CRA analyzing pre-construction condo flipping cases for tax avoidance
Canada Revenue Agency is analyzing 2,810 transactions involving cases of pre-construction condominium flipping in Toronto to determine whether audits need to be carried out to find tax evaders.
In the Toronto area in particular, audit work has increased substantially on what are called “assignment sales” or “shadow flipping” in which a condo is purchased from a developer and sold to another buyer before the unit is completed, the federal government agency said Tuesday.
“The profits from flipping real estate are generally considered to be fully taxable as business income,” said CRA spokesperson Zoltan Csepregi in an emailed statement. “The facts of each case determine whether such profits should be reported as business income or as a capital gain.”
Real estate deals in the Greater Toronto Area and Vancouver have been the subject of greater scrutiny, including audits, the agency said.