The answer to this question in most cases is yes.
Many people have hobbies such as selling homemade desserts or teaching piano to neighbourhood kids. However, people may not realize that they may actually be running a small business. The CRA considers a business to be an activity that was undertaken with the intention to earn a profit. This means that the income earned from selling your goods or providing your service is taxable business income.
For example, if someone starts selling jewellery they have been making at home to their co-workers, friends, etc, to earn a little extra income, that money collected is taxable. Just because it may not be a primary source of income, doesn’t mean that you didn’t earn it and don’t need to pay tax on it.
However, having your hobby be considered a business is not necessarily a bad thing. Although you are declaring the income you earned, you can also deduct the expenses incurred in order to collect that income. For the jewellery seller, any costs to purchase the beads and strings become business expenses and can be deducted on your tax return.
There are several other advantages to having your hobby become a small business besides just deducting the materials that went into producing your inventory. If you have a room in your home as your ‘home office’ that is your primarily place to do business or you are regularly meeting customers there, then you are also able to deduct some home maintenance costs such as utilities, property tax, home insurance and mortgage interest based on the percentage of space that the home office occupies of the entire home.
If the space is used for both business and personal use, the CRA asks you to make a reasonable estimate using hours of the day. So if you are using that space for business four hours a day, then the percentage of expenses that you could claim would be 4/24, which is 16.67%.
A small catch regarding the home office expenses is that you cannot use the home office expenses to create or increase a loss. This means that your use-of-home expenses cannot exceed your business income. The government does not want everyone to create losses with their home office expenses and then use the losses up in future tax years.
The CRA is also alert to people who want to falsely report a business in order to claim personal expenses; an isolated transaction does not count as a business. A person cannot sell a pet rock, for example, to a friend, and then consider it a business and deduct a ton of expenses. In order to ensure that the small businesses are legitimate, evidence of intention is required. This means there is evidence that you are intending to earn a profit.
So if you are frequently selling items on e-bay or making corporate gift baskets you need to consider whether your hobby is a business. By neglecting to report this money on your tax return, you are guilty of failing to report all of your income and can end up in serious trouble with the government. This can result in a penalty of 10% of the unreported amount and interest due on any taxes owing.
Or, if you have claimed personal expenses until the pretence that you are operating a business, you have filed a false statement and will be sentenced with a penalty of 50% of the tax related to your false statement.
Be proactive and determine if your hobby is a business (or not) and if think you have unreported income or have falsely claimed expenses, talk to your accountant to discuss your options.