Real Estate Professionals

You Close Deals.
We Close Your Books.

Realtors, property investors, and rental property owners have some of the most complex tax situations in Canada. Commission income, rental income, GST/HST on commissions, capital gains — we track it all and keep you CRA-compliant year-round.

✓  Commission & rental income ✓  GST/HST on commissions ✓  100% Online — All of Canada
Common Challenges

What Real Estate Professionals Deal With

Commission Income Timing

Commissions can come in irregularly — a great month followed by a slow one. Tracking net commissions after brokerage splits and deducting marketing expenses requires careful recordkeeping all year long.

Rental Property Complexity

Each rental property is its own income and expense center. Mortgage interest, repairs, CCA, property management — tracked separately for each property on the T776 schedule.

Property Flipping Rules

The CRA's Residential Property Flipping Rule (in force since 2023) treats gains on properties held under 365 days as business income, not capital gains. The wrong classification triggers significant additional tax.

FAQ

Real Estate Questions — Answered

Yes. Real estate commissions are taxable supplies and GST/HST must be charged. Once your total commissions exceed $30,000 annually, registration is mandatory. We handle registration, return preparation, and ensure the correct amounts are remitted on time.

Rental income is reported on a T776 schedule as part of your T1 personal return (or T2 if held corporately). You can deduct eligible expenses including mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, repairs, property management fees, and depreciation (CCA). We track each property separately so your return is accurate and defensible.

Common deductions include vehicle expenses (mileage log required), marketing and advertising, home office, MLS and board fees, professional development, staging costs, phone and internet, and errors & omissions insurance. We capture all of these throughout the year so nothing is left on the table at filing time.

Under the Residential Property Flipping Rule (in force since January 1, 2023), if you sell a residential property you owned for less than 365 days, the gain is treated as business income — fully taxable, not a capital gain. There are exceptions for life events like divorce, death, disability, or job relocation. We ensure your transactions are classified correctly from the start.

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Real Estate Is Complicated Enough.
Your Books Don't Have to Be.

Tell us about your real estate practice and we'll send you a custom, no-obligation quote within 1 business day.