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New Member
posted Oct 30, 2019 7:42:52 AM

Can damaged shingle replacements be included in the Maintenance section for a home office?

Last year we had damaged from a wind storm and replaced the shingles, I work out of a home office for my company (I live 600 KM from our nearest brick and morter office).


can these repairs be included in the maintenance section for my home office expenses?


if so would I include the entire amount of the repairs in the maintenance section and the software would calculate the correct percentage based on the percentage applied by the previous questions?

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1 Best answer
Level 11
Oct 30, 2019 7:42:54 AM

Unfortunately, only repairs relating to the home office itself (not to the entire home) are eligible employment expenses.

3 Replies
Level 11
Oct 30, 2019 7:42:54 AM

Unfortunately, only repairs relating to the home office itself (not to the entire home) are eligible employment expenses.

New Member
Oct 30, 2019 7:42:55 AM

so out of curiosity how does that correlate to the following Turbotax page which seems to indicate it would be:https://turbotax.intuit.ca/tips/home-office-deductions-for-self-employed-and-employed-taxpayers-6388 -- specifically this portion:"You can deduct maintenance expenses if they relate to the whole home. For example, if you put a new roof on your home, you can deduct a portion of that cost as a home office expense. If the new roof cost $10,000 and your home office is 10 percent of your home, you can deduct $1,000 as a qualifying home office expense."    the roof of the home would effect every room including the office.

Level 11
Oct 30, 2019 7:42:56 AM

When it comes to claiming repairs on a home office used as a workspace-in-the-home, I always err on the side of caution. Replacing shingles can be determined by CRA as value-adding repairs - meaning that the cost would be viewed as Capital. Claiming any type of capital cost associated with a principal residence has long-term capital gains implications. To clarify, I would contact CRA directly.