Best Crypto Tax Software Canada 2026 – CRA-Compliant Reporting
Canadian crypto taxes are genuinely different from US taxes. The ACB pooling method, the superficial loss rule, the two-tier inclusion rate — most generic crypto tax tools handle these poorly. Here is what to look for in software that actually gets Canada right.
How Canada Taxes Crypto
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Start for free →The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) treats cryptocurrency as a commodity. Gains are reported as either capital gains or business income depending on your activity level:
- Capital gains: 50% inclusion rate – only half of your gain is taxable
- Business income: 100% taxable if you trade frequently or mine as a business
- New for 2024+: Inclusion rate for capital gains above $250,000/year increased to 2/3
The Adjusted Cost Base (ACB) Method
Canada requires the Adjusted Cost Base method – a pooling approach where all purchases of the same cryptocurrency are averaged together:
- You cannot use FIFO or Specific ID to pick individual lots
- Your ACB per coin = total cost of all purchases ÷ total coins held
- When you sell, your gain = proceeds − (ACB per coin × coins sold)
- Transaction fees increase your ACB (buying) or reduce proceeds (selling)
The Superficial Loss Rule
Sell crypto at a loss and buy it back within 30 days? The CRA denies the loss — it gets added back to your ACB instead. This is Canada's version of the US wash sale rule, except it already applies to crypto. US investors are still free to do this. Canadian investors are not.
What CRA-Compliant Crypto Tax Software Must Do
- Calculate ACB (pooled cost base) correctly for each cryptocurrency
- Apply the superficial loss rule automatically
- Generate T1 Schedule 3 (Capital Gains) summary
- Handle CAD conversion for all transactions
- Track income from staking, mining, and airdrops separately
- Support all major Canadian exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Shakepay, Newton, NDAX)
Reporting Crypto on Your Canadian Tax Return
- Calculate your ACB for each crypto using your full transaction history
- Calculate capital gains/losses for each disposition
- Report on Schedule 3 (Capital Gains or Losses)
- Report staking/mining income on T1 Line 13000 (Other Income)
- Report business income on T2125 (Statement of Business Activities)
Canadian Tax Filing Deadline
The Canadian personal tax return is due April 30 (or June 15 for self-employed, though taxes owed are still due April 30). Crypto gains for the prior calendar year must be reported.
Related Resources
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Start for free →Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. For individual tax advice, consult a licensed tax professional.