Fast residence flips can result in CRA problem of principal residence exemption 



Canada Revenue Agency headquarters in Ottawa.

New anti-flipping guidelines for residential actual property (together with rental properties) that got here into impact in 2023 had been designed to “cut back speculative demand within the market and assist to chill extreme value progress.”

The foundations primarily forestall you from claiming the principal residence exemption (PRE) to shelter the capital acquire realized on the sale of your private home in case you’ve owned it for lower than 12 months. In the event you’re caught by the rule, the acquire on the sale is 100 per cent taxable as enterprise revenue reasonably than solely 50 per cent taxable as a capital acquire, topic to sure exemptions for all times occasions comparable to demise, incapacity, separation and work relocation.

Though these new guidelines solely got here into play as of 2023, the Canada Income Company can nonetheless problem actual property “flips” that happened previous to 2023 if it feels a taxpayer has speculated and flipped a property for a fast revenue. That’s precisely what occurred in a brand new case determined final week involving a Vancouver taxpayer whose 2018 tax return was reassessed for failing to report the acquire on her sale of a condominium unit, counting on the PRE.

In February 2015, the taxpayer entered right into a pre-construction contract for the acquisition of a condominium situated in North Vancouver for $660,000. Building was accomplished, and she or he took possession in October 2017.

The property was then listed on the market by the taxpayer on Dec. 6, 2017. It didn’t promote immediately and was subsequently relisted with a special agent on Feb. 21, 2018. A month later, on March 22, 2018, the taxpayer offered the property for $1,161,000, which closed on June 28, 2018. After deducting her prices, the acquire or revenue on sale was roughly $457,000.

The taxpayer claimed this property as her principal residence, and thus didn’t report the acquire on her 2018 tax return. The CRA disagreed and reassessed the taxpayer on the idea that she was engaged in a enterprise or “an journey or concern within the nature of commerce,” and included the $457,000 within the taxpayer’s revenue as enterprise revenue.

Below the Earnings Tax Act , the PRE can solely be used to shelter a acquire from tax if the property offered is taken into account to be capital property. If the property isn’t capital property as a result of it’s offered by a person in the midst of a enterprise, then the PRE can not shelter the acquire from tax.

Thus, the query earlier than the Tax Court docket was whether or not the taxpayer was carrying on a enterprise in respect of her buy and sale of the property. In that case, the taxpayer’s revenue is claimed to be on “revenue account,” which means that any revenue from sale can be handled as 100 per cent taxable enterprise revenue.

Prior jurisprudence has developed a collection of exams that assist the courts decide whether or not a person purchased an asset on revenue or capital account. The exams take into account: the character of the property offered, the size of interval of possession, the frequency or variety of different related transactions, the work expended on or in reference to the property, the circumstances that had been liable for the sale of the property and the taxpayer’s motive.

The choose reviewed every issue, making varied observations. First, the interval of possession from closing (Oct. 2017) to sale (June 2018) was pretty brief, pointing towards an journey or concern within the nature of commerce.

Second, it seems that the taxpayer, alongside together with her former partner, was beforehand engaged in various actual property transactions through the years, a number of of which the choose referred to as “notable.” For instance, in October 2005, the previous couple collectively acquired a property in West Vancouver for $4.2 million and spent extra quantities on upgrades. The property was offered in July 2010 for a loss, which was reported as a enterprise loss for tax functions.

In June 2008, the taxpayer bought a condominium unit in West Vancouver with a buddy on a 50-50 foundation for roughly $698,000. The property was listed on the market just a few weeks later, and was offered in June 2009 for internet proceeds of $588,616, leading to a loss.

The taxpayer tried to regulate her 2009 revenue tax return to deal with her share of the loss as a enterprise loss, which prompted inquiries from the CRA. In a letter to the CRA, the taxpayer defined that she meant to “pursue small-scale property refurbishment initiatives to generate a supply of revenue, and that the (property offered) was to be the primary such challenge.” She additionally acknowledged that she had “loads of expertise proudly owning and refurbishing properties” and that, after relocating to Vancouver, actual property “appeared like a logical sector to be making investments.”

In courtroom, the taxpayer testified that she moved just a few gadgets into her North Vancouver condominium round Nov. 3, 2017, and in late November moved in some extra furnishings, together with two couches, a chest of drawers, bedside tables, a mattress for the primary bed room and a settee mattress within the second bed room. She stated her daughters shared that room.

Her proof was that she lived on the condominium from Nov. 23, 2017, to June 2018.

The choose didn’t purchase this argument. The taxpayer’s different property remained obtainable, and that’s seemingly the place the taxpayer and her daughters had been residing when the daughters weren’t together with her ex. Because the choose stated, “It’s extremely inconceivable that (her teenage daughters), would have moved right into a smaller condominium and shared a bed room after having separate bedrooms at (their earlier three properties).”

The choose additionally famous that the taxpayer didn’t trouble to put in Wi-Fi on the condominium, nor did she change the handle on her driver’s license, nor replace her handle with the CRA. Moreover, when the condominium was listed on the market, it was listed as “model new” in the actual property itemizing.

Because the choose famous, “occupancy entails greater than merely transferring just a few gadgets into the premises. … It appears illogical that she would listing the (condominium) on December 6, 2017, and — whereas on the identical time — transfer in and start occupying the property primarily as a spot of residence.”

Because the choose wrote, “On a steadiness of possibilities, and contemplating the totality of the proof adduced along with frequent sense, I’m unable to seek out that the (taxpayer) occupied the (condominium) as a spot of residence. … As an alternative, it’s extra possible that the (taxpayer) and her daughters continued to reside primarily on the four-bedroom residence.”

This led the choose to conclude that the taxpayer had acquired her curiosity within the condominium with a speculative intent, motivated primarily by the opportunity of resale at a revenue. Thus, the choose dominated that the revenue was correctly taxable as enterprise revenue.

Jamie Golombek, FCPA, FCA, CFP, CLU, TEP, is the managing director, Tax & Property Planning with CIBC Personal Wealth in Toronto. Jamie.Golombek@cibc.com .


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