculation
Documentation of client meetings (if using Test 2)
Calendar, emails, or client files showing regular business use
Capital Cost Allowance on the home office
Self-employed owners can theoretically claim CCA (depreciation) on the business-use portion of an owned home — but this almost never makes sense because it triggers a change-in-use and partial loss of the Principal Residence Exemption (PRE) when you sell:
Scenario
Tax consequence
Claim CCA on home office portion
Partial loss of PRE → capital gain on that portion of the home when sold
Do not claim CCA
Full PRE preserved; no capital gain on principal residence
Recommendation for most self-employed
Skip CCA on home — claim all other eligible expenses instead
CRA gives one time grace — if you previously claimed CCA on your home, you may be able to elect to avoid the deemed disposition if you stop using the space for business. Consult a tax professional before claiming CCA on any portion of your principal residence.