Verdict: no primary Ontario authority found. Recommend striking the claim from any customer-facing page.
A direct search of (a) the Fuel Tax Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.35; (b) R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 464; and (c) all Ontario Ministry of Finance fuel-tax bulletins and guides published on ontario.ca and fin.gov.on.ca found no provision, bulletin, FAQ, or interpretive document establishing a "custom operator as customer's agent" doctrine for coloured-fuel purposes in Ontario. The phrases "custom operator," "custom combine," and "custom farming" do not appear in any Ontario primary fuel-tax authority.
What Ontario authority does say: the use-test is structured around (a) whether the use is non-taxable and (b) whether the equipment is a "motor vehicle to which a number plate is attached as required under the Highway Traffic Act" (FTA s. 2(7.1)). The Ministry's bulletin permits coloured fuel "in unlicensed construction or farm equipment" without addressing who owns the equipment or whose fuel it is. An agency analogy exists elsewhere in Ontario fuel-tax law — Gasoline Tax Act s. 2(4.2) ("on behalf of or as agent for a principal who is acquiring the aviation fuel for use … by the principal") — but is in the aviation fuel context and does not extend to coloured-diesel use by custom operators.
The conservative reading is: a custom combine operator using their own coloured fuel in their own unlicensed combine while working on a customer's farm is using coloured fuel in unlicensed farm equipment for a non-taxable purpose, which is permitted on its face. But this is an inference from the use-test, not an interpretation formally announced by the Ministry of Finance. Until a Ministry interpretive bulletin is on file, B&J should not assert a customer-facing "custom operator acts as your agent" doctrine.
| Scenario | Ontario answer | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| Custom operator's unlicensed off-road machine (combine, sprayer, manure tanker, silage chopper) is fuelled from the farmer's coloured-fuel tank while doing work on the farmer's land | Permitted in substance. The fuel is going into an unlicensed off-road machine used for a non-taxable (farming) purpose. The statute does not condition the exemption on fuel ownership. Sale-side risk attaches to the seller only if they "sell coloured fuel knowing it will be used for taxable purposes," which is not the case here. | Inferred (no MoF interpretation bulletin directly addresses it) |
| Custom operator brings own coloured fuel purchased in their own name, uses it in own unlicensed off-road machine on a customer's farm | Permitted. Same equipment-and-use test is satisfied. The Ministry does not track fuel back to ownership for unlicensed off-road use. | Inferred |
| Custom operator's licensed farm-plated truck (tandem, grain hauler) is filled from the farmer's coloured-fuel tank | Prohibited. Farm-plated trucks are licensed under the Highway Traffic Act. See op-farm-plated-coloured-fuel-rule. |
Verified |
The Fuel Tax Act offence is asymmetric: the seller commits an offence under s. 3.9(2)-style language only if they sell coloured fuel "knowing it will be used for taxable purposes." Selling coloured fuel to a farm customer who then permits a custom operator to use it in an unlicensed combine is not within the seller's knowledge of taxable use — the use is non-taxable. B&J's risk on sale to the farmer is unchanged by the custom-operator presence on the farm.
Both Prairie provinces explicitly recognise and regulate custom operators; Ontario does not.
| Province | Comparator program | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Saskatchewan | Fuel Tax Act, 2000; Saskatchewan Finance Bulletin FT-4 | Custom operators apply for a restricted-use Fuel Tax Exemption Permit ("Custom Operator's permit") and may purchase marked diesel for unlicensed farm machinery while carrying out farming activities for a farmer. Personal permit issued to the operator. |
| Alberta | Alberta Farm Fuel Benefit (AFFB) Program | Eligible custom operators are exempt from provincial tax on propane and aviation fuel used for custom farming. The custom operator must invoice the farmer directly — no sub-contractor or third-party-agent layering. The agency model is explicitly rejected through a sub-contractor screen. |
Inference: both Prairie programs treat custom operators as eligible in their own right with a permit/registration, not as agents of the farmer. Ontario has neither a permit pathway nor any published statement endorsing the agency framing. Earlier customer-facing copy on the B&J site applied Prairie-flavoured framing without Ontario authority.
Strike any customer-facing claim framing the custom operator as a legal agent. If the agriculture page must address this, frame it generically ("unlicensed farm equipment running coloured fuel is the use the regulation permits — whether owned by you or by a service provider working your land") and counsel the customer to confirm with the Ontario Ministry of Finance before relying on the framing.
Stage 1 (immediate, done 2026-05-13 commit 8ec5a25): rewrite the offending paragraph using the equipment-test frame on the live agriculture page.
Stage 2 (30 days): publish a sidebar comparing Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta on custom operators.
Trigger to revisit: any Ministry of Finance interpretation bulletin or any reported audit involving a custom operator. See roadmap-mof-custom-operator-interpretation-request.
Confidence: uncertain (Ontario negative finding; SK/AB comparators verified). Recommend Ministry of Finance bulletin request before any customer-facing claim — see roadmap-mof-custom-operator-interpretation-request.
Verdict: no primary Ontario authority found. Recommend striking the claim from any customer-facing page.
A direct search of (a) the Fuel Tax Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.35; (b) R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 464; and (c) all Ontario Ministry of Finance fuel-tax bulletins and guides published on ontario.ca and fin.gov.on.ca found no provision, bulletin, FAQ, or interpretive document establishing a "custom operator as customer's agent" doctrine for coloured-fuel purposes in Ontario. The phrases "custom operator," "custom combine," and "custom farming" do not appear in any Ontario primary fuel-tax authority.
What Ontario authority does say: the use-test is structured around (a) whether the use is non-taxable and (b) whether the equipment is a "motor vehicle to which a number plate is attached as required under the Highway Traffic Act" (FTA s. 2(7.1)). The Ministry's bulletin permits coloured fuel "in unlicensed construction or farm equipment" without addressing who owns the equipment or whose fuel it is. An agency analogy exists elsewhere in Ontario fuel-tax law — Gasoline Tax Act s. 2(4.2) ("on behalf of or as agent for a principal who is acquiring the aviation fuel for use … by the principal") — but is in the aviation fuel context and does not extend to coloured-diesel use by custom operators.
The conservative reading is: a custom combine operator using their own coloured fuel in their own unlicensed combine while working on a customer's farm is using coloured fuel in unlicensed farm equipment for a non-taxable purpose, which is permitted on its face. But this is an inference from the use-test, not an interpretation formally announced by the Ministry of Finance. Until a Ministry interpretive bulletin is on file, B&J should not assert a customer-facing "custom operator acts as your agent" doctrine.
Strike any customer-facing claim framing the custom operator as a legal agent. If the agriculture page must address this, frame it generically ("unlicensed farm equipment running coloured fuel is the use the regulation permits — whether owned by you or by a service provider working your land") and counsel the customer to confirm with the Ontario Ministry of Finance before relying on the framing.
Confidence: uncertain (negative finding — no primary Ontario authority located; recommend Ministry of Finance bulletin request before any customer-facing claim).