Bitcoin in Canada: Regulation, Taxation, and Portfolio Role
Bitcoin is the world's first and largest cryptocurrency — a decentralised digital currency that operates without a central bank or government. Its total supply is fixed at 21 million coins. In Canada, Bitcoin is treated as a commodity for tax purposes, and gains are subject to capital gains tax.
Bitcoin has become a legitimate asset class for a growing number of Canadian investors. Canada was among the first countries to approve Bitcoin ETFs — Purpose Bitcoin ETF (BTCC) launched on the TSX in February 2021, well before the US approved its own spot Bitcoin ETFs in 2024.
For Canadian tax purposes, CRA treats Bitcoin as a commodity. Selling, trading, or using Bitcoin to purchase goods triggers a capital gains event. The 50% inclusion rate applies (66.67% above $250,000). Losses can offset gains. Mining or frequent trading may be treated as business income — taxed at 100% inclusion.
Bitcoin held inside a TFSA via a Canadian Bitcoin ETF (BTCC, FBTC) grows and can be withdrawn entirely tax-free — a significant advantage for long-term holders. However, CRA has scrutinised aggressive TFSA crypto strategies, so staying within reasonable allocation limits is prudent.
Bitcoin is extraordinarily volatile — price swings of 30-50% within a single year are not uncommon. Most Canadian financial educators recommend limiting crypto to 1-5% of a diversified portfolio. It should represent a satellite position, never a core holding.
Canadian platforms for buying Bitcoin include Wealthsimple Crypto (integrated with your TFSA/RRSP brokerage), Shakepay, Newton, and Bitbuy. For larger holdings, a hardware wallet (Ledger, Trezor) is recommended for security.
Richify Tip
Richify's AI agents help you understand Bitcoin's role in a diversified Canadian portfolio — including the tax implications and whether a TSX-listed Bitcoin ETF in your TFSA makes sense for your goals.
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