Tax Guide for Realtors & Real Estate Agents in Canada: Every Deduction for 2025
March 1, 2026 10 min read2025 tax year (filed spring 2026)
Canadian realtors earn commission-based self-employment income with major swings between years. A strong understanding of every available deduction — vehicle costs, board dues, marketing, staging, client gifts, and home office — combined with smart RRSP and instalment planning can make a dramatic difference in your annual tax bill.
TL;DR — Key Points for Realtors
Form T2125: All commission income is self-employment — report on T2125, not as employment income.
HST on commissions: Real estate commissions are taxable — register and charge 13% HST in Ontario once revenues exceed $30,000.
Board dues deductible: CREA, OREA, and local board fees are fully deductible professional dues.
Vehicle is your biggest deduction: Showings, listings, and client meetings make vehicle expenses a major write-off — mileage logbook required.
Marketing fully deductible: MLS listings, signage, social media ads, website, flyers, photography — all 100% deductible.
RRSP planning: Use high-income years to maximize RRSP contributions and defer tax into lower-income years.
Income Reporting: Form T2125
Realtors are independent contractors registered with a brokerage — not employees. Commission income is reported on Form T2125 (Statement of Business or Professional Activities). Your brokerage may issue a T4A showing gross commissions paid to you.
Income Type
Reported On
Notes
Gross commissions (before brokerage split)
T2125 as gross business income
Report full gross amount; deduct brokerage fee as expense
Referral fees received from other agents
T2125 as business income
Taxable; the referring agent deducts the fee they paid you
Leasing commissions
T2125 as business income
Same treatment as sale commissions
Commission rebates paid to buyers
Deductible from income or reduces commission income
Document clearly in transaction records
HST on Real Estate Commissions
Real estate commissions are taxable supplies for HST purposes. You must:
Register for HST once annual revenues exceed $30,000
Charge 13% HST on commission invoices to Ontario vendors (sellers)
Remit HST collected minus ITCs on your business expenses
File annual or quarterly HST returns
Brokerage splits and HST
When you split a commission with your brokerage, the brokerage typically collects HST on the full commission from the client and remits the appropriate amount. Your individual arrangement depends on your brokerage agreement. Some agents are incorporated and invoice the brokerage; others receive their split net of HST. Clarify with your brokerage how HST is handled on your splits to avoid double-collecting or under-remitting.
Deductible Expenses
Professional dues and licensing
Expense
Deductible?
CREA annual membership fee
Yes — 100%
OREA annual membership fee
Yes — 100%
Local real estate board membership
Yes — 100%
MLS access and technology levies
Yes — 100%
RECO registration and renewal fees
Yes — 100%
Errors & Omissions (E&O) insurance
Yes — 100%
Continuing education (OREA courses, designations)
Yes — 100%
Vehicle expenses
Realtors typically have high business-use vehicle percentages because showings, open houses, listing appointments, and office visits are all business kilometres. Track all kilometres with a logbook.
Expense
Deductible Amount
Fuel
Business-use % × annual fuel cost
Insurance
Business-use % × annual premium
Repairs and maintenance
Business-use % × repair costs
Licence and registration
Business-use % × annual fees
CCA on vehicle (Class 10/10.1)
30% declining balance × business-use %
Lease payments
Business-use % × monthly lease (luxury cap applies)
Marketing and advertising
Marketing Expense
Deductible?
MLS listing fees (paid by agent)
Yes — 100%
Professional photography and videography for listings
Yes — 100%
Drone photography and 3D tours
Yes — 100%
Print flyers, postcards, door hangers
Yes — 100%
Yard signs, lockboxes, open house signs
Yes via CCA (Class 8, 20%) if reusable; current expense if low-value
Social media advertising (Facebook, Instagram)
Yes — 100%
Website hosting and domain
Yes — 100%
Business cards
Yes — 100%
Staging costs paid by agent
Yes — 100%
Home cleaning paid by agent for listing
Yes — 100%
Client gifts and entertainment
Gift/Entertainment Type
Deductibility
Non-food/beverage gifts (gift cards to home stores, houseplants, frames)
100% deductible — reasonable amounts
Wine, champagne, food baskets
50% deductible (food and beverage limitation)
Client dinners and lunches
50% deductible
Event tickets (hockey, theatre) given to clients
50% deductible (entertainment)
Housewarming gifts at closing
100% if non-food; 50% if food/beverage
Other deductible expenses
Expense
Deductible?
Brokerage desk fee / franchise fee
Yes — 100%
Commission splits paid to your brokerage
Yes — 100% (deduct gross commission, then brokerage split as expense)
Referral fees paid to other agents
Yes — 100%
Home office (if principal place of business)
Yes — proportional share of home costs
CRM and transaction management software
Yes — 100%
Cell phone (business portion)
Yes — business-use %
Accounting and bookkeeping
Yes — 100%
RRSP Planning for Variable Commission Income
Real estate markets are cyclical. In strong years, Ontario realtors can earn $200,000–$500,000+; in slow markets, income may drop significantly. RRSP is one of the most powerful tools to smooth taxes across years:
Strategy
How It Helps
Contribute in high-income years
Deduction at top marginal rate (up to 53.53% in Ontario)
Carry forward unused room
Unused RRSP room accumulates — use accumulated room in a banner year
Withdraw in low-income years
RRSP withdrawals taxed at lower rate during slow market years
Spousal RRSP
Income split with spouse by contributing to their RRSP; they withdraw in retirement at lower rate
Frequently Asked Questions
Do Canadian realtors charge HST on their commissions?
Yes. Real estate commissions are taxable for HST. Once revenues exceed $30,000, register and charge 13% HST in Ontario on commission invoices to sellers. Claim ITCs on all business expenses including vehicle costs, advertising, and office supplies.
Are CREA and OREA membership fees tax deductible for realtors?
Yes. Annual fees to CREA, OREA, local boards, MLS access levies, and RECO registration fees are all fully deductible professional dues on Form T2125.
What vehicle expenses can a realtor deduct?
All vehicle expenses (fuel, insurance, maintenance, CCA, registration) are deductible at your business-use percentage — business km driven divided by total km for the year. A mileage logbook is required by CRA. Most active realtors have business-use percentages of 70–90%, but the actual documented percentage must be used.
Can realtors deduct client closing gifts?
Yes. Non-food gifts (home store gift cards, houseplants, etc.) are 100% deductible. Food and beverage gifts are 50% deductible. Keep records of who received each gift and the business reason.
How should realtors plan for the boom-and-bust income cycle?
Maximize RRSP contributions in high-income years, carry forward unused room, make quarterly instalments to avoid interest, keep 30–40% of each commission for tax, and consider a spousal RRSP for income splitting in retirement.
Calculate your commission income tax
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