Taxes for Canadian Lash Artists
Taxes for Canadian Lash Artists: What No One Is Telling You
If youâre a lash artist in Canada and youâre just winging your taxes, we need to talk. Many lash artists end up overpaying, under-reporting, or completely unprepared when tax season hits. And no one teaches this in lash training, so letâs fix that!Â
First Things First: Youâre a Business
If youâre taking clients and getting paid, youâre running a business. Period.
Most lash artists in Canada operate as sole proprietors, which means you need to report your income properly. Even if youâre working from home, only taking a few clients, or strictly getting paid in cash, it still applies.
Thereâs no minimum income threshold to report what you earn, and all incomeâcash includedâis taxable. As your business grows, you may also need to register for GST/HST once you earn over $30,000 in any 12-month period (4 consecutive quarters), and youâll be responsible for contributing to CPP as a self-employed individual.Â
âCash Doesnât Countâ â Letâs Clear That Up
We hear this all the time: âCash clients donât count, right?â Wrong. All income counts, including cash, e-transfers, deposits, and tips. If it came into your hands because of your lash services, itâs income. Not reporting it might feel harmless, but if youâre the subject of an audit, it wonât be.
What You Need to Track (And What We Recommend)
Keep it simple, but letâs make it real. You need to track your total income from every client and every payment type, your expenses, and your receipts.
Hereâs what actually works for lash artists:
- QuickBooks Self-Employed: connects to your bank account, tracks income and expenses automatically, and helps estimate taxes so youâre not guessing
- Wave Accounting: free and Canadian-friendly, great if youâre newer and want something simple
- Expensify: take a photo of receipts and forget about the paper clutter
- Square or Stripe: keeps all your card payments organized in one place
Pro tip: open a separate business bank account. If your income and your Sephora runs are mixed together, tax time gets messy.
Write-Offs Lash Artists Are Sleeping On
This is where things get strategic. These are legitimate business expenses that can reduce how much tax you oweâbut only if youâre actually tracking them properly.
- Supplies and tools like lash trays, adhesives, tweezers, disposablesâeven Ergo (you bet sheâs a write-off)
- Studio costs like rent, or a percentage of your home if you work from home (based on the space used for business)
- Business essentials like your phone bill and WiFi (business-use portion only)
- Booking platforms like Fresha or GlossGenius
- Education such as lash courses, certifications, and workshops
- Marketing like branding shoots, ads, and website costs
If youâre not tracking these consistently, youâre leaving money on the table.
GST/HST: The Part Everyone Ignores
Once you make $30,000 or more in revenue over any 12-month period (4 consecutive quarters), you are required to register for GST/HST and start charging it to clients.
However, you might actually want to register before you hit $30K so you can claim back GST/HST on your business expenses (input tax credits).
If youâre using something like QuickBooks Self-Employed, it will help you track how close you are to that threshold and keep your tax collected organized so youâre not scrambling later.
How Much Should You Be Saving?
Save around 20â30% of your income for taxes. This can vary depending on your income and province, but itâs a solid starting point.
Make it automatic:
- Set up a second savings account
- Every time you get paid, move 20â30% immediately
If you wait until the end of the year, itâs usually already gone.
Common Lash Artist Tax Mistakes
Not tracking income consistently, mixing personal and business money, ignoring taxes until the last minute, not keeping receipts, and guessing instead of knowing.
Also, relying only on your booking app and thinking thatâs âgood enough.â Itâs not. You still need proper tracking or software backing it up.
A Simple System That Actually Works
You donât need anything complicated, but you do need a system.
- Use QuickBooks Self-Employed or Wave Accounting
- Separate your bank accounts
- Use Expensify for receipts
- Check your numbers once a week
- Do a deeper check-in once a month
Thatâs how you stay in control without it taking over your life.
Final Thoughts
Being a successful lash artist isnât just about perfect retention and clean sets. Itâs about running a real business. The artists who understand their money grow faster, stress less, and keep more of what they earn.
If this helped you, save it, share it, and send it to your lash bestie whoâs still pretending taxes donât exist đ Andddd.. you don't have to go it aloneâcheck out our free resources designed to help you stay organized, save money, and master your finances.