When you sell an asset or investment for more than you paid for it, that difference is your capital gain. For example, say you bought a cottage for $400,000 and two years later, sold it for $500,000. You have a capital gain of $100,000. On the flip side, when you sell an asset for less than you bought it for, you have a capital loss.
You can realize capital gains and losses on several types of investments and property, including stocks, bonds, shares in mutual funds, rental properties, cottages, even business equipment. Capital gains and losses do not apply to your primary residence.
In Canada, capital gains are taxable. How much tax you pay depends on a few factors. That’s because the value of a capital gain is treated as income during the year in which you realized it – in other words, in the year you sold your investment or property. But it’s not the full value of the gain that gets taxed – rather it’s only a portion.
Today, only 50% of the capital gain is taxable (this is known as the capital gains tax inclusion rate). This means that $50,000 of the $100,000 earned from the sale of the cottage in our example is added as income for that tax year.
Here’s an example:
The amount of tax you ultimately pay in that year will depend on your tax bracket and its marginal tax rate.
If this budget is passed, the capital gains tax inclusion rate is set to change. The federal government’s 2024 budget proposes a few modifications to how capital gains are taxed. Here’s a rundown of the changes:
The adjustments will affect all corporations and trusts regardless of value, as well as individuals with capital gains of $250,000 or more.
Capital gains tax does not apply to your primary residence, so you these changes could affect you if:
If adopted, the changes will take effect on June 25, 2024.
The federal government estimates that 28.5 million Canadians will not have any capital gains income next year, while three million others will fall below the $250,000 annual threshold, suggesting that these changes will not have an impact on the majority of Canadians.