Canada’s transfer pricing rules 2026 have undergone the most significant overhaul in more than two decades. Bill C‑15, which received Royal Assent on March 26, 2026, rewrites much of the framework governing how the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) evaluates, adjusts and penalises intercompany pricing between related parties. The amendments apply to taxation years beginning after November 4, 2025, meaning many multinationals with calendar fiscal years are already in scope. For corporate tax directors, CFOs, in‑house counsel and their advisors, the practical consequence is immediate: transfer pricing documentation must be more detailed and more timely, CRA audit powers are broader, and the litigation risk that flows from non‑compliance has materially increased.
Key dates at a glance: New rules apply to taxation years beginning after November 4, 2025. Bill C‑15 received Royal Assent on March 26, 2026. Industry observers expect updated CRA guidance memoranda during April–June 2026.
Bill C‑15 amends section 247 of the Income Tax Act and related provisions to bring Canada’s transfer pricing regime into closer alignment with the OECD Transfer Pricing Guidelines. The changes replace Canada’s former two‑step adjustment framework with a single adjustment mechanism, expand the CRA’s authority to recharacterise or disregard transactions that lack economic substance, and impose tighter requirements for contemporaneous documentation.
The new rules apply to taxation years beginning after November 4, 2025. For a corporation with a December 31 fiscal year‑end, the first affected year is the 2026 taxation year. Companies with non‑calendar fiscal years should verify their first in‑scope period carefully, a fiscal year that began on or before November 4, 2025, will still be governed by the pre‑amendment rules even if the year extends well into 2026.
The transitional period creates a split environment: CRA audits of pre‑November 2025 taxation years will proceed under the former rules, while audits of in‑scope years will apply the Bill C‑15 amendments. Industry observers expect this dual‑track environment to generate confusion and potential disputes, particularly where intercompany arrangements span both periods.
Bill C‑15 fundamentally raises the bar for what constitutes adequate transfer pricing documentation in Canada. Under the amended rules, documentation must be contemporaneous, meaning it is prepared no later than the taxpayer’s filing‑due date, and must substantively address the functions, assets, risks and decision‑making authority of each party to the controlled transaction.
Any Canadian taxpayer, whether a corporation, trust or partnership, that enters into transactions with non‑arm’s‑length parties is required to maintain transfer pricing documentation. There is no de minimis monetary threshold that exempts a taxpayer from the obligation itself, although the penalty provisions under subsection 247(3) apply only where adjustments exceed the lesser of $5 million and 10 percent of gross revenue. In practical terms, every entity filing a T106 (Information Return of Non‑Arm’s Length Transactions with Non‑Residents) should treat the documentation requirement as mandatory.
The following table sets out the core items that transfer pricing documentation should contain under the 2026 rules, why each matters from a CRA‑audit and litigation perspective, and examples of supporting evidence.
| Item | Why It Matters | Sample Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Functional analysis (functions, assets, risks) | CRA will assess whether profit allocation follows substance; a weak functional analysis is the single most common audit trigger | Organisational charts, job descriptions, board minutes showing decision authority, operational workflows |
| Industry and economic analysis | Demonstrates that the taxpayer considered market conditions and comparable transactions | Market studies, industry benchmarking reports, third‑party databases (e.g., Bureau van Dijk) |
| Selection and application of transfer pricing method | Required to show arm’s‑length pricing was achieved using a recognised method (CUP, TNMM, profit split, etc.) | Written TP policy, method‑selection memo, comparability adjustments workpapers |
| Comparable transactions / benchmarking study | Supports the arm’s‑length range; absence will trigger CRA’s own benchmarking | Search strategy memo, comparable company financials, rejected comparables log |
| Intercompany agreements and legal contracts | CRA now explicitly reviews whether contractual terms align with actual conduct | Signed intercompany agreements, service‑level agreements, IP licences, cost‑sharing arrangements |
| Identification of decision‑making locations and risk bearers | New requirement under Bill C‑15, documentation must show where key decisions are made and which entity controls economically significant risks | Travel records, meeting minutes, emails demonstrating oversight, HR records showing employee location |
| Financial data and segmented P&L | Links pricing to actual results and demonstrates consistency between policy and outcomes | Segmented financial statements, intercompany invoices, general ledger extracts |
Based on published CRA guidance and commentary from major advisory firms, the following patterns consistently draw scrutiny during a transfer pricing audit in 2026:
Under the 2026 rules, the CRA retains its existing audit authority under the Income Tax Act but now operates with enhanced information‑gathering tools. Taxpayers should expect tighter response windows and a more structured sequence of requests, particularly for cross‑border transactions involving intangibles and intra‑group services.
| CRA Notice / Action | Expected Response Deadline | Recommended Internal Owner / Action |
|---|---|---|
| Initial audit notification letter | Acknowledgement within 30 days (typical) | Tax director: confirm scope, assign internal lead, engage external advisor |
| First information request (Requirement for Information) | 30–90 days (as specified in the notice) | Tax and legal team: gather documents, prepare privilege log, coordinate with foreign affiliates |
| Follow‑up or supplementary requests | 30 days (increasingly common under Bill C‑15 enhanced powers) | Tax advisor: review scope for overreach, negotiate reasonable extensions if justified |
| Proposal letter (preliminary assessment / adjustment) | 30‑day comment period before reassessment | Tax litigation counsel: review legal basis, prepare written submissions, evaluate objection strategy |
| Notice of Reassessment | 90 days to file Notice of Objection | Litigation counsel: file objection, preserve appeal rights, consider competent authority / MAP request |
Taxpayers are not obligated to accept the initial deadline in a CRA information request without question. Where the volume or complexity of the material genuinely requires additional time, the CRA will generally consider a written extension request, but only if it is made promptly and explains the specific impediment. Late or unexplained extension requests are routinely denied and can signal a lack of cooperation that influences the auditor’s approach.
From a litigation perspective, it is critical to preserve solicitor‑client privilege and litigation privilege from the outset. Any document created for the dominant purpose of obtaining legal advice or in anticipation of litigation should be logged and withheld. The CRA’s expanded information‑gathering powers under the 2026 amendments make early privilege assessments essential, once a document is produced, the privilege is likely waived.
The penalty regime under subsection 247(3) of the Income Tax Act remains structurally unchanged: a penalty may be imposed where a transfer pricing adjustment exceeds the lesser of $5 million and 10 percent of the taxpayer’s gross revenue for the taxation year. However, Bill C‑15 significantly expands the scope of transactions to which penalties may attach, because the single adjustment rule and substance‑over‑form authority allow the CRA to make larger and more aggressive adjustments than were previously possible.
| Example Taxpayer Profile | CRA Adjustment Amount | Penalty Triggered? |
|---|---|---|
| Mid‑market manufacturer, $40M gross revenue, adjustment of $3.5M | $3.5M | No. Adjustment is below the lesser of $5M and $4M (10% of $40M). Threshold = $4M; adjustment ($3.5M) does not exceed it. |
| Technology subsidiary, $120M gross revenue, adjustment of $6M | $6M | Yes. Threshold = lesser of $5M and $12M = $5M. Adjustment ($6M) exceeds the $5M threshold, penalty applies to the $1M excess. |
| Resource company, $800M gross revenue, adjustment of $4.8M | $4.8M | No. Threshold = lesser of $5M and $80M = $5M. Adjustment ($4.8M) is below the $5M threshold. |
The penalty itself is calculated as 10 percent of the amount by which the total transfer pricing adjustments for the year exceed the threshold. In the technology subsidiary example above, the penalty would be 10 percent of the $1 million excess, or $100,000, in addition to the underlying tax reassessment and interest.
Not every CRA transfer pricing adjustment warrants litigation. The decision depends on several factors: the quantum of the adjustment, the strength of the taxpayer’s contemporaneous documentation, the availability of competent authority relief under an applicable tax treaty, and whether the adjustment creates double taxation that can be resolved through the Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP).
The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments is that transfer pricing litigation in Canada will increase. The CRA’s broader adjustment authority, combined with the single adjustment rule and substance‑over‑form powers, means more reassessments will issue, and taxpayers with weak documentation will have fewer procedural arguments to deploy in defence. The burden of proof in a tax appeal rests on the taxpayer to demonstrate that the reassessment is incorrect, which makes the quality of contemporaneous documentation the single most important litigation‑readiness factor.
When a taxpayer identifies, either through an internal review or a CRA audit, that its intercompany pricing may not withstand scrutiny under the 2026 rules, several strategic options are available. The right choice depends on the nature of the exposure, whether the CRA has already begun an audit, and the taxpayer’s appetite for risk.
The CRA’s Voluntary Disclosures Program (VDP) allows taxpayers to come forward and correct past non‑compliance with reduced penalties and potential relief from prosecution. For transfer pricing purposes, a VDP application may be appropriate where the taxpayer discovers that its intercompany pricing was not supported by adequate documentation or deviated materially from arm’s‑length terms, before the CRA initiates an audit for the relevant period.
Key considerations include:
Where litigation is the preferred or necessary path, either because the CRA adjustment is unreasonable, the taxpayer’s documentation is strong, or the quantum justifies the cost, several tactical considerations apply under the 2026 rules:
| Timeframe | Action | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1–7 | Acknowledge CRA contact; assemble internal team (tax, legal, finance); notify external tax counsel; impose document‑preservation hold | Tax Director / General Counsel |
| Days 8–30 | Review scope of CRA request; locate contemporaneous documentation; prepare privilege log; assess need for extension request; begin drafting initial response | External Tax Advisor / In‑house Tax Team |
| Days 31–90 | Submit complete response to CRA; update TP documentation for current and future years; engage transfer pricing economist if adjustment is proposed; evaluate objection / appeal strategy | Litigation Counsel / TP Economist |
| Date | Event | Practical Implication |
|---|---|---|
| November 4, 2025 | Taxation years beginning after this date are in scope of the new rules | Check fiscal year‑ends, calendar‑year taxpayers are in scope from January 1, 2026 |
| March 26, 2026 | Bill C‑15 received Royal Assent | Rules are enacted, assume CRA will apply changes for audits of affected tax years |
| April–June 2026 | CRA expected to issue updated guidance and memoranda | Update T106 templates and audit response playbook; finalise contemporaneous documentation for 2025/26 filings |
Bill C‑15 has fundamentally reshaped transfer pricing compliance and litigation risk in Canada. The single adjustment rule, tightened contemporaneous documentation requirements and expanded CRA audit powers mean that multinational groups can no longer treat transfer pricing documentation as a back‑office exercise. For taxation years beginning after November 4, 2025, every intercompany transaction needs a defensible, contemporaneous record of the functions performed, risks borne, decisions made and method applied. The cost of getting it wrong, measured in reassessments, penalties and protracted litigation, has never been higher. Multinationals operating in Canada should consult experienced tax litigation professionals in Canada to assess their exposure and build an audit‑ready compliance framework under the new rules.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact David J. Rotfleisch at Taxpage, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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