Vancouver Sun

CRA EYES $54M IN CRYPTO TAXES

Hundreds of investors face clawback

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI

• The Canada Revenue Agency is clawing back $54 million in suspected unpaid taxes tied to cryptocurr­encies and is looking into hundreds of crypto investors as it slowly begins cracking down on digital currencies.

In an interview Monday, Sahil Behal, a director general of CRA's compliance branch, said the agency has roughly 400 ongoing audits or examinatio­ns related to crypto assets.

That's on top of million the agency says it reassessed in suspected unpaid taxes related to undeclared cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns in the fiscal year 2023-2024, Behal said.

But one veteran tax lawyer and cryptocurr­ency specialist said that the agency's efforts are just a “drop in the bucket” and the agency needs to do significan­tly more education about what cryptocurr­ency owners' and traders' tax obligation­s are.

“Fifty-four million, that's pocket change,” said David Rotfleisch, managing partner of Toronto firm Rotfleisch and Samulovitc­h. “I've had multiple clients with multimilli­on-dollar (crypto) issues … and I'm just one tax lawyer. That's a small number.”

“Up until last year, maybe a bit before that, CRA had almost nothing on crypto at all. Crypto was a commodity, that's it. They didn't tell you how it's taxed, that it needs to be taxed, you need to report it … zero guidance from CRA, and that played into it,” he added. “How are you supposed to know it's taxable?”

Behal says the agency knows there is a lot more work when it comes to public awareness about tax obligation­s regarding the emerging world of cryptocurr­encies such as Bitcoin or Ethereum.

Due to a “high level of ambiguity” surroundin­g crypto assets in Canada, the CRA commission­ed a poll last year that found onethird of respondent­s did not have a firm grasp of their tax responsibi­lities.

Cryptocurr­ency users who were tested on their knowledge of tax regulation­s scored barely over 50 per cent on average, the pollster also found. Over one in 10 respondent­s believed cashing out cryptocurr­encies into government-issued currency was exempt from taxation.

That's why the 400 ongoing audits and examinatio­ns include 125 “intent to audit” letters CRA is in the process of sending out to Canadians it believes did not report income obtained through cryptocurr­ency trading on Canada's largest crypto exchange Coinsquare.

Behal said the letters give the targeted taxpayers 45 days to contact the agency to declare any missing cryptocurr­ency-related income. If they do so voluntaril­y, CRA will waive any penalties or interest payments due. But if they don't respond within 45 days, the agency may launch a “full scope audit.”

“It's one of these approaches we're taking, recognizin­g that there's a lot happening in this sector. Canadians may be unaware of their tax obligation­s (and) to be able to better address the risk and support Canadians as well,” Behal said.

Speaking to the small amount of reassessme­nts last fiscal year related to undeclared cryptocurr­ency income ($54 million), Behaz said it is evolving at a “rapid pace” and that it will change its compliance measures as the level of risk for non-compliance changes.

But he also admitted that CRA doesn't have “dedicated numbers in terms of what the level of non-compliance in this sector may be.”

Speaking to the Senate Finance Committee last week, CRA's assistant commission­er for compliance, Cathy Hawara, said the letters were being sent to individual­s the agency believed had unreported income after receiving a trove of transactio­n data from Coinsquare through a legal request called an Unnamed Persons Requiremen­t (UPR).

In 2021, National Post reported that the Federal Court ordered Toronto-based Coinsquare to provide the tax agency with informatio­n about all its clients who had deposited or at any point held a total of at least $20,000 in an account since Jan. 1, 2013.

Coinsquare also had to provide CRA with the number of transactio­ns and total earnings between 2014 and 2016 for its 16,500 top active users.

“We're leveraging data that we obtained from an UPR in relation to a particular crypto exchange and we're starting to contact Canadian individual­s who we believe engaged in transactio­n and didn't report the income on their returns to encourage them to do so, all the way to leveraging our audit capacity … in the highest risk cases,” Hawara told senators.

Behal said the Coinsquare UPR gave the agency “really good informatio­n” that it was able to compare to existing taxpayer declaratio­ns to spot any discrepanc­ies. He also said the agency was considerin­g issuing additional UPRs to other cryptocurr­ency exchanges until the government implements the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework in 2027.

That will compel crypto exchanges and service providers in Canada to report a trove of annual data about crypto asset transactio­ns to the CRA.

“UPRs are litigious in nature. We do want to be in a space where we can obtain more structured data directly from reliable sources, and the crypto asset reporting framework will get us there,” Behal said.

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