Table of Contents
- 🧾 Common Owner-Manager Scenarios & Real-World Tax Issues (Beginner to Pro Guide)
- 🏢 How Small Owner-Managers Actually Run Their Business (And What You MUST Watch For)
- 🔍 What to Look Out for in Small Owner-Managed Business Transactions (Practical Guide)
- 📊 Example of a Typical General Ledger for a Shareholder (Before Expense Analysis)
- Review of Owner-Manager Expense Reports & Transactions (Step-by-Step Guide) 📊💼
- Booking Transactions & Determining Final Compensation for Owner-Managers 📊💼
- EI Rules for Owner-Managed Corporations: Shareholdings & Non-Arm’s Length Explained 💼📊
- What If a Family Member Wants to Pay EI & Collect Benefits? (Advanced EI Planning Guide) 👩💼📊
- What If a Family Member Does NOT Want to Pay EI Premiums? (Advanced EI Exemption Strategy) 🚫💼
- Paying $500 Non-Cash Gifts to Employees (Including Owner-Managers) 🎁💼
- Can Owner-Managers Claim Employment Expenses? (Opportunities, Risks & CRA Focus) 🚗📊
- Claiming Management Fees or Other Employment Income on T1 (Why It’s NOT Recommended) ⚠️📄
- Factoring in Other Costs: WSIB and EHT in Owner-Manager Tax Planning ⚠️💼
🧾 Common Owner-Manager Scenarios & Real-World Tax Issues (Beginner to Pro Guide)
🌟 Why This Section Is CRITICAL for Every Tax Preparer
Welcome to the real world of tax practice.
Up until now, you may have learned:
- Clean examples 🧮
- Perfect scenarios 📊
- Simple salary vs dividend decisions 💰
👉 But in reality?
⚠️ Clients are messy. Records are messy. Situations are messy.
📦 📌 Reality Check Box
💡 Your job is not just calculating tax — it’s solving real-life financial puzzles.
🧠 What You’ll Learn in This Section
This guide will prepare you for:
✔️ Shareholder account problems
✔️ Unexpected tax outcomes
✔️ EI and payroll complications
✔️ Expense claims (vehicle, home office, etc.)
✔️ Difficult client conversations
✔️ “What NOT to do” scenarios
🧩 Understanding the Shareholder Account (The #1 Real-World Issue)
🔍 What Is a Shareholder Loan Account?
When an owner takes money out of their corporation:
- Not salary ❌
- Not dividend ❌
👉 It often goes into a shareholder loan account
🧠 Why This Becomes a Problem
Many owner-managers:
- 💸 Take money casually
- 🧾 Don’t track properly
- 🤷 Assume it’s “their money anyway”
📦 📌 Danger Box
🚨 Uncleared shareholder loans can become taxable income!
🧮 Simple Example
👤 Client: Scott (Owner-Manager)
- Took cash from company: $100,000
- Recorded as shareholder loan
👉 If NOT cleared properly:
- CRA may treat it as income
- Full $100,000 becomes taxable 😬
🔧 Ways to Clear Shareholder Loan
| Method | Description |
|---|---|
| 💰 Salary | Pay income + payroll taxes |
| 💸 Dividend | Pay dividend income |
| 🧾 Expense Claims | Reimburse legitimate expenses |
📦 📌 Strategy Box
💡 Always combine methods to minimize tax impact
🚗 Claiming Business Expenses (Done RIGHT)
🚘 Vehicle Expenses
Owner-managers often mix:
- Personal driving 🚗
- Business driving 💼
✅ What You Can Claim
- Fuel ⛽
- Insurance 📄
- Maintenance 🔧
- Depreciation 📉
👉 Only business portion is deductible
📦 📌 Pro Tip Box
🧾 Maintain a mileage log — this is essential for audits!
🏠 Home Office Expenses
If working from home:
✔️ Portion of:
- Rent or mortgage interest
- Utilities ⚡
- Internet 🌐
📦 📌 Rule Box
📏 Must be reasonable and proportional to workspace used
💼 Real Scenario: When Things Go WRONG
😬 Situation
Client says:
“I thought I’d only pay tax on $60,000…”
But reality:
- Took $100,000 from company
- No proper planning
👉 Result:
- Must report $100,000 income
📦 📌 Hard Truth Box
💡 Cash taken = tax consequences (eventually)
⚖️ Salary vs Dividend (In the REAL WORLD)
🧠 What Beginners Think:
- “Dividends are always better”
❌ Reality:
It depends on:
- CPP needs 🛡
- RRSP room 🏦
- Tax credits 🧾
- Cash flow 💸
📦 📌 Smart Approach Box
🎯 Use a combination of salary + dividends
🛡 EI (Employment Insurance) — The Overlooked Factor
🤔 Are Owner-Managers EI Exempt?
Often:
- ✅ YES (if they control the company)
But NOT always!
⚠️ When EI MAY Apply
- Minority shareholders
- Non-arm’s length relationships
- Specific employment structures
📦 📌 Important Box
🚨 Never assume EI exemption — analyze each case
🎁 Other Benefits Through the Corporation
💡 What Can Be Paid Through the Company?
- Health benefits 🏥
- Insurance premiums 🛡
- Allowances 💼
⚠️ But Be Careful…
Some benefits:
- Become taxable to the employee
- Must be reported properly
📦 📌 Planning Box
💡 Structure benefits to maximize tax efficiency
🧠 The MOST Important Skill: Client Conversations
😅 Real Challenge
You’ll often need to say:
❗ “You owe more tax than you expected”
🧾 Why This Happens
- Poor record keeping
- No planning
- Misunderstanding withdrawals
📦 📌 Communication Tip Box
🎯 Explain clearly:
- What happened
- Why it happened
- How to fix it going forward
🚫 What NOT To Do (Common Beginner Mistakes)
❌ Mistake 1: Ignoring Shareholder Loans
👉 Leads to unexpected tax bills
❌ Mistake 2: Overusing Dividends
👉 Misses CPP, RRSP, benefits
❌ Mistake 3: Poor Documentation
👉 Audit risk 🚨
❌ Mistake 4: Quick Decisions
👉 Missing planning opportunities
📦 📌 Warning Box
🚨 5-minute tax planning = long-term problems
🧩 Putting It ALL Together (Real Tax Planning)
🎯 A Strong Plan Includes:
✔️ Clearing shareholder loans
✔️ Balanced compensation strategy
✔️ Proper expense tracking
✔️ Benefit optimization
✔️ Compliance with rules
🧠 Example: Complete Strategy
👤 Client: Owner-Manager
- Took $100,000
- Has home office + vehicle
✅ Optimized Plan
- 💰 Salary: $30,000 (CPP + RRSP room)
- 💸 Dividends: $50,000
- 🧾 Expenses: $20,000
👉 Result:
- Lower taxes
- Better compliance
- Future benefits
📦 📌 Master Insight Box
💡 Tax planning is about structuring the SAME money in smarter ways
🚀 Final Takeaways for New Tax Preparers
✔️ Real life ≠ textbook
✔️ Clients will have messy situations
✔️ Your job = problem solver + advisor
✔️ Combine multiple strategies
✔️ Always think holistically
🧾 Quick Summary Cheat Sheet
| Area | Key Lesson |
|---|---|
| 🧩 Shareholder Loans | Must be cleared properly |
| 🚗 Expenses | Track and justify |
| ⚖️ Compensation | Mix salary + dividends |
| 🛡 EI | Case-by-case analysis |
| 🎁 Benefits | Plan carefully |
| 🧠 Strategy | Always holistic |
📦 📌 Ultimate Rule of Thumb
🔑 In real-world tax: It’s not about perfect numbers — it’s about making imperfect situations work efficiently.
🏢 How Small Owner-Managers Actually Run Their Business (And What You MUST Watch For)
🌍 The “30,000-Foot View” Every Tax Preparer Needs
Before diving into complex tax rules, you need to understand how things really work in practice.
💡 Most small business owners do NOT operate with perfect accounting discipline.
Instead, they:
- Mix personal & business finances 💸
- Use corporate accounts like personal wallets 🏦
- Assume “it’s all my money anyway” 🤷
📦 📌 Reality Check Box
🚨 Your biggest job is NOT calculating tax — it’s separating BUSINESS from PERSONAL transactions.
🧠 The Most Common Behavior of Owner-Managers
💸 1. Treating the Corporation Like a Personal Bank Account
This is the #1 issue you’ll encounter.
Owner-managers often:
- Pay personal bills using corporate funds
- Transfer money without documentation
- Ignore proper accounting treatment
📦 📌 Common Mindset
💭 “It’s my company, so it’s my money.”
👉 ❌ This is legally and tax-wise incorrect
🧾 Common Transactions You Will See (Real-Life Examples)
💳 Personal Credit Card Payments
Example:
- Corporate bank pays credit card bill
But when you review:
- 🛒 Groceries
- 🛍 Shopping
- 🍽 Restaurants
👉 These are PERSONAL expenses
🏠 Personal Loan & Mortgage Payments
You may find:
- Mortgage payments paid from corporate account
- Personal loans being serviced by the company
👉 ❌ Not deductible
👉 ⚠️ Creates tax issues
🎓 Tuition Payments
Example:
- Payment to university/college for child
👉 ❌ Not a business expense
🛒 Everyday Spending
Typical entries:
- Grocery stores 🥦
- Retail stores 🛍
- Entertainment 🎬
👉 Often misclassified as:
- “Office expense”
- “Supplies”
📦 📌 Red Flag Box
🚨 If you see vague categories like “supplies” — ALWAYS verify!
⚖️ The BIG Tax Risk: Shareholder Benefits
🔥 What Happens If Personal Expenses Are Paid by the Corporation?
These may be treated as:
⚠️ Shareholder benefits (Section 15)
💰 Tax Consequences
- Added to personal income
- Taxed at top marginal rates (~50%+)
📦 📌 Danger Box
🚨 Misclassified personal expenses can lead to VERY HIGH TAX + penalties
🧠 Your Core Responsibility as a Tax Preparer
🎯 Separate BUSINESS vs PERSONAL
This is your mission:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 🔍 Review | All transactions in bank |
| 🧾 Verify | Supporting documents |
| ⚖️ Classify | Business or personal |
| 🚫 Adjust | Remove non-deductible items |
📦 📌 Golden Rule Box
🔑 Never assume — ALWAYS verify
🕵️ Why You Can’t Just Trust the Client
😅 Common Client Response
“Yeah, that’s all business expenses.”
❌ Why That’s Risky
If you rely on this:
- CRA audit may reveal personal expenses
- You (and client) face consequences
📦 📌 Audit Risk Box
🚨 If CRA reviews and finds personal expenses:
- Deductions denied
- Income increased
- Penalties applied
🔍 Proper Approach: How Professionals Handle It
📄 Step 1: Request Documentation
Always ask for:
- Credit card statements 📑
- Receipts 🧾
- Expense breakdown
🔎 Step 2: Analyze Line by Line
Look for:
- Vendor names (e.g., grocery stores)
- Patterns of spending
- Personal vs business nature
🧾 Step 3: Extract Legitimate Expenses
- Keep only valid business costs
- Remove personal items
💼 Step 4: Record Properly
- Business → Expense
- Personal → Shareholder loan or benefit
📦 📌 Pro Tip Box
💡 Good bookkeeping = your strongest defense in an audit
🧩 The Shareholder Drawings Problem
💰 What Is It?
When owners take money:
- Without salary
- Without dividend
👉 It becomes a shareholder drawing / loan
⚠️ Why It Matters
If not handled:
- Can become taxable income
- Creates compliance issues
📦 📌 Key Insight Box
💡 Most “mystery transactions” end up in the shareholder account
🚨 Where 99% of Problems Come From
❗ The Truth
🔥 Most tax issues arise from personal expenses being run through the business
📊 Common Sources of Errors
| Area | Risk Level |
|---|---|
| Credit cards | 🔥 High |
| Cash withdrawals | 🔥 High |
| Mixed-use expenses | ⚠️ Medium |
| Poor records | 🚨 Extreme |
🧠 Real-Life Scenario
👤 Client: Owner-Manager
- Corporate bank paid $25,000 credit card
Client says:
“It’s all business”
🔍 Your Review Finds:
- $18,000 groceries 🛒
- $5,000 shopping 🛍
- $2,000 actual business
❌ If Ignored:
- $25,000 deducted incorrectly
- CRA audit risk
✅ Correct Treatment:
- $2,000 → Business expense
- $23,000 → Shareholder loan/benefit
📦 📌 Outcome Box
💡 Proper classification protects BOTH you and your client
⚖️ The Balance Sheet Impact
Every transaction affects:
- 🧾 Income statement
- 📊 Balance sheet
- 💼 Shareholder account
📦 📌 Important Concept
💡 Nothing “disappears” in accounting — everything must be classified
🚀 Best Practices for Tax Preparers
✅ Always Do This
✔️ Review ALL bank transactions
✔️ Ask for supporting documents
✔️ Challenge unclear expenses
✔️ Educate clients
❌ Never Do This
❌ Assume everything is business
❌ Skip detailed review
❌ Ignore red flags
📦 📌 Professional Rule
🎯 Trust, but verify — ALWAYS
🧠 Final Takeaways
✔️ Owner-managers often mix finances
✔️ Personal expenses are the biggest risk
✔️ Shareholder benefits can trigger high tax
✔️ Your job is classification & correction
✔️ Documentation is everything
🧾 Quick Summary Cheat Sheet
| Topic | Key Insight |
|---|---|
| 💸 Corporate funds | Often used personally |
| 🧾 Expenses | Must be verified |
| ⚠️ Risks | Shareholder benefits |
| 🔍 Role | Separate & classify |
| 📊 Goal | Accurate financial statements |
📦 📌 Ultimate Rule of Thumb
🔑 If it looks personal, question it. If you can’t prove it, don’t deduct it.
🔍 What to Look Out for in Small Owner-Managed Business Transactions (Practical Guide)
🌍 The Reality: Where Most Tax Problems Begin
If you remember only ONE thing as a beginner tax preparer, let it be this:
🚨 Most tax issues don’t come from complex rules — they come from messy transactions.
Owner-managers often:
- Mix personal & business spending 💸
- Pay everything through one account 🏦
- Assume it’s all deductible ❌
📦 📌 Golden Rule Box
🔑 Every transaction must answer one question:
Business or Personal?
💳 1. Personal Credit Cards Paid by the Corporation
🧠 What Happens in Real Life
Owner:
- Uses personal credit card for EVERYTHING
- Pays full balance using corporate funds
❌ Common Mistake
Recording entire payment as:
- “Office expense”
- “Supplies”
🧮 Example
- Credit card bill: $2,000
- Actual business expenses: $600
- Personal expenses: $1,400
✅ Correct Treatment
| Portion | Treatment |
|---|---|
| $600 | Business expense |
| $1,400 | Shareholder draw |
📦 📌 Key Insight Box
💡 The FULL payment hits shareholder account first, then business portion is carved out.
🔀 2. Mixed Personal & Business Expenses
🧠 The Situation
One credit card:
- Used for business 💼
- Used for personal 🛒
⚠️ The Problem
Owners usually:
- Pay entire balance from corporation
- Do NOT separate expenses
🧾 Your Job
✔️ Analyze statement line-by-line
✔️ Extract business portion
✔️ Assign remainder to drawings
📦 📌 Pro Tip Box
🧾 Always request monthly credit card statements — never rely on totals alone.
👨👩👧 3. Payments to Family Members
🧠 Common Scenario
- Cheques written to:
- Spouse
- Children
- Parents
❓ Key Question
“Did they ACTUALLY work in the business?”
❌ If NO:
- Not deductible
- Treated as shareholder draw
✅ If YES:
- Must be:
- Reasonable compensation
- Properly documented
📦 📌 Warning Box
🚨 Paying family without proof = audit risk + denied deductions
🔁 4. Third-Party Payments (Hidden Personal Spending)
🧠 What You’ll See
Payments to:
- Spouse’s account 💸
- Friends or relatives
- External accounts
❗ Reality
These are often:
- Household expense transfers
- Personal obligations
✅ Treatment
👉 Shareholder draw (NOT business expense)
🎓 5. School & Tuition Payments
🧠 Common Example
- Payments to:
- Schools
- Colleges
- Universities
❌ Tax Treatment
- NOT deductible
- NOT business expense
📦 📌 Rule Box
🎯 Education expenses = personal (unless directly business-related training)
🔄 6. Pre-Authorized Debits (PADs) — Silent Killers ⚠️
🧠 Why They’re Dangerous
Automatic payments often go unnoticed:
- Gas bills 🔥
- Utilities ⚡
- Subscriptions 📺
🔍 What You Must Check
Example:
- Payment to utility company
Ask:
- Office expense? ✅
- Home expense? ❌
📦 📌 Red Flag Box
🚨 PADs are often personal expenses hiding in plain sight
🚗 7. Vehicle Payments (VERY Common Issue)
🧠 What Happens
Payments to:
- Car loans 🚗
- Leases
But:
- Vehicle NOT owned by corporation
❌ Result
- Personal expense
- Must go to shareholder account
🧾 Example
- Payment to BMW lease (spouse’s car)
👉 ❌ Not deductible
👉 ✅ Shareholder draw
📦 📌 Important Box
💡 Even if used occasionally for business — ownership matters
🏠 8. Mortgage Payments Through Corporation
🧠 Reality
Owner pays:
- Personal mortgage using corporate funds
❌ Tax Treatment
- Not deductible
- Considered personal withdrawal
📦 📌 Insight Box
💡 Paying mortgage via corporation = same as taking cash out first
🧩 The BIG Picture: Shareholder Drawings
💰 What Happens to All These Transactions?
They accumulate in:
📊 Shareholder Loan / Drawings Account
⚠️ Why This Matters
At year-end:
- Must be cleared
- Or becomes taxable
📦 📌 Critical Insight Box
🚨 Many clients underestimate how much they’ve actually withdrawn
🧠 Real-Life Case Study
👤 Client: Scott
Claims:
“I only took $60,000”
🔍 Your Analysis Shows:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cheques written | $60,000 |
| Mortgage payments | $20,000 |
| Credit card groceries | $25,000 |
| Car payments | $15,000 |
💥 Reality:
👉 Total withdrawals = $120,000
📦 📌 Outcome Box
💡 This difference often leads to unexpected tax bills
🗣 Handling Difficult Conversations
😬 What You’ll Need to Say
“You withdrew more than you realized…”
🧠 How to Handle It
✔️ Show detailed breakdown
✔️ Use evidence (statements)
✔️ Stay calm & professional
📦 📌 Communication Tip Box
🎯 Facts + transparency = less resistance from clients
⚠️ CRA Risk & Tax Consequences
🚨 If Misclassified
- Expenses denied ❌
- Income increased 📈
- Penalties applied ⚠️
💸 Worst Case
- Taxed at top marginal rate (~50%+)
📦 📌 Risk Box
🚨 Poor bookkeeping can DOUBLE a client’s tax bill
🛠 Your Workflow as a Tax Preparer
🔹 Step-by-Step Process
- 📥 Review bank transactions
- 📄 Request supporting documents
- 🔍 Analyze each entry
- ⚖️ Classify correctly
- 🧾 Adjust financial statements
📦 📌 Pro Workflow Box
💡 Treat EVERY transaction like an audit will happen
🚀 Final Takeaways
✔️ Most issues come from personal expenses
✔️ Credit cards are the biggest red flag
✔️ Always verify — never assume
✔️ Shareholder account is key
✔️ Documentation protects you
🧾 Quick Summary Cheat Sheet
| Area | What to Watch |
|---|---|
| 💳 Credit Cards | Personal vs business split |
| 👨👩👧 Family Payments | Legitimate work? |
| 🔁 Transfers | Personal use |
| 🎓 Tuition | Always personal |
| 🚗 Vehicles | Ownership matters |
| 🏠 Mortgage | Always personal |
📦 📌 Ultimate Rule of Thumb
🔑 If the expense benefits the OWNER personally — it is NOT a business expense.
📊 Example of a Typical General Ledger for a Shareholder (Before Expense Analysis)
🌍 Why This Step Is a GAME-CHANGER in Tax Preparation
This is where theory meets reality.
You’re no longer dealing with:
- Clean examples ❌
- Simple withdrawals ❌
Instead, you’re looking at:
🔍 A messy, real-world General Ledger (GL) full of mixed transactions
📦 📌 Big Picture Box
💡 Before you calculate ANY tax → you must first understand the shareholder’s transactions
🧾 What Is a General Ledger (GL) in This Context?
🧠 Simple Explanation
The General Ledger (GL) is:
📊 A detailed list of ALL transactions recorded in the company
For owner-managers, one key account is:
👉 Shareholder Drawings / Loan Account
💰 What Does This Account Show?
It tracks:
- 💸 Money taken by owner
- 💳 Payments made on their behalf
- 🧾 Personal expenses paid by corporation
📦 📌 Key Insight Box
🔑 The GL tells the REAL story — not what the client “thinks” they withdrew
🔍 Real Example: What You’ll Actually See
👤 Scenario
You receive a file from bookkeeping:
- Shareholder drawings balance: $122,219
😳 First Reaction
Client might say:
“I only took about $60,000…”
👉 But GL says otherwise.
📦 📌 Reality Check Box
🚨 Clients often underestimate withdrawals by 2X or more
📊 Breaking Down the GL Transactions
💰 1. Direct Payments to Shareholder
- Monthly cheques to owner
- Cash withdrawals
👉 These are clearly personal draws
💳 2. Credit Card Payments (Major Area)
🧠 What You’ll See
- Payments to:
- Visa
- MasterCard
But:
- Cards are personal (not corporate)
⚠️ Treatment
👉 Entire amount initially = Shareholder draw
📦 📌 Important Box
💡 You ONLY extract business expenses AFTER reviewing statements
🛒 3. Grocery Credit Cards (e.g., Store Cards)
Example:
- Payments to grocery credit cards
👉 Likely:
- 🛒 Food
- 🏠 Household expenses
❌ Treatment
- NOT deductible
- Posted to drawings account
🧾 4. Personal Tax Payments (VERY COMMON)
🧠 What Happens
Owner pays:
- Income tax
- Installments
Using corporate account
❌ Tax Treatment
👉 100% personal
📦 📌 Rule Box
💡 Paying personal tax from corporation = same as withdrawing cash
🦷 5. Personal Lifestyle Expenses
🧠 Examples You’ll See
- Dentist 🦷
- Medical payments 🏥
- Entertainment 🎬
❌ Treatment
- Personal
- Shareholder draw
🎓 6. Tuition & Education Payments
🧠 Example
- Payment to university
❌ Treatment
- Not business-related
- Shareholder draw
📦 📌 Reminder Box
🎯 Education expenses are almost always personal
🚗 7. Vehicle Payments (Key Decision Area)
🧠 Example
- Payment to car dealership
🔍 Critical Question
Is the vehicle owned by the corporation?
❌ If PERSONAL:
- Down payment → draw
- Loan/lease payments → draw
📦 📌 Strategy Box
💡 Business use can be reimbursed separately — but ownership determines treatment
🧠 Why Everything Is Initially Posted to Drawings
🎯 Purpose
To ensure:
- Nothing is incorrectly deducted
- Everything is reviewed carefully
📦 📌 Professional Approach Box
🔑 Start conservative → then extract valid deductions
🔍 Step-by-Step Expense Analysis Process
🔹 Step 1: Identify Key Accounts
Focus on:
- Credit cards
- Vehicle expenses
- Home office
- Misc payments
🔹 Step 2: Request Documentation
Ask for:
- Credit card statements 📄
- Vehicle logs 🚗
- Receipts 🧾
🔹 Step 3: Analyze & Extract
Separate:
- ✅ Business expenses
- ❌ Personal expenses
🔹 Step 4: Adjust the GL
- Move business portion → expense accounts
- Keep rest → drawings
📦 📌 Workflow Box
💡 This process transforms a messy GL into accurate financials
⚖️ The Goal: Reduce the Drawings Balance
🧠 Why It Matters
At year-end:
👉 Remaining balance becomes:
- Salary 💰 OR
- Dividend 💸
📦 📌 Critical Insight Box
🚨 Higher drawings = higher taxable income
🧮 Example: Before vs After Analysis
❌ Before Analysis
- Drawings: $122,000
✅ After Analysis
| Category | Amount |
|---|---|
| Business expenses extracted | $30,000 |
| Remaining drawings | $92,000 |
👉 Tax is based on $92,000, not $122,000
📦 📌 Key Win Box
💡 Proper analysis can significantly reduce taxable income
🗣 Managing Client Expectations
😬 The Challenge
Client hears:
“You withdrew $122,000…”
🧠 Smart Approach
✔️ Don’t panic the client
✔️ Explain process step-by-step
✔️ Show reductions after analysis
📦 📌 Communication Tip Box
🎯 Always say:
“Let’s first see what we can deduct before finalizing your income.”
🚨 Common Beginner Mistakes
❌ Mistake 1: Treating GL as Final
👉 It’s only a starting point
❌ Mistake 2: Not Requesting Documents
👉 Leads to missed deductions
❌ Mistake 3: Assuming Everything Is Personal
👉 Overstates income
📦 📌 Warning Box
🚨 Skipping expense analysis = inaccurate tax results
🧠 Final Takeaways
✔️ GL shows raw financial activity
✔️ Drawings account is the key focus
✔️ Everything starts as personal
✔️ Then you extract business expenses
✔️ Final number determines compensation
🧾 Quick Summary Cheat Sheet
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 📊 Review GL | Identify drawings |
| 📄 Request docs | Credit cards, receipts |
| 🔍 Analyze | Separate business/personal |
| ⚖️ Adjust | Reclassify expenses |
| 💰 Finalize | Determine taxable income |
📦 📌 Ultimate Rule of Thumb
🔑 Never trust the initial numbers — the real tax story is revealed AFTER analysis.
Review of Owner-Manager Expense Reports & Transactions (Step-by-Step Guide) 📊💼
When working with corporate owner-managers, one of the most important real-world tasks is reviewing their expense reports and transactions.
This is where you:
- Clean up messy records 🧹
- Identify deductible expenses 💰
- Reduce shareholder loan balances 📉
- Prepare for accurate compensation planning 📊
👉 This section will walk you through a complete, practical workflow you can follow as a beginner tax preparer.
🎯 What is the Objective of Reviewing Expense Reports?
Before diving into numbers, understand the goal:
👉 Convert personal/business spending into valid corporate deductions
👉 Reduce the shareholder loan balance (debit)
👉 Prepare a clean base for salary/dividend planning
💡 In simple terms:
- More valid expenses = lower tax + lower shareholder debt
📂 Step 1: Collect All Documents from Client
A typical owner-manager (like “Scott”) will provide:
- 💳 Credit card statements (Visa, MasterCard, etc.)
- 🏦 Bank statements
- 🏠 Home office expense details
- 🚗 Vehicle mileage log
👉 These are your raw inputs
🧾 Step 2: Create an Expense Summary Sheet
A bookkeeper or you will:
- Go through every transaction line-by-line
- Extract only business-related expenses
- Summarize them into categories
Example Categories:
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| ✈️ Travel | Airfare, hotels |
| 🚗 Vehicle | Fuel, repairs |
| 📞 Telephone | Mobile bills |
| 🍽️ Meals | Business lunches |
| 🛡️ Insurance | Business insurance |
👉 This becomes your working spreadsheet
💳 Step 3: Reconcile Total Payments vs Business Expenses
Let’s say:
- Total payments to credit cards = $23,593
- Business expenses extracted = lower amount
👉 Important insight:
- Not all spending = deductible
- Remaining = personal → stays in shareholder loan
⚠️ Key Rule Box
📌 Only business expenses go to the company books
📌 Personal expenses remain in the shareholder loan account (debit)
🚗 Step 4: Vehicle Expense Calculation (Very Important)
Instead of guessing expenses, use kilometer method:
Example:
- Business kilometers = 13,375 km
- Rate = $0.49/km
👉 Vehicle expense =
13,375 × 0.49 = $6,553.75
🚫 Avoid Double Counting
If using kilometer method:
❌ Do NOT also claim:
- Fuel
- Repairs
- Insurance
👉 These must NOT be added again
📦 Pro Tip Box
✔ Use either:
- Kilometer method
OR - Actual expenses method
❌ Never both
🏠 Step 5: Home Office Expense Calculation
Home office is another major deduction opportunity.
Example Inputs:
- Mortgage interest
- Property tax
- Insurance
- Utilities
- Maintenance
Allocation:
- Office space = 12% of home
👉 Total home expenses × 12%
Example:
- Total home expenses → $31,467
- 12% = $3,776.04
📊 Step 6: Calculate Total Deductible Expenses
Now combine everything:
| Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Credit card business expenses | ~$9,000 |
| Vehicle expenses | ~$6,553 |
| Home office | ~$3,776 |
| Total deductions | ~$19,000+ |
💰 Step 7: Apply Credits to Shareholder Loan Account
This is the most important step.
👉 All valid expenses are:
- Debited to expense accounts
- Credited to shareholder loan
📉 What Does This Achieve?
If initial shareholder loan (debit) = $23,593
After adjustments:
- Minus expenses (~$19,000)
👉 New balance ≈ $4,500
🔥 Why This Step is Critical
Because:
- Lower loan balance = less taxable income later
- Less need for salary/dividend adjustments
- Cleaner financial statements
🧠 Step 8: Identify Non-Deductible Items
Some items must stay as personal:
- Dentist expenses
- Education fees
- Personal shopping
👉 These remain as debit balance
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Booking all credit card payments as expenses
🚫 Ignoring personal vs business separation
🚫 Double counting vehicle expenses
🚫 Not documenting mileage
🚫 Overclaiming home office percentage
📌 Journal Entry Concept (Simplified)
At the end, you will record:
👉 Debit: Expense accounts
👉 Credit: Shareholder loan
This aligns:
- Financial statements
- Tax reporting
- Shareholder balances
🧭 Big Picture: Why This Matters
This process directly impacts:
- 💰 Corporate tax
- 📊 Shareholder loan balance
- 🧾 Compensation strategy
- ⚖️ CRA compliance
📦 Expert Insight Box
👉 As a tax preparer, your role is NOT just data entry
Your real job is:
- Analyze transactions
- Identify deductions
- Reduce tax exposure
- Prepare for strategic planning
🌟 Final Takeaway
Reviewing expense reports is where:
👉 Accounting meets tax strategy
If you master this process, you will be able to:
- Clean messy books confidently
- Help clients save tax legally
- Prepare accurate compensation plans
🚀 Professional Growth Insight
Most beginners struggle here because:
👉 They try to “record transactions”
But professionals:
👉 Interpret transactions
That shift is what turns you into a
trusted tax advisor instead of just a bookkeeper.
Booking Transactions & Determining Final Compensation for Owner-Managers 📊💼
Once you’ve reviewed and cleaned up an owner-manager’s expenses, the next critical step is:
👉 Booking the transactions properly
👉 Determining the final compensation (salary or dividend)
This is where everything comes together — bookkeeping, tax, and strategy.
Let’s walk through this step-by-step so you can confidently apply it in real client situations.
🎯 What is the Goal of This Step?
At this stage, your objective is:
- Complete the income statement 📄
- Clean up the shareholder loan (drawings account) 📉
- Arrive at a final number for compensation planning 💰
💡 Think of it as:
Turning raw data → into a decision-ready number
📊 Step 1: Start with Cleaned Expense Data
From previous analysis, you should already have:
- Categorized business expenses
- Calculated vehicle expenses
- Calculated home office expenses
👉 Now, these need to be recorded in the General Ledger (GL)
🧾 Step 2: Book Business Expenses from Credit Cards
Let’s say total business expenses from credit cards = $8,886.21
✔️ Journal Entry:
| Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Travel, Telephone, Meals, Insurance | $8,886.21 | |
| Shareholder Drawings | $8,886.21 |
👉 Explanation:
- Expenses increase → Debit
- Shareholder loan decreases → Credit
📦 Expense Categories Example
- ✈️ Airfare → Travel
- 📞 Phone bills → Telephone expense
- 🍽️ Meals → Meals & entertainment
- 🛡️ Insurance → Commercial insurance
⚠️ Important Rule
🚫 Do NOT include vehicle fuel or insurance here if using km method
👉 Avoid double counting
🚗 Step 3: Book Vehicle Expense (Kilometer Method)
From earlier:
- Vehicle expense = $6,553.75
✔️ Journal Entry:
| Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Automobile Expense | $6,553.75 | |
| Shareholder Drawings | $6,553.75 |
👉 This reflects reimbursement to the owner
🏠 Step 4: Book Home Office Expense
From earlier:
- Home office expense = $3,776.04
✔️ Journal Entry:
| Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Rent / Office Expense | $3,776.04 | |
| Shareholder Drawings | $3,776.04 |
👉 This compensates the owner for using personal space
📉 Step 5: Understand the Impact on Shareholder Loan
Before adjustments:
- Shareholder draws = $122,002
After booking credits:
- Business expenses credited
- Vehicle credited
- Home office credited
👉 New balance ≈ $103,003
🔍 What Just Happened?
Let’s simplify:
| Description | Amount |
|---|---|
| Original withdrawals | $122,002 |
| Less: Expenses credited | ~$19,000 |
| Remaining balance | ~$103,000 |
👉 This remaining amount = personal withdrawals
📌 Key Insight Box
💡 Only personal portion stays in shareholder loan
💡 Business portion is removed through expenses
📊 Step 6: Review Trial Balance
Now check:
- Income statement is updated
- Expenses are correctly recorded
- Shareholder loan reflects true balance
👉 This gives you a clean and reliable number
💰 Step 7: Decide Final Compensation Strategy
Now comes the decision:
👉 How will the client clear the $103,000?
Options:
- Salary
- Dividend
- Combination
📘 Example Scenario (Dividend Option)
Client chooses dividends:
- Dividend declared = $103,003.02
✔️ Journal Entry:
| Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Shareholder Drawings | $103,003.02 | |
| Dividends Payable / Retained Earnings | $103,003.02 |
👉 This clears the shareholder loan completely
🎯 Why Use Exact Amount?
✔ Eliminates rounding differences
✔ Keeps balance sheet clean
✔ Avoids reconciliation issues
📊 Final Tax Impact Snapshot
| Type | Impact |
|---|---|
| Corporate tax | Based on remaining income |
| Personal tax | Dividend income taxed |
👉 Both must be analyzed together
⚠️ Common Beginner Mistakes
🚫 Not booking adjusting entries
🚫 Leaving shareholder loan uncleared
🚫 Using rough estimates instead of exact numbers
🚫 Mixing personal and business expenses
🚫 Ignoring vehicle/home office adjustments
📦 Pro Tip Box
✔ Always finalize bookkeeping BEFORE tax planning
✔ Never do compensation planning on messy numbers
✔ Clean GL = Accurate tax decisions
🧠 Big Picture Workflow
- Review transactions
- Identify business expenses
- Book journal entries
- Adjust shareholder loan
- Determine final balance
- Plan compensation
👉 This is your core workflow as a tax preparer
🌟 Final Takeaway
This step is where everything connects:
- 📊 Bookkeeping
- 💰 Tax planning
- 🧾 Compliance
- 🧠 Strategy
If you master this:
👉 You will confidently handle real client files
👉 You will avoid costly errors
👉 You will deliver professional-level advice
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginners focus on:
👉 Recording transactions
Professionals focus on:
👉 Interpreting and adjusting transactions for tax outcomes
That shift is what transforms you into a
trusted corporate tax advisor.
EI Rules for Owner-Managed Corporations: Shareholdings & Non-Arm’s Length Explained 💼📊
When learning tax planning for corporate owner-managers, you’ll hear a lot about CPP — but EI (Employment Insurance) is often ignored.
👉 Why? Because most owner-managers are exempt from EI.
But here’s the reality:
⚠️ EI rules can become tricky, confusing, and risky — especially when family members or shareholders are involved.
This guide will break it down in a simple, practical, and professional way so you can apply it confidently.
🎯 Why EI Matters in Tax Planning
Even though EI is often skipped:
- It still affects payroll compliance
- It impacts employee benefits eligibility
- It can trigger CRA reviews if done incorrectly
👉 As a tax preparer, you must know:
Who should pay EI and who should NOT
💡 What is EI (Employment Insurance)?
EI is a government program that provides:
- 💰 Income support during unemployment
- 👶 Maternity and parental benefits
- 🏥 Sickness benefits
👉 Employees pay EI premiums
👉 Employers match those premiums
📌 Important Rule Box
📌 Employee pays EI
📌 Employer pays 1.4× the employee EI
🚫 Why Owner-Managers Are Usually EI Exempt
Owner-managers typically:
- Control the business
- Decide their own employment
- Cannot be “laid off” in a real sense
👉 Without rules, they could:
- Work for a few months
- Lay themselves off
- Collect EI benefits
❌ This is NOT allowed
📊 Rule 1: Shareholding Test (40% Rule)
This is the first and most important test.
✔️ If ownership is MORE than 40%:
👉 EI exempt automatically
❌ If ownership is LESS than 40%:
👉 EI may apply (but not always)
📊 Example 1: Shareholding Rule
| Person | Ownership | EI Status |
|---|---|---|
| Scott | 60% | EI exempt |
| Janet | 40% | EI exempt |
| Janet (39%) | 39% | EI applies |
👉 That 40% threshold is critical
⚠️ Important Insight
👉 40% is a bright-line rule
👉 Even 1% difference can change EI treatment
🔄 Rule 2: Non-Arm’s Length (Family Relationship Rule)
Even if ownership is below 40%:
👉 You may STILL be exempt from EI
Condition:
- Individuals are not dealing at arm’s length
👨👩👧 What Does Non-Arm’s Length Mean?
It means:
- Related by family
- Influence or control exists
- Not independent parties
📊 Example 2: Spouses
| Person | Ownership | Relationship | EI Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scott | 80% | Husband | EI exempt |
| Janet | 20% | Wife | EI exempt |
👉 Even though Janet owns only 20%
👉 She is still EI exempt because of relationship
📦 Why This Rule Exists
💡 To prevent abuse of the EI system:
Without this rule:
- Family members could be “employed”
- Then “laid off”
- Then collect EI
👉 Government blocks this using non-arm’s length rules
⚖️ Combining Both Rules (Decision Framework)
Here’s how you decide:
Step 1: Check ownership
- Above 40% → EI exempt
- Below 40% → go to Step 2
Step 2: Check relationship
- Non-arm’s length → EI exempt
- Arm’s length → EI applies
🧠 Simple Decision Table
| Ownership | Relationship | EI Status |
|---|---|---|
| >40% | Any | Exempt |
| <40% | Non-arm’s length | Exempt |
| <40% | Arm’s length | EI applies |
👶 Real-Life Scenario: Family Members
Let’s say:
- Son works in family business
- Owns 10% shares
👉 What happens?
- Ownership < 40%
- Family relationship exists
✔ Likely EI exempt
🤔 What If Someone WANTS EI?
This happens more often than you think.
Example:
- Employee wants maternity benefits
- Wants to contribute to EI
👉 Problem:
- If non-arm’s length → EI may NOT be allowed
⚠️ Reverse Scenario: Avoiding EI
Sometimes clients ask:
👉 “Can I avoid EI?”
If:
- Ownership < 40%
- Arm’s length
👉 EI is mandatory
📢 Key Professional Insight
You cannot “choose” EI freely.
👉 It depends on:
- Ownership structure
- Relationship
- Nature of employment
🧾 What If You’re Not Sure? (Rulings)
In complex cases:
👉 You can request a ruling from CRA / Service Canada
📦 Ruling Request Use Cases
✔ Unclear relationship
✔ Complex ownership
✔ Family business structures
✔ Mixed roles (employee + shareholder)
💡 Pro Tip Box
✔ Always document:
- Shareholding percentage
- Relationship details
- Employment role
👉 This protects you during CRA review
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Assuming all owner-managers are EI exempt
🚫 Ignoring shareholding percentage
🚫 Ignoring family relationships
🚫 Incorrectly charging EI premiums
🚫 Not seeking rulings when unsure
🧭 Big Picture: Why This Matters
EI decisions affect:
- 💰 Payroll costs
- 📊 Compliance
- 🧾 Employee benefits eligibility
- ⚖️ CRA audits
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 EI is not just a payroll detail — it is a legal classification issue
To get it right:
- Understand ownership
- Understand relationships
- Apply rules carefully
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “Do I deduct EI or not?”
Professional mindset:
👉 “Does this relationship qualify as arm’s length under EI law?”
That shift is what makes you a
confident and trusted tax advisor.
What If a Family Member Wants to Pay EI & Collect Benefits? (Advanced EI Planning Guide) 👩💼📊
In most corporate tax planning discussions, you’ll hear:
👉 “Owner-managers and family members are EI exempt.”
But what if:
👉 A family member WANTS to pay EI premiums
👉 And wants access to benefits like maternity leave, parental leave, or unemployment benefits
This creates a very practical and common real-world scenario — especially in family-run businesses.
Let’s break this down step-by-step so you can confidently advise clients.
🎯 The Core Problem
Normally:
- Family members are not at arm’s length
- Therefore → EI exempt
But:
👉 Some individuals WANT:
- 👶 Maternity benefits
- 🏥 Sickness benefits
- 💼 Unemployment protection
So the question becomes:
❓ Can a family member still qualify for EI benefits?
💡 The Short Answer
👉 Yes — but only if specific conditions are met
And the key requirement is:
📌 The individual must be treated like a true arm’s length employee
⚖️ Understanding the Challenge
CRA assumes:
- Family members = special treatment
- Special treatment = NOT insurable
- Not insurable = NO EI
👉 Your job is to prove the opposite
🧠 Key Concept: “Substance Over Relationship”
Even if someone is related:
👉 If they are treated like a normal employee
👉 They can be considered arm’s length in practice
👩💼 Real-Life Example
Let’s say:
- Andrew owns a company
- His niece works full-time
She wants:
- EI coverage
- Future maternity benefits
❓ Problem
She is related → EI exempt by default
✅ Solution
You must prove she is treated like any other employee
📋 Conditions to Qualify for EI
To make earnings insurable, you must show:
✔️ Equal Treatment
- Same working hours (e.g., 9 to 5)
- Same attendance rules
- Same performance expectations
✔️ Same Compensation Structure
- Same salary structure
- Same bonus policies
- Same raises and evaluations
✔️ Same Benefits
- Same vacation policy
- Same sick leave
- Same employment terms
📦 Key Requirement Box
📌 No special treatment
📌 No preferential benefits
📌 No informal arrangements
👉 Must be identical to arm’s length employees
📝 Step-by-Step: How to Make EI Possible
Step 1: Identify the situation
- Family member wants EI eligibility
Step 2: Analyze employment conditions
- Compare with regular employees
Step 3: Prepare documentation
- Job description
- Work hours
- Payroll records
- HR policies
Step 4: Request CRA / Service Canada ruling
🧾 What is a Ruling?
A ruling is:
👉 A formal decision from CRA or Service Canada
It confirms:
- Whether earnings are insurable
- Whether EI premiums should be paid
📊 Possible Outcomes
| Scenario | Result |
|---|---|
| CRA agrees employee is arm’s length | EI applies |
| CRA disagrees | EI exempt |
⚠️ Important Reality Check
👉 Approval is not guaranteed
The closer the relationship:
- Child 👶 → harder
- Spouse 💑 → harder
- Niece/Nephew → easier
📌 Practical Insight
👉 Relationship strength affects outcome
| Relationship | Difficulty Level |
|---|---|
| Employee (no relation) | Easy |
| Niece/Nephew | Moderate |
| Child/Spouse | Difficult |
🚨 Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Assuming family members can automatically opt into EI
🚫 Not documenting employment conditions
🚫 Giving informal benefits
🚫 Skipping the ruling process
🚫 Treating family differently in practice
💰 Why Clients Ask for This
Clients usually want EI for:
- 👶 Maternity/parental benefits
- 🏥 Sickness leave
- 💼 Income protection
📦 Strategic Planning Tip
👉 This is NOT just payroll — it is benefit planning
You are helping clients:
- Access government programs
- Manage risk
- Plan for life events
🧭 When Should You Recommend This?
Recommend EI inclusion when:
- Employee genuinely works full-time
- Business has structured HR policies
- Client values benefits over savings
- Future maternity or leave is expected
⚖️ Trade-Off Analysis
| Factor | EI Participation |
|---|---|
| Payroll cost | Higher |
| Benefits access | Yes |
| Flexibility | Lower |
| Compliance | Higher requirement |
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 EI is not automatic — it is earned through structure
To make a family member eligible:
- Treat them like a real employee
- Document everything
- Get a ruling
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “They are family, so no EI”
Professional mindset:
👉 “Can we structure this relationship to qualify for EI?”
That shift turns you into a
strategic tax advisor who solves real-life problems.
What If a Family Member Does NOT Want to Pay EI Premiums? (Advanced EI Exemption Strategy) 🚫💼
In corporate tax planning, you’ll often encounter the opposite situation:
👉 Instead of wanting EI benefits…
👉 The client wants to avoid paying EI premiums altogether
This is very common in family-owned businesses, where:
- The owner believes EI is unnecessary
- The employee (family member) does not expect to claim benefits
- The goal is to reduce payroll costs
Let’s break this down into a clear, practical, and professional framework so you can confidently advise your clients.
🎯 The Core Situation
Let’s take a simple scenario:
- A business owner employs a family member (e.g., niece, son, spouse)
- The family member is currently paying EI premiums
- The owner says: “This is a waste of money. I don’t want to pay EI.”
👉 Now the question becomes:
❓ Can we make them EI exempt?
💡 The Short Answer
👉 Yes — if you can prove the employment is NOT arm’s length
This is the opposite approach of making someone EI eligible.
⚖️ Understanding the Strategy Shift
When you WANT EI:
👉 Prove employee is treated like everyone else
When you DO NOT WANT EI:
👉 Prove employee is treated differently
🧠 Key Concept: Non-Arm’s Length Employment
To qualify for EI exemption, you must show:
📌 The employee is not dealing at arm’s length
This usually means:
- Family relationship
- Influence or control exists
- Different employment conditions
📋 How to Prove EI Exemption
To make earnings non-insurable, you must demonstrate:
❌ Different Working Conditions
- No fixed work hours
- No strict attendance requirements
- Flexible schedule
❌ Different Responsibilities
- Access to sensitive areas (keys, banking access)
- Higher level responsibilities
- Managerial or trusted roles
❌ Different Treatment
- Not subject to same rules as employees
- Informal arrangements
- Special privileges
📦 Key Strategy Box
📌 Show they are NOT like regular employees
📌 Emphasize control, flexibility, and trust
📌 Highlight family relationship influence
👩💼 Real-Life Example
Let’s revisit:
- Andrew owns a company
- His niece works in the business
❌ Goal: Avoid EI premiums
To achieve this, you would present:
- She does not follow standard 9–5 schedule
- She does not clock in or out
- She handles sensitive tasks like bookkeeping and banking
- She has keys to the office
- She operates more like a manager than an employee
👉 Conclusion:
She is not treated like an arm’s length employee
📝 Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Identify the situation
- Family member currently paying EI
Step 2: Analyze employment conditions
- Look for differences vs regular employees
Step 3: Prepare supporting documentation
- Job responsibilities
- Work flexibility
- Level of control
Step 4: Request ruling from CRA / Service Canada
🧾 What is a Ruling?
A ruling is a formal decision that determines:
- Whether earnings are insurable
- Whether EI premiums are required
📊 Possible Outcomes
| Scenario | Result |
|---|---|
| CRA agrees non-arm’s length | EI exempt |
| CRA disagrees | EI required |
💰 Bonus Strategy: EI Refund Opportunity
Here’s where things get interesting.
👉 If EI was paid incorrectly in the past…
You may be able to:
💸 Recover EI premiums already paid
📊 Example
- Niece worked for 3 years
- EI premiums paid each year
👉 After ruling:
- CRA confirms EI exemption
✔ You can apply for:
- Refund of employee EI
- Refund of employer EI
📦 Refund Insight Box
💡 Both employer and employee contributions can be refunded
💡 This can result in significant cash recovery
⚠️ Important Limitation
- Refund claims must follow CRA timelines
- Professional fees must be reasonable
- Cannot charge excessive percentage-based fees
🧭 When Should You Consider This Strategy?
Use this approach when:
- Family member does NOT need EI benefits
- Employment is clearly non-arm’s length
- Business wants to reduce payroll costs
- Long-term employment is expected
⚖️ Trade-Off Analysis
| Factor | EI Exemption |
|---|---|
| Payroll cost | Lower |
| Access to EI benefits | None |
| Compliance requirement | High |
| Documentation needed | Strong |
🚨 Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Assuming all family members are automatically exempt
🚫 Not documenting differences in employment
🚫 Treating them exactly like regular employees
🚫 Skipping the ruling process
🚫 Ignoring refund opportunities
📌 Professional Workflow
👉 When onboarding a new client:
- Identify family members on payroll
- Review EI deductions historically
- Analyze employment conditions
- Consider exemption strategy
- Request ruling if applicable
- Explore refund opportunities
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 EI exemption is not automatic — it must be proven
To make it work:
- Show non-arm’s length relationship
- Demonstrate different working conditions
- Support with documentation
- Obtain a formal ruling
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “They are family, so no EI”
Professional mindset:
👉 “Can I justify EI exemption based on employment conditions?”
That shift is what makes you a
strategic and high-value tax advisor.
Paying $500 Non-Cash Gifts to Employees (Including Owner-Managers) 🎁💼
One of the simplest and most tax-efficient ways to reward employees — including owner-managers — is through the $500 non-cash gift rule.
This is a powerful but often misunderstood strategy that allows:
👉 Employees to receive tax-free benefits
👉 Corporations to claim a tax deduction
If used correctly, this becomes a win-win strategy in compensation planning.
Let’s break this down in a clear, practical, and beginner-friendly way so you can apply it confidently.
🎯 What is the $500 Non-Cash Gift Rule?
The CRA allows employers to:
🎁 Give employees non-cash gifts up to $500 per year
💰 Without creating a taxable benefit
✔️ Key Benefits:
- Employee pays NO tax
- Employer gets a deduction
- Simple and easy to implement
📌 Important Conditions (Must Follow Strictly)
To qualify for tax-free treatment, ALL conditions must be met:
✅ 1. Must Be Non-Cash
- Physical items only
- Goods or services
❌ NOT allowed:
- Cash
- Gift cards
- Gift certificates
✅ 2. Maximum Limit = $500 (Including Tax)
- Total value must be ≤ $500
- This includes HST/GST
✅ 3. Once Per Year
- Only one gift per year qualifies
- Cannot split into multiple smaller gifts
📦 Quick Rule Box
📌 Non-cash only
📌 Max $500 including tax
📌 Once per year
👉 Break any rule → becomes taxable benefit
👩💼 Can Owner-Managers Use This?
Yes — and this is where it gets interesting.
👉 Owner-managers can also receive this benefit
👉 BUT only if they are treated as employees
⚠️ Critical Condition for Owner-Managers
👉 The gift must be given to ALL employees, not just the owner
If:
- Only owner receives gift ❌
👉 It becomes a shareholder benefit (taxable)
📌 Section 15 Risk
If misused:
- CRA may apply Section 15(1)
- Treat it as shareholder benefit
- Fully taxable
📊 Example
| Scenario | Result |
|---|---|
| All employees get $500 gift | Non-taxable |
| Only owner gets $500 gift | Taxable |
| Gift exceeds $500 | Taxable |
🎁 What Qualifies as a Non-Cash Gift?
Here are some valid examples:
- 🎧 Headphones
- 📱 Tablet or device
- 🛍️ Retail items
- 🧥 Clothing
- 🍽️ Restaurant-paid experience
❌ What Does NOT Qualify?
| Item | Allowed? |
|---|---|
| Cash | ❌ No |
| Gift cards | ❌ No |
| Gift certificates | ❌ No |
| Reimbursements without proof | ❌ No |
🧠 Why Gift Cards Are Not Allowed
Because:
👉 Gift cards are treated like cash equivalents
CRA wants:
- A specific item purchased
- Not open-ended spending
💡 Practical Ways to Implement This
There are several ways to apply this rule correctly:
🛒 Option 1: Employer Purchases Gift
- Business buys item directly
- Gives it to employee
✔ Clean
✔ Simple
✔ Fully compliant
🧾 Option 2: Employee Purchases & Gets Reimbursed
- Employee buys item (< $500)
- Submits receipt
- Employer reimburses
✔ Allowed
✔ Must have proper receipt
💳 Option 3: Owner Pays via Corporate Card
- Employee selects item
- Owner purchases using business card
✔ Valid if documented properly
📦 Pro Tip Box
✔ Always keep receipts
✔ Ensure item value ≤ $500
✔ Record properly in books
⚠️ Strict Rule: Cannot Exceed $500
This is VERY important.
👉 Even $1 over → entire benefit becomes taxable
📊 Example
| Cost | Result |
|---|---|
| $495 | Non-taxable |
| $500 | Non-taxable |
| $510 | Fully taxable |
🚨 Real-World Insight
Some auditors are strict:
👉 Even if employee pays the extra amount
👉 CRA may still deny exemption
💡 Best practice:
Stay below $500 always
🎯 Can Employee Add Their Own Money?
This is tricky.
👉 Example:
- TV costs $600
- Employer pays $500
- Employee pays $100
❌ Not allowed
👉 CRA may treat entire amount as taxable
🧠 Why This Rule Exists
CRA wants:
- Clear, simple benefits
- No manipulation of limits
- No disguised compensation
🏆 Bonus: Long-Service Awards
In addition to annual gifts:
👉 Employees may receive non-taxable awards:
- For years of service
- Typically every 5 years
💡 These are separate from the $500 gift rule
💰 Tax Treatment Summary
| Party | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Employee | No tax |
| Employer | Deductible expense |
📊 Accounting Treatment
👉 Record as:
- Employee benefits expense
- Or staff welfare expense
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Giving gift cards instead of items
🚫 Exceeding $500 limit
🚫 Giving benefit only to owner
🚫 Not keeping receipts
🚫 Treating reimbursement casually
🧭 When Should You Use This Strategy?
This works best:
- At year-end (holiday gifts)
- For employee motivation
- As part of compensation planning
- For owner-manager personal benefit (properly structured)
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 The $500 non-cash gift rule is a simple but powerful tax strategy
If used correctly:
- Employees feel rewarded
- Owners get deductions
- No tax complications
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “It’s just a small gift”
Professional mindset:
👉 “This is a structured, tax-free compensation tool”
That shift turns you into a
smart and strategic tax advisor.
Can Owner-Managers Claim Employment Expenses? (Opportunities, Risks & CRA Focus) 🚗📊
This is one of the most powerful — yet risky — tax planning strategies for corporate owner-managers.
At first glance, it seems simple:
👉 Instead of claiming expenses inside the corporation
👉 Claim them personally as employment expenses
But here’s the catch:
⚠️ The CRA is actively reviewing and challenging this approach
This section will give you a complete, practical understanding so you can apply it properly and avoid costly mistakes.
🎯 What Is the Strategy?
Normally:
- Business expenses → claimed by the corporation
- Deduction at corporate tax rate (~12–15%)
Alternative strategy:
👉 Pay salary to owner-manager
👉 Claim expenses personally as employment expenses
✔ Deduction at personal tax rate (~30–50%)
💡 Why This Strategy Exists
Because:
| Type | Deduction Rate |
|---|---|
| Corporate expense | ~15% |
| Personal (employment) expense | ~40%+ |
👉 Same expense → much higher tax savings personally
📊 Simple Example (Vehicle Expense Strategy)
Let’s assume:
- Salary = $100,000
- Additional allowance = $6,000
- Total income = $106,000
🚗 Scenario 1: Corporate Deduction
- Corporation deducts: ~$12,400
- Tax savings at 15% ≈ $1,860
🚗 Scenario 2: Personal Employment Expense
- Personal deduction: ~$18,000
- Tax savings at 40% ≈ $7,200
🔥 Result:
👉 Extra savings ≈ $5,000+
📦 Key Insight Box
💡 Same expense
💡 Different location
💡 HUGE difference in tax savings
📋 How This Strategy Works (Step-by-Step)
🧾 Step 1: Pay Salary Instead of Pure Dividends
- Owner-manager must receive T4 income
- This creates eligibility for employment expenses
📄 Step 2: Issue T2200 Form
This form confirms:
👉 Employee is required to incur expenses
For owner-managers:
- They control the company
- They can sign their own T2200
📊 Step 3: Claim Expenses Using T777
Common expenses:
- 🚗 Vehicle
- 📱 Cell phone
- 🖥️ Office supplies
- 🅿️ Parking
🚗 Step 4: Example – Vehicle Expenses
Let’s say:
- Total expenses = $20,000
- Business use = 90%
👉 Deduction:
- $20,000 × 90% = $18,000
📌 Important Requirement
👉 Must maintain:
- Mileage log
- Receipts
- Expense breakdown
⚖️ Why CRA Is Concerned
This strategy looks too good — and CRA noticed.
👉 Owner-managers are:
- Both employer AND employee
- Able to control conditions
🚨 CRA Argument
CRA may say:
“Owner-managers do NOT have real conditions of employment”
❓ Why This Matters
To claim employment expenses:
👉 Expenses must be required as a condition of employment
⚠️ CRA Position
- Real employees → valid conditions
- Owner-managers → questionable
📦 CRA Risk Box
📌 “Can you fire yourself?”
📌 “Are these real employment conditions?”
📌 “Is this artificial tax planning?”
🔄 What Actually Happened (Important History)
- CRA started disallowing these expenses
- Many reassessments issued
- Accountants challenged CRA
👉 Result:
- CRA backed off temporarily
- Deductions reinstated
⚠️ BUT HERE’S THE BIG WARNING
👉 CRA is still reviewing this area
This means:
- Future audits likely
- Possible rule changes
- Higher scrutiny
📊 Risk Level Summary
| Factor | Risk Level |
|---|---|
| Corporate deduction | Low |
| Employment expense (owner-manager) | Medium to High |
🧠 When This Strategy Makes Sense
Use cautiously when:
- Owner is in high tax bracket
- Expenses are significant
- Proper documentation exists
- Client understands risk
🚫 When to Avoid This Strategy
Avoid when:
- Poor record keeping
- Small expense amounts
- Client is risk-averse
- CRA audit risk is high
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 No mileage log
🚫 Weak or generic T2200
🚫 Claiming excessive expenses
🚫 Mixing personal and business use
🚫 Assuming CRA will always accept
📦 Pro Tip Box
✔ Always document “condition of employment” clearly
✔ Keep strong records
✔ Be conservative in claims
✔ Explain risks to client
🧭 Alternative Approach (Safer Option)
Instead of personal deduction:
👉 Claim expenses inside corporation
✔ Lower tax savings
✔ Much lower risk
📊 Strategy Comparison
| Strategy | Tax Savings | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate deduction | Lower | Low |
| Employment expense | Higher | Higher |
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 This strategy is powerful — but not guaranteed
You must balance:
- 💰 Tax savings
- ⚖️ Compliance
- ⚠️ Audit risk
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “This gives higher deduction, so use it”
Professional mindset:
👉 “Is this defensible if CRA reviews it?”
👉 That mindset shift is what turns you into a
trusted and strategic tax advisor
Claiming Management Fees or Other Employment Income on T1 (Why It’s NOT Recommended) ⚠️📄
When preparing tax returns for corporate owner-managers — especially late filings or messy records — you may feel tempted to “fix things quickly.”
One of the most common shortcuts used in the past was:
👉 Reporting income directly on the T1 return (Line 104 or business income)
👉 Instead of properly issuing T4 or T5
⚠️ This approach may seem convenient…
But it can lead to serious tax issues, CRA reassessments, and penalties
Let’s break this down in a clear, practical, and beginner-friendly way so you understand why to avoid it completely.
🎯 The Situation: Late or Missing Payroll Planning
You may encounter this scenario:
- Client took money from corporation (e.g., $100,000)
- No payroll was set up
- No T4 issued
- Now it’s time to file taxes
👉 Question:
❓ “Can we just report this income on the T1 and move on?”
💡 The Temptation (What Accountants Used to Do)
Instead of fixing payroll, some would:
👉 Report income on Line 104 (Other Employment Income)
📊 Example
- Owner withdrew: $100,000
- Reported on T1 → Line 104
✔ Income is reported
✔ Tax is paid
👉 Seems okay… right?
🚨 Problem #1: CPP Is NOT Paid
This is the biggest issue.
📌 What happens?
- Line 104 does NOT trigger CPP automatically
- CRA expects CPP on employment income
📊 Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Income reported | $100,000 |
| CPP required | ~$5,500 |
👉 Result:
- CRA reassesses
- Adds CPP
- Adds penalties
- Adds interest
📦 CPP Risk Box
📌 Missing CPP = automatic CRA attention
📌 Leads to reassessment + penalties
📌 Very common audit trigger
🚨 Problem #2: CRA “Line 104 Project”
CRA actively monitors this.
👉 They will:
- Call or send letter
- Ask: “What is this income?”
- Investigate source
⚠️ What Happens Next?
If you say:
👉 “This is salary from my corporation”
CRA response:
- “Where is the T4?”
- “Where is CPP?”
👉 Then reassessment follows
🚨 Problem #3: Late T4 Penalties Still Apply
Even if you report income:
👉 CRA may still require:
- T4 filing
- Payroll corrections
💰 Result:
- CPP payable
- Late filing penalties
- Interest
❌ Alternative Attempt: Report as Self-Employment Income (T2125)
Some accountants tried another workaround:
👉 Report income as business income (T2125)
✔ What This Fixes
- CPP gets calculated
- No Line 104 issue
❌ New Problem Created
👉 HST/GST issue
🚨 Problem #4: HST Registration & Liability
If reported as business income:
👉 CRA may say:
- You are a self-employed contractor
- You should have charged HST
📊 Example
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Income | $100,000 |
| HST (13%) | $13,000 |
👉 CRA may assess:
- $13,000 HST
- Plus penalties
- Plus interest
📦 HST Risk Box
📌 Self-employment = HST exposure
📌 Over $30,000 → mandatory registration
📌 Even related-party transactions may trigger rules
⚠️ Even Small Amounts Are Not Safe
You might think:
👉 “What if income is below $30,000?”
Still risky because:
- Associated corporations may already be registered
- HST rules apply at group level
📊 Summary of Bad Approaches
| Method | Problem |
|---|---|
| Line 104 income | CPP reassessment |
| T2125 business income | HST liability |
| No reporting | Tax evasion risk |
✅ Correct Approach (Always Recommended)
👉 Use proper compensation methods:
✔ Option 1: Salary
- Issue T4
- Deduct CPP
- Full compliance
✔ Option 2: Dividends
- Issue T5
- No CPP
- Simpler administration
📦 Best Practice Box
📌 Always follow proper structure
📌 Use T4 or T5
📌 Avoid shortcuts
💰 What About Late Filing?
Many beginners worry:
👉 “What if it’s too late to issue T4?”
✔ Reality:
- Late T4 penalties are usually small
- Example: ~$100 for small businesses
👉 MUCH cheaper than:
- CPP reassessment
- HST penalties
- CRA audits
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Using Line 104 for corporate income
🚫 Treating owner as contractor
🚫 Ignoring CPP obligations
🚫 Ignoring HST implications
🚫 Trying to “fix” things at T1 level
🧭 Practical Workflow for Tax Preparers
When you receive a messy file:
- Identify withdrawals
- Decide salary vs dividend
- Issue proper slips (T4/T5)
- File late if needed
- Accept small penalties
- Avoid risky shortcuts
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 There are NO shortcuts in tax planning
What seems like a quick fix:
- Line 104
- T2125 workaround
👉 Almost always leads to:
- CRA scrutiny
- Additional taxes
- Client frustration
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “Just report income and move on”
Professional mindset:
👉 “Structure it correctly, even if it’s late”
👉 That mindset is what makes you a
trusted, reliable, and audit-safe tax advisor
Factoring in Other Costs: WSIB and EHT in Owner-Manager Tax Planning ⚠️💼
When learning compensation planning for corporate owner-managers, most beginners focus only on:
👉 Salary vs Dividend
👉 Income tax
👉 CPP and EI
But here’s what separates a beginner from a professional:
✅ Professionals factor in ALL payroll-related costs — including hidden ones like WSIB and EHT
These additional costs can significantly change your planning decisions.
Let’s break this down in a clear, practical, and beginner-friendly way so you can apply it confidently.
🎯 Why These Additional Costs Matter
When you choose salary as compensation:
👉 It’s not just salary + CPP
There may also be:
- 🛡️ WSIB premiums
- 🏥 Employer Health Tax (EHT)
- 💼 Other provincial payroll levies
👉 These increase the true cost of salary
📊 Big Picture: Salary Cost Breakdown
| Component | Applies? | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Salary | Yes | Base compensation |
| CPP | Yes | Mandatory |
| EI | Sometimes | Depends on eligibility |
| WSIB | Industry-based | Can be significant |
| EHT | Payroll threshold-based | Adds extra % |
👉 Total cost can be much higher than expected
🛡️ WSIB (Workplace Safety and Insurance Board)
💡 What is WSIB?
WSIB is a mandatory insurance program in many provinces for certain industries.
👉 It provides:
- Workplace injury coverage
- Income replacement benefits
- Medical support
⚠️ When Does WSIB Apply?
WSIB is industry-specific
Example industries:
- Construction
- Roofing
- Manufacturing
👉 In these industries:
WSIB is often mandatory
📊 WSIB Cost Example
Let’s say:
- WSIB rate = 6%
- Salary = $100,000
👉 WSIB cost:
- $100,000 × 6% = $6,000
📦 WSIB Insight Box
📌 WSIB is paid by employer
📌 Rate depends on industry risk
📌 Higher risk industry = higher premium
🧠 Real-World Insight
Some industries have very high WSIB rates
Example:
| Industry | WSIB Rate |
|---|---|
| Office work | Low |
| Construction | Medium |
| Roofing | High (can be ~8% or more) |
⚠️ Planning Impact
If you choose salary:
👉 WSIB adds to total cost
📊 Example Scenario
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Salary | $100,000 |
| CPP | ~$5,500 |
| WSIB (8%) | $8,000 |
| Total Cost | ~$113,500 |
👉 Salary is no longer “just $100,000”
🏥 Employer Health Tax (EHT)
💡 What is EHT?
EHT is a provincial payroll tax (example: Ontario).
👉 It is paid by the employer based on total payroll.
📌 When Does EHT Apply?
In Ontario:
👉 Applies when payroll exceeds:
💰 $400,000 annually
📊 EHT Rate
- Approx: 1.95% to 2%
📊 Example
If payroll = $500,000
👉 EHT applies on excess:
- $500,000 – $400,000 = $100,000
- EHT = ~$2,000
📦 EHT Insight Box
📌 Small businesses often exempt
📌 Large payroll → EHT becomes significant
📌 Must be considered in planning
⚠️ Bonus Planning Trap (Very Important)
This is where beginners often make mistakes.
📊 Scenario
- Current payroll = $380,000
- Owner wants bonus = $100,000
👉 New payroll:
- $380,000 + $100,000 = $480,000
❗ What Happens?
👉 EHT is triggered on:
- $480,000 – $400,000 = $80,000
👉 EHT cost:
- ~$1,600
🧠 Planning Insight
Instead of bonus:
👉 Consider dividend
✔ Avoids EHT
✔ Reduces payroll cost
🔄 Combining WSIB + EHT (Real Impact)
Let’s look at a high-cost scenario.
📊 Example: Roofing Business
- Salary = $100,000
- WSIB = 8% → $8,000
- EHT = 2% → $2,000
💰 Total Additional Cost
| Cost Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| WSIB | $8,000 |
| EHT | $2,000 |
| Total Extra Cost | $10,000 |
🚨 Final Salary Cost
- Base salary = $100,000
- Additional costs = $10,000
👉 Total = $110,000
📦 Key Insight Box
💡 Salary planning is NOT just tax
💡 It includes payroll burden
💡 These costs can change decisions
🌍 Provincial Differences (Very Important)
Each province has:
- Different WSIB rules
- Different payroll taxes
- Different thresholds
📌 As a Tax Preparer
You must:
👉 Check rules in your province
📦 Pro Tip Box
✔ Always research local payroll taxes
✔ Understand industry-specific rules
✔ Stay updated on thresholds
⚠️ Common Mistakes to Avoid
🚫 Ignoring WSIB in high-risk industries
🚫 Forgetting EHT thresholds
🚫 Overusing salary without cost analysis
🚫 Not considering bonuses triggering EHT
🚫 Assuming CPP is the only cost
🧭 Practical Workflow for Planning
When advising a client:
- Identify industry
- Check WSIB applicability
- Calculate WSIB rate
- Check total payroll
- Evaluate EHT exposure
- Compare salary vs dividend
- Recommend optimal mix
📊 Strategy Comparison
| Factor | Salary | Dividend |
|---|---|---|
| CPP | Yes | No |
| WSIB | Maybe | No |
| EHT | Maybe | No |
| Admin | High | Low |
| Flexibility | Medium | High |
🌟 Final Takeaway
👉 Salary is not just a tax decision — it is a cost decision
To plan properly:
- Include CPP
- Include EI (if applicable)
- Include WSIB
- Include EHT
🚀 Professional Insight
Beginner mindset:
👉 “Salary is $100,000”
Professional mindset:
👉 “What is the TOTAL cost of that $100,000 salary?”
👉 That shift is what turns you into a
strategic and high-value tax advisor

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