Do I need to pay income tax on money I make selling pics on feetfinder in Canada?
So I'm thinking about making some extra cash on the side through feetfinder in Ontario, and I'm kinda confused about the tax situation. Do I actually have to report this income on my taxes? I've heard different things from friends - some say you only need to report if you make over a certain amount, others say all income needs to be reported no matter what. I don't expect to make thousands or anything, probably just a few hundred dollars a month at most, but I don't want to get in trouble with the CRA later. Anyone know what the rules are for reporting this kind of side income in Canada/Ontario specifically? I've never had to deal with anything besides my regular job's income before.
24 comments


Anastasia Popov
Yes, you absolutely need to report income from any source on your Canadian tax return, including income from platforms like feetfinder. In Canada, all income is taxable regardless of how much you make or where it comes from (with very few exceptions). The CRA expects you to report this as self-employment income on your T1 return. You'll need to fill out Form T2125 (Statement of Business Activities) where you can also deduct reasonable expenses related to earning that income - things like a portion of your internet costs, any specific equipment you purchased, etc. There's no minimum threshold for reporting in Canada - even if you make $100, technically it should be reported. The good news is you'll only pay tax on your net profit (income minus allowable expenses).
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Sean Murphy
•What about if the money goes to paypal? Does CRA even know about that? And do you have to register as a business or something first before selling?
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Anastasia Popov
•It doesn't matter if the money goes to PayPal, direct deposit, or cash under your mattress - income is income and legally must be reported regardless of how you receive it. While the CRA might not automatically know about PayPal transactions, they have ways to find out if they audit you, and PayPal does report to tax authorities in many cases. You don't need to register as a business to start selling and reporting the income. For small amounts, you can simply report it as self-employment income on your personal tax return using the T2125 form. If your business grows significantly or you want liability protection, you might consider formal registration, but it's not required just to report the income properly.
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Zara Khan
I struggled with this exact situation last year when I started making money from content creation online. The tax rules were super confusing and I kept getting different advice from friends. I finally found this AI tool called taxr.ai (https://taxr.ai) that analyzes your specific situation and breaks down exactly what you need to report and how. I uploaded screenshots of my earnings and it told me exactly where to report them on my Canadian taxes. It also identified deductions I could take that I had no idea about - saved me almost $400! Definitely worth checking out if you're confused about how to handle income from places like feetfinder.
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Luca Ferrari
•Does this tool work for US taxes too? I'm doing the same thing but I'm in the States and have no idea how to report it properly.
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Nia Davis
•Sounds interesting but how does it work with the CRA specifically? I've used other tax tools before that were really designed for US taxes and they missed a bunch of Canada-specific stuff.
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Zara Khan
•Yes, it works for US taxes too! It has specific modules for both US and Canadian tax systems, so it can handle your situation as well. Just make sure to specify you're in the US when you first set it up. For Canadian taxes specifically, it's actually designed with the CRA in mind. It references all the current CRA guidelines and forms, not just generic tax advice. That's why I liked it - it knew about specific Canadian self-employment rules, GST/HST thresholds, and provincial tax differences. It even told me which specific line numbers to use on my T1 forms.
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Luca Ferrari
Just wanted to update - I tried taxr.ai after seeing the recommendation here and WOW it really helped with my situation! I was so confused about how to handle my feetfinder income (and some Etsy stuff I sell too) but this tool broke everything down super clearly. It showed me exactly what counts as business expenses (apparently part of my phone bill and internet can be deducted!) and warned me that I might need to start charging sales tax if I hit $30k in sales. Definitely feeling more confident about tax season now. Worth checking out for anyone in the same boat!
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Mateo Martinez
If you're having trouble getting clear answers from the CRA about reporting this income, try Claimyr (https://claimyr.com). I was on hold with the CRA for literally HOURS trying to get clarification about my online income, and it was driving me insane. Claimyr got me connected with a real CRA agent in about 15 minutes instead of the usual 2+ hour wait. You can see how it works in this video: https://youtu.be/_kiP6q8DX5c The CRA agent I spoke with clarified everything about reporting my content creation income and told me exactly what forms I needed. Saved me so much time and stress!
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QuantumQueen
•Wait how does this actually work? You pay someone to wait on hold for you? How do they transfer you to the call?
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Aisha Rahman
•This sounds like BS honestly. I doubt some random service can get you through to the CRA faster than anyone else. The hold times are long for everyone.
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Mateo Martinez
•It's actually super simple. You provide your phone number and what you're calling about, and they use their system to navigate the CRA phone tree and wait on hold. When they finally get an agent, they call you and connect you directly to that agent. You don't have to be on hold at all - they call you once they have a real person. The reason it works is they have technology that can handle hundreds of calls simultaneously, so they're basically professional "hold-sitters." It's not about cutting in line - they're just waiting in the queue for you so you don't have to waste your own time. Nothing sketchy about it, just a smart service that saves you from the frustration of listening to hold music for hours.
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Aisha Rahman
Ok I need to admit I was totally wrong about Claimyr. After seeing it mentioned here I was super skeptical but I was desperate to get some answers about my online income before filing my taxes. I decided to try it as a last resort and holy crap it actually worked! I had been trying to reach the CRA for THREE DAYS with no luck (kept getting disconnected after 1+ hour waits). Used Claimyr yesterday and got connected to an agent in about 25 minutes. The agent answered all my questions about reporting my feetfinder and other platform income. Turns out I had been filing wrong last year and could have gotten in trouble. Never been so happy to be wrong about something lol.
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Ethan Wilson
Just my two cents, but this is what I learned from my accountant about this kinda thing. In Ontario, you need to report ANY income you make, period. But that doesn't mean you'll necessarily pay a ton of tax on it. Here's what she told me: 1) Keep track of ALL your expenses related to creating that content (props, lighting, camera equipment, portion of internet bill, etc) 2) You can deduct those expenses against your income to reduce your taxable amount 3) If you make less than $30k annually from it, you don't need to register for GST/HST 4) Keep ALL your receipts for at least 7 years in case of audit Also, consider setting aside like 25-30% of what you make for taxes, especially if you have other income from a job, since this additional income might push you into a higher tax bracket.
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Yuki Sato
•Does this apply to OnlyFans too? I do both platforms and wasn't sure if the tax stuff was different between them.
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Ethan Wilson
•Absolutely, this applies to OnlyFans, feetfinder, and any other content creation platform. From a tax perspective, the CRA doesn't care which platform you're using - they just see it all as self-employment income. The source doesn't matter, only that you earned money. In fact, if you're using multiple platforms, you should combine all that income together on your tax return as part of the same self-employment business. The upside is you can also combine all your related expenses across platforms. Just make sure you're keeping really good records of which income came from where, in case you ever get questioned about it.
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Carmen Flores
just make sure u dont make more than $30k a year cause then u have to register for GST/HST and thats a whole other headache lol. i kept mine under that on purpose cause i dont wanna deal with all that.
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Andre Dubois
•This isn't completely accurate advice. The $30k threshold is for a 12-month period, not necessarily a calendar year. And even if you stay under $30k, you still have to report and pay income tax on all earnings. The GST/HST registration is a separate issue from income tax reporting.
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Leeann Blackstein
I went through this exact same situation when I started doing online content creation last year! The short answer is yes, you absolutely need to report ALL income to the CRA, even if it's just a few hundred dollars. Here's what I learned from my experience: - Report it as self-employment income on Form T2125 - Keep detailed records of ALL your earnings from the platform - Track business expenses (equipment, internet portion, phone bills, etc.) - Set aside about 25-30% of earnings for taxes - You don't need to register as a business unless you hit $30k annually The CRA considers this taxable income regardless of the amount or payment method (PayPal, direct deposit, whatever). I was nervous about it too at first, but it's really not that complicated once you understand the process. Better to be compliant from the start than deal with issues later! Pro tip: Keep a simple spreadsheet tracking your monthly earnings and any related expenses. Makes tax time way less stressful.
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Zara Mirza
•Thanks for sharing your experience! This is really helpful. I'm curious about the spreadsheet tracking - do you track income by platform separately or just lump it all together? And for expenses, how do you figure out what percentage of your internet/phone bill you can claim? I've heard different things about how to calculate that properly.
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Grace Durand
Hey! I'm dealing with a similar situation right now and this thread has been super helpful. I just started selling on a few different platforms and was totally overwhelmed by the tax implications. One thing I'm still confused about though - if I'm using multiple platforms (like feetfinder, OnlyFans, etc.), do I need to fill out separate T2125 forms for each one, or can I combine all the income from different platforms into one business activity? Also, for anyone who's been doing this for a while - what's the best way to track payments that come in at different times? Sometimes platforms hold payments for a week or two, so I'm not sure if I should record income when I earn it or when it actually hits my account. Don't want to mess up my record keeping from the start! Thanks for all the great advice in this thread - definitely feel more confident about handling this properly now.
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Paolo Esposito
•Great questions! You can definitely combine all your platform income into one T2125 form - the CRA sees it all as the same self-employment business (content creation/digital services). Just make sure to keep detailed records showing which platform each payment came from in case they ever ask. For tracking payments, you should record income when you actually receive it (when it hits your account), not when you earn it. This is called "cash basis" accounting and it's what most small businesses use. So if you earn $100 on Monday but the platform doesn't pay you until the following week, record it on the day you actually get paid. This makes it much simpler to match your records with your bank statements too! I'd recommend setting up a simple spreadsheet with columns for: Date Received, Platform, Amount, and maybe a notes column. That way you have everything organized for tax time.
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Daniel Washington
This is such a common question and I'm glad you're being proactive about it! I went through the exact same confusion when I started earning from similar platforms. The key thing to remember is that in Canada, ALL income must be reported regardless of the source or amount - there's no minimum threshold. Even if you only make $50, technically it should be on your tax return. The good news is that as self-employment income, you can deduct legitimate business expenses against it. Since you're in Ontario, you'll report this on your T1 return using Form T2125. Some expenses you can likely deduct include: - Portion of your internet/phone bills used for business - Any equipment purchases (camera, lighting, props, etc.) - Marketing costs if you promote yourself My advice: start tracking everything from day one. Keep a simple spreadsheet with your monthly earnings and any related expenses. Set aside about 25-30% of what you earn for taxes. And don't stress too much - once you get the hang of it, it's really not that complicated! The CRA would much rather see you reporting everything properly from the start than trying to figure it out later.
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Monique Byrd
•This is really solid advice! I'm just starting out with this whole side income thing and honestly was pretty intimidated by all the tax stuff. The 25-30% rule is something I hadn't heard before but makes total sense - better to have too much set aside than scramble at tax time. Quick question though - when you say "portion of internet/phone bills," how do you actually calculate that? Like if I use my phone/internet for personal stuff too (which obviously I do), how do I figure out what percentage is reasonable to claim as a business expense? Don't want to get in trouble for claiming too much but also don't want to miss out on legitimate deductions. Also super helpful to know there's no minimum threshold - I was definitely one of those people thinking small amounts might not matter. Better safe than sorry!
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