Your stock could light
the next fire.
Somewhere in your investment account, there’s probably a stock you bought years ago and mostly forgot about.
Maybe it split. Maybe it doubled. Maybe you don’t even remember why you bought it – a tip from a brother-in-law, a hunch about a mining company, a name you liked the sound of. If it’s grown since then, Ottawa has quietly built you a door marked donate here, and walking through it doesn’t cost you a cent more than staying put. This page explains how that door works – and how walking through it helps keep a fire burning that’s now in its twelfth year.
Give the stock. Skip the tax. Get the full credit.
You don’t need a foundation, a lawyer, or a free Saturday. You need a short form, your broker, and about two weeks.
Here’s the mechanic, plainly.
But donate the security itself — not the cash from selling it – directly to a charity, and the capital gains tax on that gift is eliminated. You get a receipt for the full value, based on the closing price on the day it lands in the charity’s account.
The one rule that matters
The security has to be donated “in kind.” If your broker sells it first and you donate the cash, the tax benefit disappears and everyone ends up with less. The instruction to your broker has to be a transfer, not a sale.
An illustration, not a sales pitch.
Sell them, and a chunk goes to capital gains tax before you ever get to decide what happens with the rest. Donate them directly instead, and none of that tax applies — you get a receipt for the full value, and every dollar of it goes toward sending a fifteen-year-old from a nearby town and a fifteen-year-old from a nearby First Nation to the same fire circle, on the same territory, guided by the same Elders. Free, the way it’s worked for twelve years running.
The math, plainly (a worked example)
| Sell it, donate the cash | Donate the security directly | |
| Original cost | $1,000 | $1,000 |
| Current value | $5,000 | $5,000 |
| Capital gain | $4,000 | $4,000 |
| Tax on the gain* | ≈$920 | 0 |
| HIP receives | ≈$4,080 | $5,000 |
| Your tax credit* | ≈$1,876 | ≈$2300 |
*Assumes a 46% marginal tax rate, applied to 50% of the gain, and a donor resident in New Brunswick – used here only because it’s the example CanadaHelps publishes. Your actual tax credit rate depends on your province of residence and income. Fees apply to donations processed through CanadaHelps, on a sliding scale that starts around 3% for smaller gifts.
How it actually works
- Give us a heads-up: A quick note to finance@HIPAlly.com lets us watch for the transfer and say thank you properly when it lands.
- Fill out the CanadaHelps form: It’s short, and it automatically produces a “letter of direction” – the document your broker needs to act.
- Sign it and send it to your broker: Your broker or financial institution transfers the shares – not cash – from your account to CanadaHelps.
- CanadaHelps sells the security: They handle the sale, deduct a small handling fee, and transfer the proceeds to HIP.
- You get your receipt: A charitable tax receipt arrives for the full market value, based on the closing price the day the shares reached CanadaHelps.
- We put it to work: No new infrastructure, no extra overhead – your gift moves straight into fueling the fire.
Timing matters:
Processing a securities gift takes longer than a credit card swipe. If you want a receipt for this tax year, start the conversation in the fall and aim to initiate the transfer by December 15, not December 31.
One fire. One people. One future.
Honouring Indigenous Peoples (HIP) Charitable Corporation · finance@HIPAlly.com
This page is general information, not legal or financial advice. Please speak with your own tax or financial advisor before donating securities. Figures shown in the worked example are illustrative and drawn from CanadaHelps’ published materials — your actual tax outcome will depend on your province, income, and personal circumstances. Learn more from the Canada Revenue Agency.
