Side Hustle or Small Business?

How the CRA Sees You — and What That Means for Your 2026 Taxes


The CRA Does Not Care What You Call It

You drive for DoorDash on weekends. You sell vintage clothing on Depop. You freelance as a video editor between contracts. You Airbnb your spare room.

In your mind, it’s extra income. Side money. A hustle.

In the CRA’s mind, it’s a business — and that one-word changes how much tax you owe, which expenses you can deduct, and whether you’re legally required to charge customers GST/HST.

This guide covers how the CRA draws the line between a hobby, a side hustle, and a small business; what your filing obligations are once you cross into business territory; and which deductions are actually available to you.

One thing to know upfront: self-employed Canadians get an extended filing deadline of June 15, 2026. But any taxes you owe are still due April 30, 2026. Count myAccount handles that split-deadline obligation as a standard part of every self-employed file.

Quick Answer: What the CRA Considers a Business

The CRA classifies your side income as a business — not a hobby — when:

  • You carry out the activity with a reasonable expectation of profit
  • You operate in a businesslike manner (advertise, invoice, track expenses)
  • You earn income through a gig platform (Uber, DoorDash, Airbnb, Etsy, Fiverr, etc.)
  • Your activity is consistent and organized — not just a one-time sale

Once classified as a business, you must:

  • Report all income on Form T2125 of your T1 personal return
  • Register for GST/HST once you exceed $30,000 in gross revenue over four consecutive calendar quarters
  • Keep records for at least six years
  • Pay CPP contributions on net self-employment income (11.9% for 2025, up to $8,068.20)

Rideshare drivers (Uber, Lyft): you must register for GST/HST immediately. The $30,000 threshold does not apply.

Who This Guide Is For

This guide covers Canadian residents in any of these situations in 2025 or 2026:

  • Gig platform workers: Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, SkipTheDishes, Instacart, TaskRabbit
  • Freelancers and contractors: graphic designers, writers, developers, consultants, trades
  • Online sellers: Etsy, eBay, Shopify, Amazon FBA, Facebook Marketplace
  • Content creators: YouTubers, TikTokers, Substack writers, OnlyFans creators, Twitch streamers
  • Short-term rental hosts: Airbnb, VRBO, Facebook Marketplace
  • Anyone earning income outside a T4 employment relationship
  • Sole proprietors with under $500K in annual revenue

If you also have a T4 from a full-time job, that doesn’t change your obligations. The CRA adds your self-employment income to your employment income and taxes the combined total at your marginal rate.

Hobby, Side Hustle, or Business — How the CRA Decides

The Profit Test

The CRA’s central question is whether you’re carrying on this activity with a reasonable expectation of profit. That’s not the same as asking whether you actually made money — it’s asking whether a reasonable person in your position would expect the activity to eventually turn a profit.

  • Signals the CRA reads as a business:
    • You actively advertise, market, or promote your services
    • You issue invoices and maintain records
    • You reinvest earnings to grow the activity
    • You have repeat customers or ongoing client relationships
    • You hold relevant training, skills, or qualifications
    • You’ve made a profit in at least some years, or have a credible plan to
  • Signals the CRA reads as a hobby:
    • Consistent losses year after year with no path to profitability
    • The activity is primarily for personal enjoyment, with income as a byproduct
    • No organized records, invoicing, or marketing
    • Occasional and irregular — low time investment
    • No dedicated business bank account or separate tracking
  • The practical difference:
    • If the CRA classifies your activity as a hobby, you still report profits — but you can’t claim expenses or losses against other income. If it classifies the activity as a business, you report all income and can deduct all eligible expenses. Business losses can offset T4 employment income.

Gig Economy Workers: The CRA Has Already Decided

If you earn income through a digital platform — Uber, DoorDash, Etsy, Fiverr, Airbnb, or anything comparable — this isn’t a hobby question. The CRA treats it as self-employment income. No grey area.

Canada’s digital platform reporting rules (Part XX of the Income Tax Act), which took effect January 1, 2024, require platforms to report seller income to the CRA annually. Uber, Airbnb, Etsy, and equivalent platforms now send the CRA a record of what you earned. Your T1 return has to be consistent with that record.

Decision Table: CRA Classification by Common Scenario

Your SituationCRA ClassificationFile T2125?GST/HST Threshold
Sell handmade goods occasionally, losing money most yearsHobbyNoNot applicable
Sell on Etsy consistently, making a profit, reinvestingBusiness (self-employed)Yes$30,000 over 4 quarters
Drive for Uber or Lyft — any amountBusiness (self-employed)YesMust register immediately — no threshold
Rent your property on Airbnb short-termBusiness or rental incomeYes (T2125 or T776)$30,000 over 4 quarters
Freelance graphic design, web dev, consultingBusiness (professional income)Yes$30,000 over 4 quarters
Deliver for DoorDash or SkipTheDishesBusiness (self-employed)Yes$30,000 over 4 quarters

Your Filing Obligations Once You’re a Business

Form T2125

T2125, Statement of Business or Professional Activities, is filed as part of your T1 personal return — not as a separate corporate filing. It’s an attachment to your individual return.

T2125 requires you to report:

  • Gross revenue from the business (before expenses)
  • All eligible business expenses, organized by category
  • Net business income or loss (revenue minus expenses)
  • GST/HST collected, if you’re registered
  • Internet business income, including URLs for online activities
  • Industry code (e.g., 485310 for taxi/rideshare, 561499 for other business services)

If you have more than one distinct business activity, you complete a separate T2125 for each.

Deadlines for Self-Employed Canadians
DeadlineWho It Applies ToWhat Happens If You Miss It
April 30, 2026Everyone — including self-employed. This is the payment deadline.Interest charges start May 1 at CRA’s prescribed rate on any balance owing
June 15, 2026Self-employed individuals and their spouses/partnersLate-filing penalty: 5% of balance owing + 1% per month for up to 12 months
Quarterly: Mar 15, Jun 15, Sep 15, Dec 15Self-employed if you owed $3,000+ in net tax in 2024 or 2025Interest charges on shortfall — CRA notifies you if instalments are required
Within 30 days of crossing $30,000 in revenueAny self-employed person who hits the GST/HST thresholdPenalty + interest on uncollected GST/HST from the date you were required to register

The most common and costly mistake: thinking the June 15 filing deadline also extends the April 30 payment deadline. It doesn’t. Interest on unpaid balances starts May 1, no matter when you file.

GST/HST: The Threshold Most Side-Hustle Operators Miss

You must register for a GST/HST account when your worldwide taxable revenues exceed $30,000 in any four consecutive calendar quarters. That’s a rolling 12-month total — not a calendar year.

What that looks like in practice

If you earned $10,000 in Q4 2024, $8,000 in Q1 2025, $7,000 in Q2 2025, and $6,000 in Q3 2025, your total is $31,000. You crossed the threshold in Q3 2025 and had 30 days from that point to register.

Once registered

You charge GST (5%) or HST (13% in Ontario, 15% in NS/NB/NL/PEI) on taxable sales and remit the net amount to the CRA, after claiming Input Tax Credits (ITCs) on your own business purchases.

Rideshare exception

Uber, Lyft, or any commercial ridesharing platform — you must register for GST/HST on your first trip. The $30,000 threshold doesn’t apply.

Registering voluntarily below the threshold is also allowed, and can be worth it — once registered, you can claim ITCs on business purchases even before you hit $30,000.

CPP Contributions on Self-Employment Income

Self-employed people pay both the employee and employer shares of CPP — 11.9% of net self-employment income for 2025, up to $8,068.20. It’s calculated on Schedule 8 and added to your tax owing.

Nobody withholds this for you during the year. That’s the main reason first-year self-employed filers end up with a larger-than-expected bill in April.

What You Can Deduct

The CRA lets you deduct reasonable business expenses incurred to earn income. Only the business portion is deductible — personal use doesn’t count. Everything goes on Form T2125.

Expense CategoryWhat You Can DeductRecord Required
Home office (T2125 Part 7)% of rent, utilities, insurance, internet based on workspace sq. footageFloor plan sketch + bills
Vehicle (T2125 Chart A)% of gas, insurance, maintenance, lease, registration based on business km ÷ total kmCRA-compliant mileage logbook
Phone & internetBusiness-use portion only — split personal vs. businessMonthly bills + usage log
Advertising & marketingBusiness cards, website, social ads, platform feesInvoices + receipts
Software & subscriptionsBusiness tools: accounting software, project management, streaming for workReceipts + business purpose note
Meals & entertainment50% of business-related meals (not personal meals)Receipt + name of client + purpose
Professional developmentCourses, books, certifications directly related to your businessReceipts + course description
Professional feesAccountant, bookkeeper, legal fees for business purposesInvoices
Supplies & equipmentMaterials used to deliver your service or productReceipts; large items = Capital Cost Allowance (CCA)
Home Office: The Calculation That Trips People Up

To claim home office expenses on T2125 Part 7, you need to meet one of two CRA conditions:

  • The home is your principal place of business (you do the majority of your income-earning work there); OR
  • You use the space exclusively to earn business income and regularly meet clients there

The deduction is: business workspace square footage ÷ total home square footage × eligible annual home expenses.

Example: 1,000 sq. ft. home, 150 sq. ft. dedicated office (15%)
Annual rent: $24,000
Utilities: $3,000
You can claim 15% of $27,000 = $4,050 against business income.

Home office expenses can’t exceed your net business income for the year. Unused amounts carry forward.

Vehicle: The Mileage Log Is Not Optional

Vehicle expenses are deductible proportional to business kilometres driven versus total kilometres. The CRA requires a logbook recording date, destination, purpose, and kilometres for every business trip.

Example: 22,000 km total in 2025
9,000 km for client visits, supply pickups, and deliveries
Business use: 40.9%
Total vehicle expenses: $12,000
Deductible amount: $4,908

Driving from home to a regular workplace is not a business trip. Driving from your home office to a client site is.

How Count myAccount Handles Self-Employed and Gig Worker Files

Self-employed and gig worker files follow a consistent process at Count myAccount — not a case-by-case improvisation.

When you submit your file, Count myAccount assigns it to an accounting professional with specific experience in sole proprietor and platform economy returns. Here’s what that covers:

  • Income classification
    We review all your income sources at intake to confirm the correct CRA classification — business income, professional income, or rental income — and apply the right form (T2125 or T776).
  • Expense documentation
    Our process walks through every deductible category relevant to your activity — home office calculation, vehicle log review, phone and internet allocation, platform fees, and equipment. We find what’s missing before we file, not after a CRA review.
  • GST/HST assessment
    Count myAccount checks your revenue against the $30,000 threshold at intake. If you’re approaching it, or have already crossed it, we handle GST/HST registration guidance — and, where needed, a review of any periods where GST/HST should have been collected but wasn’t.
  • CPP calculation and instalment planning
    Every self-employed file includes a CPP contribution calculation and a projection of whether quarterly instalments will be required in 2026. The April surprise is preventable — we build that math into your file up front.
  • Platform income reconciliation
    Because platforms now report your earnings to the CRA under Part XX of the Income Tax Act, your T1 return has to match what they reported. Count myAccount reconciles your platform income against your filed return before submitting.

7 Mistakes Self-Employed Canadians Make

Mistake #1: Paying Tax on Gross Income Instead of Net

The CRA taxes net business income — revenue minus allowable expenses. Filing without claiming your deductions means overpaying. Most self-employed Canadians who don’t actively track expenses miss thousands in valid write-offs.

Mistake #2: Confusing the Filing and Payment Deadlines

The June 15 extension is for filing, not payment. Taxes owed are still due April 30, 2026. Pay after April 30 and interest accrues daily — even if your return arrives on time in June.

Mistake #3: Skipping the Mileage Log

Vehicle expenses are one of the biggest deductions available to self-employed Canadians — but only with a logbook. Without one, the CRA disallows the deduction entirely. A mileage tracking app running in the background takes no effort and protects real money.

Mistake #4: Missing the GST/HST Threshold

The $30,000 threshold is cumulative across any four rolling quarters — not a calendar year. Plenty of gig workers cross it mid-year without noticing. Once you cross it, you had 30 days to register and start collecting. Uncollected GST/HST from that point becomes a personal liability.

Mistake #5: Claiming 100% of Mixed-Use Expenses

Claiming 100% of your phone, internet, or vehicle when they’re shared between personal and business use is a common audit trigger. Only the business portion is deductible, and the split needs to be documented.

Mistake #6: Underestimating CPP

Self-employed people pay both sides of CPP — up to $8,068.20 for 2025 — on top of income tax. First-year filers who aren’t expecting this routinely get a jarring bill in April. It’s not a penalty; it’s just how the math works when nobody’s been withholding for you all year.

Mistake #7: Letting Platform Income Go Unreconciled

Platforms now report your earnings to the CRA under Canada’s digital platform reporting rules (in effect since 2024). If your T1 understates income relative to what the platform reported, the CRA flags it. Underreporting — even accidentally — can trigger a 10% penalty on the unreported amount.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • I only made $3,000 on the side last year. Do I still need to report it?
    • Yes. There’s no minimum threshold for reporting self-employment income. All business income gets reported, regardless of amount. The $30,000 threshold only applies to GST/HST registration, not income reporting.

  • I have a T4 job and a side hustle. How do I file both?
    • One T1 return covers both. Your T4 employment income goes in as usual; your side hustle income goes on a T2125, which flows into your total income. The CRA calculates tax on the combined amount at your marginal rate.

  • Can I deduct my phone if I use it for both personal and business?
    • Yes, but only the business-use portion. Document how you determined the split — if 40% of your calls and data are business-related, you can claim 40% of your monthly bill. A blanket 100% claim raises CRA flags.

  • Is the $30,000 GST/HST threshold per calendar year?
    • No — it’s over any four consecutive calendar quarters, which is a rolling 12-month window. Track this total continuously. The moment you exceed $30,000 over any such period, you have 30 days to register.

  • I deliver for both DoorDash and Instacart. Is the threshold calculated per app?
    • No. The CRA combines revenue from all business activities. $18,000 from DoorDash plus $15,000 from Instacart over four consecutive quarters = $33,000. You’re over the threshold and need to register.

  • Do I need a business bank account?
    • The CRA doesn’t legally require one. But mixing personal and business transactions in a single account creates documentation problems that are annoying and expensive to untangle. A dedicated account is worth it.

  • How long do I need to keep records?
    • Six years from the end of the tax year they relate to. That covers invoices, receipts, bank statements, and your mileage logbook.

  • Can I deduct business losses from my T4 employment income?
    • Generally, yes. A net loss from self-employment can offset other income, including T4 employment income, reducing your total taxable income. The catch: the CRA scrutinizes repeated losses. Show losses year after year with no clear path to profit, and they may reclassify the activity as a hobby and disallow future claims.

  • What’s the difference between a sole proprietor and an incorporated business?
    • A sole proprietor is an unincorporated self-employed individual — the simplest structure. Income flows directly to your T1 via T2125. Incorporation creates a separate legal entity (a corporation) that files its own T2 return. Tax deferral advantages start to make sense around $100,000 in annual profit, but incorporation adds regulatory, accounting, and legal obligations. Count myAccount can advise on whether it makes sense for your situation.

  • I’m an Airbnb host. Is my income business income or rental income?
    • It depends on the level of services you provide. Short-term rentals (under one month of continuous occupancy) where you offer significant services — cleaning, concierge, meals — are generally treated as business income on T2125. Basic room rentals with minimal services usually go on T776 as rental income. Also: rules effective January 1, 2024 restrict expense deductions for short-term rentals that don’t comply with local municipal regulations.

  • What if I haven’t reported side hustle income from previous years?
    • The CRA’s Voluntary Disclosures Program (VDP) lets you come forward to correct unreported income before the CRA contacts you. It can reduce or eliminate penalties. Once the CRA initiates contact about an audit or compliance review, VDP eligibility ends. Count myAccount prepares amended returns and VDP applications.

Conclusion: Make the Classification Work for You

The CRA has already decided what your side income is. The decision isn’t punitive — business status means access to every eligible deduction and the ability to offset losses against other income.

What determines your actual outcome is whether your records and filings accurately reflect your position. Gaps cost money. So does not knowing what you’re entitled to claim.

Three things to do this week:

  1. Start a mileage logbook — reconstruct from Google Maps history if you need to
  2. Separate business and personal expenses going forward, even if that just means a second bank account
  3. Calculate your rolling 12-month gross revenue and check whether GST/HST registration applies
Need help filing as a self-employed Canadian for 2025?

Count myAccount handles self-employed tax returns through a digital-first process. Your file goes to an expert with specific experience in T2125 filings, platform economy income, and GST/HST.

  • Flat-rate pricing — no surprise fees
  • Year-round support, not just tax season
  • Bilingual service across Canada

Book your consultation
Count myAccount handles your T2125, CPP, and GST/HST obligations from start to finish

Downloadable Resource:
2026 Self-Employed Tax Prep Checklist

Designed by Freepik

This printable PDF includes:

  • Business income summary sheet (by source)
  • Expense tracker by T2125 category
  • GST/HST threshold calculation worksheet
  • Mileage logbook template (CRA-compliant)
  • Key deadline calendar for self-employed filers
  • CPP contribution estimator
  • Platform income reconciliation checklist
Designed by Freepik
Your First Canadian Tax Season 2026

Filing taxes in Canada for the first time? Avoid costly mistakes, claim $1,000s in benefits, and meet CRA deadlines with this complete 2026 newcomer guide

Read more

Shopping Cart