How They Work and How They Can Reduce Your Taxes In Canadian tax planning, one of the most powerful...
📉 Capital Loss Carryovers in Canada
🔹 What Is a Capital Loss?
A capital loss occurs when you sell a capital asset for less than its adjusted cost base (ACB).
Common examples include:
✔ Stocks
✔ ETFs
✔ Mutual funds
✔ Investment real estate
✔ Cryptocurrency
✔ Other investment assets
The rules are governed by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).
Important: Only 50% of a capital loss is deductible. This is called an allowable capital loss.
🔹 What Can Capital Losses Offset?
Capital losses can only offset:
👉 Capital gains
They cannot reduce:
❌ Employment income
❌ Business income
❌ Rental income
❌ Interest income
If you do not have capital gains in the current year, you may carry the loss to another year.
🔹 1️⃣ Carryback (Apply to Prior Years)
You can apply a current-year capital loss against capital gains from any of the previous 3 tax years.
This may result in:
✔ An immediate tax refund
✔ Recovery of taxes previously paid on capital gains
You must file the appropriate adjustment request with the CRA to apply the carryback.
🔹 2️⃣ Carryforward (Apply to Future Years)
If you have no current or prior capital gains:
✔ You can carry capital losses forward indefinitely
✔ They can be applied in any future year when you realize capital gains
There is no time limit for carrying capital losses forward.
🔹 Practical Example
In 2025:
- You sold investments with a $40,000 capital loss
- 50% is deductible = $20,000 allowable capital loss
You can:
- Apply it to capital gains from 2022, 2023, or 2024
- Or carry it forward to offset future gains
Proper planning could generate significant refunds.
🔹 Important Rules
✔ The loss must be realized (you must actually sell the investment).
✔ Documentation of the transaction is essential.
✔ The “superficial loss rule” may deny your deduction in certain cases.
🔹 The Superficial Loss Rule
If you sell an investment at a loss and:
- Repurchase the same or identical property within 30 days before or after the sale, or
- A related person (such as your spouse or corporation) repurchases it
👉 The loss may be denied temporarily.
This is one of the most commonly reviewed areas by the CRA.
🔹 Strategic Tax Planning
Capital loss planning can:
✔ Offset large capital gains (such as selling investment property)
✔ Reduce year-end tax exposure
✔ Improve long-term portfolio tax efficiency
✔ Support estate and retirement planning
Year-end tax planning before December 31 can be especially valuable.
🔹 Common Mistakes
❌ Not realizing losses strategically
❌ Ignoring the superficial loss rule
❌ Failing to apply carrybacks when beneficial
❌ Losing track of accumulated capital losses
Tax planning requires coordination with your broader financial strategy.
💼 How Toro Accounting Can Help
At Toro Accounting, we:
✔ Review your investment portfolio
✔ Calculate allowable capital losses accurately
✔ Evaluate carryback vs. carryforward strategies
✔ Coordinate with your overall tax planning
✔ Reduce CRA reassessment risk
Losses don’t have to mean wasted opportunities — with proper planning, they can reduce your overall tax burden.
📞 Book a Consultation
If you experienced investment losses and want to optimize your tax strategy: