As the technologies progress, earning in DePIN, as well as earning dividends in tokens, is getting more widespread among the participants in the cryptocurrency market in Canada. From earning tokens for contributing to decentralized physical infrastructure networks, known as DePIN, to earning dividends in tokens, such sources of income pose significant tax implications. How to treat such income sources for tax purposes, as reported to the CRA, is no longer of specialist concern, but of general significance.
In this article, the ways in which Canadian taxpayers can report their earnings from DePIN and their tokenized dividends to the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) are explained in a neutral and educational way, and some questions and answers are included, keeping in mind the aspects of compliance, transparency, and privacy in the world of crypto.
Understanding DePIN Earnings and Tokenized Dividends
Before discussing reporting obligations, it is important to understand what these income types represent from a tax perspective.
What Are DePIN Earnings?
DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks) reward participants for providing real-world resources such as:
Wireless connectivity
Data storage
Compute power
Energy or sensor coverage
Participants may earn tokens for running hardware, validating data, or maintaining network uptime. From the CRA’s perspective, these rewards are typically viewed as income, not gifts.
What Are Tokenized Dividends?
Tokenized dividends are blockchain-based distributions tied to tokenized assets, such as:
Revenue-sharing tokens
Tokenized equity or funds
Protocol profit-sharing mechanisms
Although they may resemble traditional dividends, the CRA generally focuses on economic substance over form, meaning tokenized dividends are taxed based on how they function, not how they are labeled.
CRA’s General Approach to Crypto Income
The CRA does not treat cryptocurrency as legal tender but as a commodity for tax purposes. This principle extends to DePIN earnings and tokenized dividends.
In most cases, these earnings fall into one of two categories:
Business income – if activities are commercial, continuous, or profit-driven
Investment or other income – if tokens are earned passively
Correct classification is critical, as it affects tax rates, deductions, and reporting forms.
How to Report DePIN Earnings to the CRA
Income Recognition
DePIN earnings are generally taxable at the fair market value (FMV) of the tokens at the time they are received.
This applies even if:
Tokens are not converted to fiat
Tokens are locked or staked
Tokens later decline in value
The CRA considers the moment you gain control of the tokens as the taxable event.
Steps to Report DePIN Earnings
Determine whether your activity qualifies as a business or hobby
Record the date and time each reward is received
Calculate the FMV in Canadian dollars
Include the value as income on your tax return
Track future disposals separately for capital gains or losses
How to Report Tokenized Dividends to the CRA
Tokenized dividends are usually reported as income, not capital gains, at the time of receipt.
Key considerations include:
Whether the dividend is paid in tokens or stablecoins
Whether it is tied to profit-sharing or protocol revenue
Whether it is received regularly or occasionally
If dividends are reinvested automatically, they are still taxable when received.