2 – Salary & Dividend Planning for Owner-Managers πŸ’Ό

Planning how to pay yourself from your corporation is one of the most important decisions you’ll make as a business owner. It’s not just about saving tax β€” it’s about cash flow, lifestyle, retirement, and future goals.

Let’s break it down step-by-step so you can confidently understand how salary and dividends work together in real life.

Table of Contents

  1. πŸ’Ό 1. Introduction β€” A Disciplined Approach to Salary & Dividend Planning
  2. 🧠 2. How Disciplined Is the Client?
  3. 🏑 3. How Much Money Do You Need for Your Lifestyle?
  4. πŸ§“ 4. Retirement Planning β€” Who Is Responsible?
  5. 🏑 5. Future Mortgages & Income Requirements
  6. πŸ‘Ά 6. Child Care Expenses β€” Don’t Miss This
  7. πŸ’΅ 7. Always Plan Using NET (Not Gross)
  8. 🌈 8. Hybrid Strategy β€” The Best of Both Worlds
  9. 🧱 9. Simple Structure β€” Salary First, Then Dividends
  10. πŸ’Ό 10. CPP & Payroll Taxes β€” What About EI?
  11. πŸ‘΄ 11. Age 60–65 β€” Why Dividends Often Win
  12. πŸ”¬ 12. R&D and Film Credits (SR&ED Impact)
  13. 🧭 13. Planning Matrix β€” Making the Decision
  14. 🧩 14. Putting It All Together β€” Client Profile

πŸ’Ό 1. Introduction β€” A Disciplined Approach to Salary & Dividend Planning

Before you even think about tax rates, start with one thing:

πŸ‘‰ Can the client follow the plan?

A perfect strategy fails if:

  • Payments are missed
  • Deadlines are ignored
  • Records are not maintained

πŸ’‘ Tax planning is not just math β€” it’s behavior.


🧠 2. How Disciplined Is the Client?

Different clients need different structures.

βœ”οΈ Disciplined clients:

  • Can handle payroll
  • Make remittances on time
  • Can use salary, dividends, or both

⚠️ Less disciplined clients:

  • Miss deadlines
  • Forget payments
  • Risk CRA penalties

πŸ‘‰ Salary requires monthly compliance.
πŸ‘‰ Dividends are simpler and more forgiving.


🏑 3. How Much Money Do You Need for Your Lifestyle?

This is the starting point of all planning.

Ask:

  • How much do you need per year?
  • Does your spouse contribute income?

Example:

ScenarioCorporate IncomePersonal Need
Client A$200,000$200,000
Client B$40,000$0

πŸ‘‰ Planning depends on what you take out, not what you earn.

⚠️ Critical rule:

Every dollar withdrawn must be taxed.
Otherwise β†’ shareholder loan problems + CRA risk


πŸ§“ 4. Retirement Planning β€” Who Is Responsible?

Salary and dividends create completely different futures.

πŸ’Ό Salary:

  • CPP contributions
  • RRSP room (18%)
  • Structured retirement

πŸ’Έ Dividends:

  • No CPP
  • No RRSP room
  • Self-managed retirement

πŸ‘‰ The real question: Will the client actually save?


🏑 5. Future Mortgages & Income Requirements

Banks don’t care about tax efficiency β€” they care about visible income.

Comparison:

TypeMortgage Friendly?
Salaryβœ… Strong
Dividend⚠️ Moderate
Shareholder Loan❌ Not counted

Example:

  • Corporation earns $300,000
  • Personal income shows $60,000

πŸ‘‰ Bank sees only $60,000.

πŸ’‘ Sometimes paying more tax today = qualifying for a mortgage tomorrow.


πŸ‘Ά 6. Child Care Expenses β€” Don’t Miss This

A commonly missed but critical rule:

πŸ‘‰ Child care expenses require earned income

βœ”οΈ Qualifies:

  • Salary

❌ Does NOT qualify:

  • Dividends

Example:

  • Child care cost: $10,000
  • Lower-income spouse has only dividends

πŸ‘‰ Deduction lost ❌

πŸ’‘ Often, even a small salary fixes this.


πŸ’΅ 7. Always Plan Using NET (Not Gross)

Clients live on cash in hand, not gross numbers.

Example:

  • $1,000/week gross β†’ ~$750 net
  • To get $1,000 net β†’ salary may need $70,000+

Risks if ignored:

  • Shareholder loans
  • Underpaid taxes
  • CRA penalties

πŸ‘‰ Always ask:
β€œDo you mean before tax or after tax?”


🌈 8. Hybrid Strategy β€” The Best of Both Worlds

You don’t have to choose one.

πŸ‘‰ Combine salary + dividends.

Salary gives:

  • CPP
  • RRSP
  • Mortgage support

Dividends give:

  • Flexibility
  • Lower CPP cost
  • Simpler admin

πŸ’‘ Most real-world plans are hybrid.


🧱 9. Simple Structure β€” Salary First, Then Dividends

A practical formula:

Step 1: Set salary for goals

  • CPP
  • RRSP
  • Childcare
  • Mortgage

Step 2: Add dividends

  • Extra cash
  • Reduce CPP burden

Example:

  • Total income: $100,000
  • Salary: $60,000
  • Dividend: $40,000

πŸ‘‰ Balanced and flexible.


πŸ’Ό 10. CPP & Payroll Taxes β€” What About EI?

πŸ§“ CPP:

  • Mandatory on salary
  • Employee + employer portions
  • Employer portion = pure cost

Example:

  • Employee CPP: $2,600
  • Employer CPP: $2,600
  • Total: $5,200

❌ EI:

  • Usually NOT required for owner-managers

πŸ‘‰ Salary = CPP cost
πŸ‘‰ Dividend = no CPP


πŸ‘΄ 11. Age 60–65 β€” Why Dividends Often Win

After age 60:

Salary:

  • Still triggers CPP
  • Limited benefit
  • Higher cost

Dividends:

  • No CPP
  • More cash retained

πŸ‘‰ Example:
Switching to dividends can save $5,000+ per year

πŸ’‘ At 65, CPP can be optional β€” but before that, it is mandatory.


πŸ”¬ 12. R&D and Film Credits (SR&ED Impact)

If your business claims credits:

βœ”οΈ Salary:

  • Eligible for credits
  • Can generate large refunds

❌ Dividends:

  • Not eligible

Example:

  • $80,000 salary β†’ $28,000 credit
  • $80,000 dividend β†’ $0

πŸ‘‰ Salary often beats dividends here.


🧭 13. Planning Matrix β€” Making the Decision

Use a simple checklist:

  • Do you want CPP?
  • Do you want RRSP room?
  • Need a mortgage soon?
  • Family involved?
  • Childcare expenses?
  • Age near retirement?

Example:

Client TypeStrategy
Young + mortgageSalary
Age 62Dividend
Family + kidsHybrid

πŸ‘‰ No one-size-fits-all answer.


🧩 14. Putting It All Together β€” Client Profile

Great tax planning = understanding the person.

Build a profile:

  • πŸ§“ Retirement goals
  • 🏦 Existing savings
  • πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§ Family situation
  • ⏰ Discipline level

Always:

  • Document decisions
  • Review annually
  • Adjust as life changes

πŸ’‘ Example note:
Client prefers dividends.
Understands no CPP.
Plans mortgage in 2 years β†’ may switch to salary.


🌟 Final Thoughts

Salary vs dividend is not just a tax decision β€” it’s a life strategy.

Remember:

  • πŸ’‘ Start with lifestyle needs
  • πŸ“Š Use net, not gross
  • βš–οΈ Balance short-term vs long-term
  • πŸ”„ Review every year
  • 🧠 Customize for each client

πŸ‘‰ The best tax planners don’t just minimize tax β€”
they design strategies that actually work in real life.

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