Tax planning isnβt about shortcuts β itβs about understanding how money flows through the system and making informed decisions π‘. This guide walks you through the essential concepts every tax preparer, business owner, and future accountant must master.
Table of Contents
- π 1. Tax Planning Fundamentals: Your Starting Point
- π° 2. Taxes for Proprietors & Partners
- π§Ύ 3. Personal Tax Return (Sole Proprietor)
- π€ 4. Personal Tax Return (Partnership)
- π’ 5. Corporate Tax Basics
- π 6. Small Business Deduction (SBD)
- πΌ 7. Salary Strategy (Corporation)
- π° 8. Dividend Strategy (Corporation)
- π§Ύ 9. CPP (Self-Employed)
- π’ 10. CPP (Corporate Salary)
- βοΈ 11. CPP Comparison (All Methods)
- π¨βπ©βπ§ 12. Income Splitting with Family
- β οΈ 13. TOSI Rules (Critical)
- π° 14. βTax-Freeβ Dividends Explained
- π 15. Owner-Manager Benefits
- β οΈ 16. Section 15 (Shareholder Benefits)
- π« 17. Personal Expenses in Corporation
- πΈ 18. Borrowing from Your Corporation
- βοΈ 19. Shareholder vs Employee Benefits
- πΌ 20. TFSA vs CPP Strategy
- π§ Final Thoughts: Master the System, Not Shortcuts
- π― Key Takeaways
π 1. Tax Planning Fundamentals: Your Starting Point
- Taxes depend heavily on business structure (sole prop, partnership, corporation)
- Canada aims for tax integration (similar total tax across structures)
- Strategy matters more than structure alone
- β οΈ Biggest risk: applying generic strategies without context
π Think of tax planning as a map β not a formula.
π° 2. Taxes for Proprietors & Partners
- Business income is NOT taxed separately
- Itβs added to your personal income
- Taxed using progressive tax rates
- More income = higher marginal tax rate
π Key rule: Total income determines your tax β not just business income.
π§Ύ 3. Personal Tax Return (Sole Proprietor)
- Profit = Revenue β Expenses
- Added directly to personal income
- Includes CPP (double contribution)
- Tax = Federal + Provincial + CPP
β οΈ Higher income increases tax faster than expected.
π€ 4. Personal Tax Return (Partnership)
- Partnership doesnβt pay tax
- Each partner reports their share only
- Ownership % = taxable income share
π Always verify ownership splits β errors here are costly.
π’ 5. Corporate Tax Basics
- Two layers:
- Corporate tax
- Personal tax (when money is withdrawn)
- Small business rate β 12%
- Personal tax triggered via:
- Salary πΌ
- Dividends π°
π‘ Corporations donβt eliminate tax β they delay it.
π 6. Small Business Deduction (SBD)
- Reduces corporate tax from ~27% β ~12%
- Applies only to:
- Active business income
- First $500,000
β οΈ Investment income taxed much higher (~50%+)
πΌ 7. Salary Strategy (Corporation)
- Salary = deductible expense
- Can reduce corporate tax to $0
- Fully taxable personally
- Triggers CPP
π‘ Salary shifts tax from corporation β individual.
π° 8. Dividend Strategy (Corporation)
- Paid from after-tax profit
- Not deductible
- Uses:
- Gross-up
- Dividend tax credit
π Designed to prevent double taxation (integration principle)
π§Ύ 9. CPP (Self-Employed)
- Pay both employer + employee portions
- Calculated on net income
- Paid with tax return
β οΈ Big cash impact at filing time.
π’ 10. CPP (Corporate Salary)
- Split between:
- You (employee)
- Corporation (employer)
- Same total CPP as self-employed
π‘ Difference is in structure β not total cost.
βοΈ 11. CPP Comparison (All Methods)
| Income Type | CPP |
|---|---|
| Proprietor | Full |
| Salary | Split |
| Dividends | None |
π Trade-off:
- CPP = future benefits π§
- No CPP = more cash today π°
π¨βπ©βπ§ 12. Income Splitting with Family
- Salary splitting β (if reasonable work done)
- Must pass βreasonable salaryβ test
β οΈ No work = no deduction
β οΈ 13. TOSI Rules (Critical)
- Dividends to family may be taxed at highest rate
- Applies unless exceptions met:
- Active involvement (20+ hrs/week)
- Capital invested
- Age 65+
- Non-service business
π¨ Most misuse = zero tax benefit.
π° 14. βTax-Freeβ Dividends Explained
- Not truly tax-free
- Uses:
- Basic Personal Amount
- Dividend Tax Credit
π Works best when:
- Low income
- No other income sources
π 15. Owner-Manager Benefits
- Two types:
- Employee benefits β (often tax-efficient)
- Shareholder benefits β (taxable risk)
β οΈ CRA heavily audits this area
β οΈ 16. Section 15 (Shareholder Benefits)
- Personal benefits taken from corporation = taxable
- Examples:
- Free use of company assets
- Personal expenses paid by company
π¨ Hidden tax trap for many business owners
π« 17. Personal Expenses in Corporation
- Not deductible
- Treated as shareholder benefit
- Leads to:
- Added personal income
- Possible penalties
π Never mix personal and corporate expenses.
πΈ 18. Borrowing from Your Corporation
- Loans must be repaid within strict timelines
- Otherwise:
- Added to personal income
- Fully taxable
β οΈ Common misuse = unexpected large tax bills
βοΈ 19. Shareholder vs Employee Benefits
| Type | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|
| Employee benefit | Often tax-efficient |
| Shareholder benefit | Fully taxable |
π‘ Intent matters:
- Employee = for work
- Shareholder = personal advantage
πΌ 20. TFSA vs CPP Strategy
- TFSA:
- Tax-free growth & withdrawals
- Flexible
- CPP:
- Guaranteed retirement income
- Mandatory (in some cases)
π‘ Many strategies combine both for balance.
π§ Final Thoughts: Master the System, Not Shortcuts
- Tax planning = understanding flow, not memorizing tricks
- Always consider:
- Total income
- Structure
- Timing
- Long-term goals
π― Key Takeaways
- βοΈ Structure affects timing, not total tax
- βοΈ Corporations = flexibility, not automatic savings
- βοΈ Income splitting is restricted (TOSI rules)
- βοΈ CPP decisions impact long-term wealth
- βοΈ Most mistakes come from misunderstanding fundamentals
Leave a Reply