Canada

Canada's $100,000 Crypto Reporting Threshold and FINTRAC Rules 2026: Your Compliance Checklist

Canada FINTRAC crypto reporting CRA T1135 compliance 2026
Canadian crypto regulation is maturing along two parallel tracks: provincial securities oversight and federal tax and AML compliance. AXT News

Canadian cryptocurrency regulation continues to mature along two parallel tracks: provincial securities oversight and federal tax and AML compliance. For investors, traders, and businesses, understanding these obligations is now critical — and 2026 has brought new clarity on several fronts.

The T1135 Foreign Reporting Obligation: The $100,000 Threshold

The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) has clarified that Canadian residents must report virtual currency held outside Canada if the total cost exceeds C$100,000 at any time during the tax year, on Form T1135 (Foreign Income Verification Statement).

However, there is an important and frequently misunderstood exemption: crypto held through Canadian-resident trading platforms that comply with CSA regulations is generally not considered "outside Canada" for T1135 reporting purposes. This creates a powerful practical incentive for Canadians to use domestic exchanges that meet provincial licensing requirements.

Crypto LocationT1135 Required?Notes
Canadian CSA-compliant exchange (Bitbuy, NDAX, Newton)NoTreated as Canadian-resident asset
Self-custody (hardware wallet, MetaMask)Likely NoCRA considers self-custody "in Canada" if holder is Canadian resident
Foreign exchange (Binance, OKX, Bybit)Yes (if cost > C$100K)Report on T1135; penalties for non-compliance up to $2,500/year
Foreign DeFi protocolsLikely Yes (if cost > C$100K)CRA treats DeFi participation as a foreign property interest

Penalties for failing to file T1135 when required are substantial: a flat $25 penalty per day, to a maximum of $2,500 per year, plus potential gross negligence penalties of 5% of the unreported property value if CRA determines non-filing was negligent.

FINTRAC Obligations: What Exchanges and MSBs Must Do

Under the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, all crypto exchanges and Virtual Currency Dealers (VCDs) operating in Canada must register as Money Services Businesses (MSBs) with FINTRAC and implement full AML compliance programmes. The core obligations include:

CSA Custody and Staking Standards: What Platforms Must Comply With

For platforms offering crypto custody and staking services to Canadian clients, the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) have established strict conditions as part of their interim framework for crypto trading platforms:

The Enforcement Environment: What's Changed in 2026

Canada's approach mirrors the global shift toward treating crypto as a regulated financial service. FINTRAC enforcement actions have accelerated significantly. In 2025, FINTRAC issued penalties totalling C$7.8 million against crypto-related entities — double the previous year — for AML compliance failures including inadequate KYC, failure to report large virtual currency transactions, and operating without MSB registration.

The OSC (Ontario Securities Commission) and BCSC (British Columbia Securities Commission) have been the most active provincial regulators. Both have taken enforcement action against unregistered crypto trading platforms and issued investor alerts about non-compliant offshore exchanges actively marketing to Canadian users.

In 2026, the CSA's coordinated approach has resulted in several major international exchanges either withdrawing from Canada or applying for registration. This thinning of the exchange landscape, while potentially limiting competition, significantly reduces the risk that Canadian investors will lose funds on unregulated platforms.

What Canadians Should Do Now: A Practical Checklist

For individual investors:

For businesses and platforms:

For a comprehensive guide to Canadian crypto regulation, see our article Crypto Regulation in Canada 2026: FINTRAC, Provincial Rules & Compliance Guide. For tax obligations, read our Canadian Crypto Tax Guide 2026: CRA Reporting, RRSP Rules & Adjusted Cost Basis Explained.