Canada’s crypto tax crackdown reaps millions. So why no criminal charges?
VANCOUVER — A team of Canada Revenue Agency “cryptoasset auditors” has been mining a rich seam of unpaid taxes, working on more than 200 files and reaping more $100 million in the last three years.
While the agency says up to 40 per cent of taxpayers who use cryptoasset platforms either haven’t filed their taxes or are at high risk of non-compliance, no criminal charges have been laid since 2020.
Court filings involving a Vancouver-based crypto firm suggest the federal government’s efforts to rein in crypto-based tax evasion and illicit financing are hampered by limited resources for enforcement in a space hallmarked by its borderless anonymity.
A CRA application filed in Federal Court in September says Canada’s Minister of National Revenue is concerned about taxpayers using the anonymous underground economy to evade taxes, fuelled by cryptocurrencies and non-fungible tokens, which are digital representations of an asset.


