Tools
Canada Capital Gains Tax Calculator
Estimate how much tax you owe when you sell stocks, ETFs, real estate, or crypto in Canada — and how much you actually keep after tax. Works for all provinces, all account types.
Last updated: May 2026 · Based on 2025 CRA rules (50% inclusion rate)
Estimated Tax Summary
Capital gain
$1,000
Taxable amount (50%)
$500
Marginal tax rate
33%
Tax owing
$165
How Capital Gains Tax Works in Canada
Canada doesn’t have a separate “capital gains tax.” Instead, a portion of your capital gain is added to your regular income for the year and taxed at your normal marginal rate. The key lever is the inclusion rate — currently 50% for individuals — which means only half of your gain is ever taxable. The other half is completely tax-free.
The trigger point is the sale of the asset, not when the money arrives in your bank account. The moment you sell shares or close a position, you have a realized capital gain (or loss), regardless of where the proceeds sit.
Calculate your gain: Sale proceeds minus your Adjusted Cost Base (ACB) — your original purchase price plus commissions and any associated acquisition costs.
Apply the 50% inclusion rate: Only half of the gain counts as taxable income. If you made $10,000, only $5,000 is added to your income for the year.
Tax it at your marginal rate: That $5,000 is stacked on top of your other income. Combined federal + provincial rates range from roughly 20% to 54%, depending on your province and total income.
Report and pay: Capital gains are reported on your annual tax return (T1), due April 30 of the following year. You don’t make installment payments for a one-time gain.
Worked Example — BC Resident
You bought 100 shares of a Canadian bank stock at $50/share ($5,000 total). You sell them for $70/share ($7,000). Your other income this year is $85,000.
Capital gain: $7,000 − $5,000 = $2,000
Taxable portion (50%): $1,000 added to income
Marginal rate (BC, ~$86,000 total income): approximately 38.29%
Tax owing: $1,000 × 38.29% = ~$383 — you keep $1,617 of the $2,000 gain.
Account Type Changes Everything
Where you hold your investment determines whether you pay any tax at all. The same stock, sold for the same gain, produces very different tax outcomes depending on the account.
| Account | Tax on growth | Tax on withdrawal | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Registered | Capital gains taxed annually (50% inclusion) | No additional tax | Overflow after maxing registered accounts |
| TFSA | Tax-free ✓ | Tax-free ✓ | Stocks, ETFs, high-growth assets — best overall |
| RRSP | Tax-deferred ✓ | Fully taxed as income ✗ | High earners who expect lower income in retirement |
| FHSA | Tax-free ✓ | Tax-free (for qualifying home purchase) ✓ | First-time home buyers only |
The general priority for most Canadians: fill your TFSA first (for growth assets), then RRSP (if your current tax rate is meaningfully higher than retirement), then non-registered. This sequencing alone can save tens of thousands in lifetime taxes.
Key Rules to Know
Capital losses offset capital gains
If you sell an investment at a loss, that loss can offset gains in the same year dollar-for-dollar. Unused losses can be carried back three years or forward indefinitely. This makes year-end “tax loss harvesting” a common strategy among Canadian investors.
The Adjusted Cost Base (ACB) matters
Your ACB is not just the purchase price. For stocks bought in multiple lots, the CRA requires you to use a weighted average ACB across all shares of that security. Commissions and transaction fees also add to the ACB, reducing your eventual gain. Tracking ACB carefully can meaningfully reduce the tax you owe.
When you pay
Capital gains realized in a calendar year are reported on your T1 return, due April 30 of the following year. If you owe more than $3,000 in taxes above what’s withheld at source, the CRA may require you to make quarterly installment payments in future years.
The 2025 inclusion rate is confirmed at 50%
The federal government proposed raising the inclusion rate to 66.67% on gains above $250,000 in 2024, but the measure was cancelled in March 2025. The 50% rate applies to all individual capital gains for 2025 and 2026, with no threshold split.
Frequently Asked Questions
Deciding where to hold your investments?
Compare the best TFSA rates, HISA rates, and GIC rates in Canada to find the highest return for your savings.
Disclaimer: This calculator is for estimation purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Tax results are approximations based on 2025 CRA rules and published provincial marginal rates. Your actual tax liability depends on your full income picture, deductions, credits, carryforward losses, and other factors. Consult a qualified Canadian tax professional before making financial decisions.