Capital cost
Disclaimer
We do not guarantee the accuracy of this copy of the CRA website.
Scraped Page Content
Capital cost
This is the amount on which you first claim capital cost allowance. The capital cost of a property is usually the total of:
- the purchase price (not including the cost of land, which is not depreciable);
- the part of your legal, accounting, engineering, installation, and other fees that relates to buying or constructing the property (not including the part that applies to land);
- the cost of any additions or improvements you made to the property after you acquired it, if you did not claim these costs as a current expense (such as modifications to accommodate persons with disabilities); and
- for a building, soft costs (such as interest, legal and accounting fees, and property taxes) related to the period you are constructing, renovating, or altering the building, if these expenses have not been deducted as current expenses.
Forms and publications
- Date modified:
- 2016-01-05