
08-11-2022 11:38 PM
08-12-2022 09:39 AM - edited 08-12-2022 09:40 AM
No, you do not have to claim that; you're allowed to sell a reasonable amount of your property without reporting it. That's a reasonable amount in my eyes lol
Cheers,
Joel
08-12-2022 01:00 PM
The free advice you get online, is worth every penny you pay for it.
08-12-2022 08:38 PM - edited 08-12-2022 08:39 PM
https://www.advisor.ca/tax/tax-news/taxes-for-collectors/
That article might be relevant.
I don't know what you mean by regular CRA holder.
eBay charges taxes regardless now, so if you operate a business and ONLY sell on eBay, you should register for HST so that you can claim your input tax credits and get a refund on all the HST you pay on your business expenses, which for even a small business can be hundreds or thousands a year.
(The reason I say if you only sell on eBay is that if you register, you have to charge taxes on every platform. Because eBay is already inflating the price of your item to the buyer through charging Canadian taxes, there is no real downside to registering, aside from additional paperwork.)
I don't know whether HST registration is allowed in the event that you're not running a business, but selling off pieces from a personal collection. Ultimately, those are the kind of things you'd have to figure out with an accountant.