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Did you use a vehicle for business purposes this past tax year? This article explains what motor vehicle expense claims you can make on income tax in Canada and what kind of documentation you’ll need to support your expenses claim.

Note that the examples in this article describe how to enter Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) automobile expenses on the T1 income individual tax return (used by sole proprietors and partnerships). Automobile expenses are included as part of the business expenses on Form T2125 – Statement of Business or Professional Activities.

If your business is incorporated you claim these same motor vehicle expenses on your T2 corporate income tax return.

The Two Types of Motor Vehicle Expense Claims

First, before you claim vehicle expenses, you need to understand that there are two types of motor vehicle expenses, broadly speaking, when it comes to income tax in Canada:

  1. those related to use of a vehicle (which you claim on line 9281 – Motor vehicle expenses)
  2. those related to purchasing a motor vehicle (which you claim as Capital Cost Allowance).
This article covers motor vehicle expenses relating to using a motor vehicle for business purposes.

(If you are a partner in a business partnership and you incur motor vehicle expenses for the business through the use of your personal vehicle, you can claim those expenses related to the business on line 9943 – Other amounts deductible from your share of net partnership income (loss) in Part 6 on page 2 of Form T2125.)

Motor Vehicle Expenses You Can Claim Related to Use of a Motor Vehicle

When you use a motor vehicle to earn business income, you can then claim:

  • license and registration fees;
  • fuel and oil costs;
  • insurance;
  • money borrowed to buy a motor vehicle;
  • maintenance and repairs; and
  • leasing costs.

But (as is almost always the case with income tax deductions), there is a catch. If you also use that same vehicle for personal use, you can only deduct the portion of the expenses above that are directly related to using your vehicle for earning income.

This means that to claim motor vehicle expenses, you need to know how many kilometers you have driven for business reasons and how many kilometers you have driven for personal use.

The cost of parking and supplementary business insurance for your vehicle are the exceptions to the “you-can-only-claim-a-portion” rule; you can claim 100% of those expenses.

So You Need to Keep a Logbook

In practice, this means that you have to keep a Logbook of all your motor vehicle use throughout the tax year, which is what the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) recommends.

Once you’ve done it once, though, you may be able to use a simplified logbook, keeping detailed records for three months and then extrapolating your business use of your vehicle for the rest of the year.

How to Calculate Your Motor Vehicle Expenses Related to Motor Vehicle Use

Let’s say that you, a sole proprietor, own a van that you use for both business and personal use. You keep track of all your automobile expenses throughout the fiscal year and end up with a list of expenses that looks like this:

Expense Amount
License and registration fees $175.00
Gas and oil $2,100.00
Insurance $980.00
Interest $760.00
Maintenance and repairs $650.00
Parking fees $330.00
Supplementary Insurance $500.00
Total Expenses $5,495.00

 

 

 

 

 

If you used your vehicle for both business and personal use, you use your kilometers driven for business purposes and your total kilometers driven to calculate how much of your automobile expenses you can claim.

For instance, let’s say that in the tax year that you incurred the automobile expenses above, you drove:

  • 32,000 kilometers to earn business income
  • 44,000 total kilometers

Divide your business kilometers by your total kilometers and then multiply that sum by the amount of your total “only-a-portion-allowed” allowed expenses:

(Remember: you can claim 100% of parking fees and supplemental business insurance, so remove those from your amount of expenses before you calculate!)

(32,000 business kilometers ÷ 44,000 total kilometers) x $4665 = $3,392.73

Now, because you can claim all of your parking and supplementary business insurance costs, add those in:

$3,392.73 + ($330 + $500) = $4,222.73

Expense Amount
License and registration fees $175.00
Gas and oil $2,100.00
Insurance $980.00
Interest $760.00
Maintenance and repairs $650.00
Parking fees $330.00
Supplementary Insurance $500.00
Total Expenses $5,495.00
Business use (32,000km/44,000km * Total) $3,392.73
Parking fees $330
Supplementary Insurance $500
Total Business Use Expenses $4,222.73

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And you have your total motor vehicle expense claim; in this case, $4,222.73 which, on the T1 income tax return, is claimed on line 9281, “Motor vehicle expenses (not including CCA)”, in Part 5 of Form T2125, Statement of Business or Professional Activities

Keep All Your Receipts!

You always need receipts to back up your claims for business expenses. It’s tedious and easy to forget, but if you want to claim something, you have to have a receipt for it – even if you are NETFILING your income tax return or having it EFILED by a tax professional.

Also, be aware that you need to keep all your tax-related receipts for six years, just in case the Canada Revenue Agency decides they want to have a look at them.

 

 

(article source: https://www.thebalancesmb.com/vehicle-expenses-you-can-claim-on-taxes-in-canada-2948626)

 

 

Paul Dunne

Paul Dunne, Principal and Director of Operations, founder of JPDO is an Irish Chartered Accountant with over three decades of experience in accounting and finance. He has been an auditor, controller of a real estate company, supervisor of consolidation accounting and manager of financial planning for Alcan Aluminium Limited, lecturer in consolidation accounting and foreign currency translation in Montreal’s McGill University chartered accounting program and CFO of a large manufacturing company.

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