Ontario Poker Tax Calculator
Estimate how CRA treats your poker winnings and calculate potential federal and Ontario provincial taxes. Updated for 2025/2026 tax year brackets.
Your Poker Details
Tax Estimate
As a recreational player, your poker winnings are generally treated as non-taxable windfall income by the CRA.
Tax Treatment by Player Type
The CRA does not have a bright-line rule. Your classification depends on the totality of your circumstances.
Recreational Player
Winnings are generally not taxable
- Play for entertainment, not profit
- Poker is a hobby alongside regular job
- No systematic approach or records
- Winnings treated as windfall
- Cannot deduct poker losses
Semi-Professional
Tax status is a grey area
- Regular schedule but not full-time
- Keeps records and tracks results
- Has other employment income
- CRA may argue business income
- Consider professional tax advice
Professional Player
Winnings are likely taxable as business income
- Poker is primary income source
- Treats poker as a business
- Advanced training and skill
- Must report on T2125 form
- Can deduct legitimate expenses
How CRA Determines If You're a Professional
No single factor is decisive. The CRA evaluates the overall pattern of your poker activity based on several indicators.
2025 Canadian Tax Brackets (If Poker Income Is Taxable)
These brackets apply to your total income, including poker winnings classified as business income.
Federal Tax Rates
| Taxable Income | Rate |
|---|---|
| First $57,375 | 15% |
| $57,375 to $114,750 | 20.5% |
| $114,750 to $158,468 | 26% |
| $158,468 to $220,000 | 29% |
| Over $220,000 | 33% |
Ontario Provincial Rates
| Taxable Income | Rate |
|---|---|
| First $52,886 | 5.05% |
| $52,886 to $105,775 | 9.15% |
| $105,775 to $150,000 | 11.16% |
| $150,000 to $220,000 | 12.16% |
| Over $220,000 | 13.16% |
Basic personal amount of $16,129 (federal) and $11,865 (Ontario) applied. Rates reflect 2025 brackets. CPP/EI not included.
Deductible Expenses for Professional Players
If the CRA classifies your poker income as business income, you can offset it with legitimate business expenses. Keep receipts and detailed records for all claims.
- Tournament buy-ins and entry fees
- Cash game losses (documented)
- Poker coaching and training courses
- Tracking and analysis software (e.g., PokerTracker, Hold'em Manager)
- Travel to live poker events
- Accommodation for tournament trips
- Home office expenses (proportional)
- Internet and phone costs (poker portion)
- Computer and equipment (depreciated)
- Books and educational materials
- Accounting and tax preparation fees
- Staking losses (if applicable)
How to Use This Calculator
- Select your player classification. Be honest about how you approach poker. Recreational means you play for fun. Semi-pro means you play regularly and track results. Professional means poker is your main income.
- Enter your annual poker winnings. This is your total gross winnings before subtracting losses or expenses.
- Enter your poker expenses. Include buy-ins lost, coaching, software, travel, and other poker-related costs. These only matter for tax purposes if you are classified as professional.
- Enter other income. Your employment salary or other income helps determine which tax bracket applies to your poker earnings.
- Review results. The calculator will tell you whether your winnings are likely taxable and, if so, estimate the federal and Ontario provincial tax owed.
Remember: this calculator uses simplified assumptions. Real tax calculations involve additional credits, deductions, and rules that vary by individual. For more details, read our Ontario Poker Taxes Guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Resources
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