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Also, CRA recognizes that crowdfunding income is not taxable income if you aren't providing a service or product to people so you don't actually need to pay taxes on it if you aren't giving people shirts or something else the CRA could claim has actual tangible value to them.
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taxpage.com/articles-and-t is the general idea. Basically, if you give rewards, you turn it into taxable income. There's ridiculously complex information about it on the CRA site. I talked about it with an accountant and they recommended being really careful not to offer anything.
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The rules about rewards are somewhat vague and it might seem like you could get away with giving rewards in some cases without it turning it into taxable income. However, accountant that I talked to strongly recommended never giving out any rewards including no priority support.
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Since if you start giving out any rewards at all, the CRA is going to be very tempted to claim that all the donations are business income, including from other sources. Best to just keep it all clean of anything they could possibly claim is a product or service being offered.
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Yep. This is something I looked into back when I started accepting pizza donations. No strings attached, no promises. Thanks for all the info, nice to have something to refer back to if I need it.
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I recently won a battle with the CRA over my 2018 income taxes by the way, unrelated to anything to do with donations. They wanted $8k in additional taxes from me and somehow ended up having to pay me $3.2k since apparently I paid taxes that I didn't actually need to pay to them.
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$3.2k probably covers all the legal fees spent dealing with the CRA specifically about this but it definitely doesn't cover the massive ordeal that they put me through over 2 years. They're largely MIA right now due to COVID-19. Government employees have barely been doing work.
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It basically took a whole year of my lawyer repeatedly trying to contact them and reason with them to finally get that dealt with. I very much want to avoid any further nonsense with them so I'm extremely careful not doing anything that could make them upset about the donations.
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A legitimate fear of mine, one I could not afford deal with. I'm not working either, but I'm not at that point yet where I can live off donations, currently about CAD $270 spread out in small amounts over the month.
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GitHub Sponsors has worked out really well. Bitcoin and Monero have too but those are reserved for paying devs outside Canada because they bypass all the hassle of sending payments internationally to people. PayPal recently jacked up rates to 4.4% + conversion fee to pay US devs.
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Another thing I really despise about PayPal is that they convince most of the US donors to convert to CAD even though my account has USD as a currency. End up losing 2.5% to conversion fee from USD to CAD and then another 2.5% to go back from CAD to USD when funding other people.
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