Published August 28, 2026 · CoinTaxReporting

Crypto Gifting Taxes in Canada 2026 – CRA Rules for Donors & Recipients

Want to give someone Bitcoin as a gift in Canada? Here's the part nobody tells you upfront: the CRA treats that gift as a sale. You can owe capital gains tax on crypto you gave away for free.

CRA: Gifts Are Taxable Dispositions

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Under Canadian tax law, gifting crypto is a deemed disposition at fair market value. The CRA treats it as if you sold the crypto at its current FMV the moment you gave it away — and you owe capital gains tax on any accrued gain, even though you received nothing.

Let's make it concrete. You bought 1 BTC for $20,000 CAD. You gift it when BTC is at $80,000 CAD. That's a $60,000 capital gain on your hands — 50% included in your income (or 2/3 if you're over the $250k threshold). The person you gave it to pays nothing. You pay the tax. That's the deal.

Exception: Gifts Between Spouses

Gifting to a spouse or common-law partner works differently. The attribution rules kick in — the transfer happens at your ACB, not FMV, deferring the gain. But when your spouse eventually sells, that income or gain can get attributed back to you. The tax doesn't disappear. It just moves around.

ACB for the Recipient

Good news for whoever receives the gift: their cost basis resets to the fair market value on the date they received it. Any future gain they make is calculated from that new baseline.

Charitable Donations of Crypto

This is genuinely one of the best tax moves in Canada for crypto holders. Donating crypto directly to a CRA-registered charity gives you:

Just confirm the charity can actually receive crypto directly before you send anything.

Gifts to Minor Children

The attribution rules apply here too — income and capital gains earned on property gifted to a minor child are attributed back to the parent until the child turns 18. Family income-splitting via crypto gifts to kids doesn't work the way people hope.

Record-Keeping for Crypto Gifts

Related Resources

Crypto Tax SoftwareCrypto Tax BlogCanada Crypto Tax GuideCanada Capital Gains 2026Canada Filing GuideInherited Crypto Taxes

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. For individual tax advice, consult a licensed tax professional.