Close

Our Privacy Statement & Cookie Policy

All Thomson Reuters websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.

Line 69 - Allowable business investment loss

Quebec Line 69 - Allowable business investment loss

An allowable business investment loss is a capital loss that the trust sustained on the disposition of a share of the capital stock of a Canadian-controlled private corporation (CCPC) all or substantially all of the fair market value (FMV) of whose assets is attributable to assets used in an eligible business that the corporation carries on primarily in Canada. A business investment loss may also be sustained on the disposition of a debt obligation owed by a small business corporation or owed by a CCPC that:

In the return, you must enter allowable business investment losses on line 69.

Complete the work chart below to calculate allowable business investment losses.

A loss sustained in one of the following situations is considered to be a business investment loss:

For more information, see guide IN-120-V, Capital Gains and Losses.

Allowable business investment losses must be reduced by the amounts the trust allocated to the beneficiaries in a previous year and that the trust designated as taxable capital gains that give entitlement to a deduction. The amount of the reduction (line 12 of the work chart) is considered a capital loss and must be carried to line 219 of Schedule A.

The allowable business investment loss is determined on line 14 of the work chart, and can be deducted on line 69 of the return. If the amount of the allowable business investment loss exceeds the trust's income for the year, the excess amount is included in the calculation of the non-capital loss (see the instructions for line 90 and line 99).

Note that the portion of a non-capital loss that is attributable to the allowable business investment loss can be carried to the three previous taxation years and the ten subsequent taxation years. Any amount that cannot be deducted as a non-capital loss for these years becomes a net capital loss.

Sections 231, 232.1, 264.5, 299 and 300