๐ How to Use This Guide
This guide may look lengthy, but don’t scroll through it from top to bottom. Instead, use the Table of Contents below to jump directly to any section you need.
๐ After finishing a section, don’t scroll back up. Use the Back to Top button floating at the bottom-right corner of your screen to quickly return to the Table of Contents and navigate to the next section.

๐ฅ Each section also includes a YouTube video explanation from our channel. For the best learning experience, we recommend watching the video first before reading the notes.
โถ๏ธ Rather than playing the video on the website, click the “Watch on YouTube” button at the bottom-right of the video for better clarity and viewing controls.

๐งญ Follow the sections in the recommended order whenever possible. The concepts build on one another, and later sections often rely on ideas explained earlier.
๐ก Don’t worry if some tax terms or concepts seem confusing at first. If you continue through the lessons in order, most of those concepts will become clear naturally as you progress through the guide.
Table of Contents
- ๐ผ Exploring Canadaโs RDTOH Reforms: Old Refund Rules vs. New ERDTOH and NERDTOH Dividend Planning Strategies
- ๐ Deep Dive into GRIP, LRIP & Schedule 53: Building Eligible Dividend Capacity in Canadian Corporate Tax Planning
- ๐ข Case Study: Building Eligible Dividend Capacity โ Amco Windows & Doors and GRIP Strategy in Canadian Corporate Tax Planning
- โ ๏ธ Avoiding Expensive Tax Traps: How Excess Eligible Dividends and Part III.1 Penalties Work in Canadian Corporations (with Solutions & Case Study)
- ๐ก Unlocking NERDTOH Refunds: Amco Windows & Doors Investment Income Strategy for Effective Dividend Planning & Tax Recovery
- ๐ต Amco Windows & Doors: Unlocking ERDTOH Flexibility with Eligible Dividend Income for Optimal Corporate Dividend Planning
- ๐ ERDTOH Flexibility Unlocked: What Happens If Amco Receives Non-Eligible Dividends? (Debunking Myths and Mastering Refund Rules in Canadian Corporate Tax Planning)
- ๐งพ Case Study: Optimizing Eligible vs Non-Eligible Dividends for Barnes Dentistry PC โ Finding the Best Tax-Efficient Dividend Mix with ERDTOH & NERDTOH Balances
- ๐ฏ Optimizing Dividend Strategy for Professional Corporations: Maximizing Refunds and Minimizing Tax for Barnes Dentistry (NERDTOH, ERDTOH & GRIP Best Practices Explained)
- ๐ง Comprehensive Guide to ERDTOH vs NERDTOH Rules and the Professional Thought Process for Corporate Dividend Tax Planning
๐ผ Exploring Canadaโs RDTOH Reforms: Old Refund Rules vs. New ERDTOH and NERDTOH Dividend Planning Strategies
Understanding how corporations recover refundable taxes through dividends is crucial for any tax preparer. This section breaks down the evolution from the old RDTOH system to the new ERDTOH & NERDTOH regime, in a way that is beginner-friendly but deep enough to serve as a long-term reference.
Video Explanation
๐ง What Is RDTOH (Refundable Dividend Tax on Hand)?
๐ RDTOH is a notional account that tracks refundable taxes a corporation has paid on certain types of income (mainly investment income).
๐ก Key Idea:
The government allows corporations to recover part of the tax paid when they distribute profits as dividends.
๐ How Does a Corporation Get the Refund?
A corporation must pay dividends to shareholders to trigger the refund.
๐ Refund Formula:
- Refund = 38.33% of dividends paid
- Subject to available RDTOH balance
๐๏ธ Old RDTOH Regime (Pre-2019 Rules)
โ Simple & Flexible System
Under the old system:
โ Only one RDTOH account
โ Type of dividend did NOT matter
โ Refund triggered regardless of dividend type
๐ How It Worked
Letโs say:
- RDTOH balance = $17,212
To recover this:
- Required dividends =
$17,212 รท 38.33% โ $44,900
๐ Pay ~$45,000 in dividends โ Get full refund
๐ฏ Key Advantage
๐ก Corporations could pay eligible dividends (lower personal tax for shareholders) AND still get the refund.
โ ๏ธ Limitation of Old System
The government noticed:
- Corporations were using eligible dividends strategically
- Shareholders paid less personal tax
- But corporations still got full refunds
๐ This led to tax planning advantages the government didnโt like
โ๏ธ New RDTOH Regime (Post-2018 Rules)
๐จ Major Change: Split into Two Accounts
Now RDTOH is divided into:
| Account Type | Meaning |
|---|---|
| ๐ก NERDTOH | Non-Eligible RDTOH |
| ๐ต ERDTOH | Eligible RDTOH |
๐งฉ Why the Split?
To ensure:
โ Proper alignment between
- Type of income earned
- Type of dividend paid
โ Prevent misuse of lower-tax eligible dividends
๐ Understanding the Two Accounts
๐ก NERDTOH (Non-Eligible RDTOH)
- Comes from passive investment income
- Refunded when non-eligible dividends are paid
๐ต ERDTOH (Eligible RDTOH)
- Comes from certain eligible dividend sources
- Refunded only when eligible dividends are paid
๐ How Refunds Work Now
โ ๏ธ Important Rule:
The type of dividend you pay determines which account gets refunded
๐ Refund Mechanics
| Dividend Type Paid | Refund Source |
|---|---|
| Non-Eligible Dividend | First from NERDTOH |
| Eligible Dividend | From ERDTOH (only after NERDTOH is depleted) |
๐ซ Key Restriction
You cannot recover NERDTOH by paying eligible dividends.
โ๏ธ Strategic Impact on Tax Planning
This change introduces complex decision-making:
๐ฏ Before (Old System)
โ Always preferred:
- Pay eligible dividends
- Lower personal tax
- Still get refund
๐ง Now (New System)
You must balance:
โ Personal tax efficiency
โ Corporate tax refunds
๐ Practical Example
Scenario:
- Total RDTOH = $17,212
- Split into:
- NERDTOH = $12,000
- ERDTOH = $5,212
Option 1: Pay Only Eligible Dividends
โ You will:
- Recover only ERDTOH ($5,212)
- Leave $12,000 stuck
Option 2: Pay Only Non-Eligible Dividends
โ You will:
- Recover NERDTOH first ($12,000)
- Possibly access ERDTOH later
BUT:
โ Shareholder pays higher personal tax
Option 3: Mixed Strategy (Optimal)
โ Pay:
- Some non-eligible dividends โ unlock NERDTOH
- Some eligible dividends โ tax-efficient income
๐ก Pro Tip for Tax Preparers:
The best strategy often involves a blend of dividend types.
๐งฎ Decision Framework for Tax Preparers
When advising clients, always evaluate:
๐งฉ 1. RDTOH Breakdown
- How much is in:
- NERDTOH?
- ERDTOH?
๐ฐ 2. Shareholder Tax Situation
- Marginal tax rates
- Income level
๐ 3. GRIP Balance (General Rate Income Pool)
- Determines ability to pay eligible dividends
๐ฏ 4. Cash Flow Needs
- How much dividend is required?
๐ฆ Summary Box
๐ Old vs New Regime
| Feature | Old System | New System |
|---|---|---|
| RDTOH Accounts | Single | Two (NERDTOH & ERDTOH) |
| Dividend Type Impact | None | Critical |
| Planning Complexity | Low | High |
| Tax Optimization | Easier | Requires strategy |
โ ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid
๐ซ Ignoring NERDTOH balance
๐ซ Paying only eligible dividends without analysis
๐ซ Forgetting refund sequencing rules
๐ซ Not aligning dividend strategy with tax goals
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก The new regime forces tax preparers to think strategically.
Youโre no longer just:
โ Paying dividends
You are now:
โ Managing tax pools
โ Optimizing refunds
โ Balancing corporate + personal tax
๐ Expert Insight
The true skill lies in:
๐ Designing a dividend mix strategy
๐ That maximizes refunds
๐ While minimizing total tax burden
๐ Deep Dive into GRIP, LRIP & Schedule 53: Building Eligible Dividend Capacity in Canadian Corporate Tax Planning
๐ง Why This Foundation Matters
Before diving into dividend strategies, you must understand GRIP and LRIP โ these are the core building blocks that determine:
โ What type of dividends a corporation can pay
โ How shareholders are taxed
โ How to plan corporate distributions efficiently
๐จ Critical Insight:
If you donโt understand GRIP, you cannot properly advise on eligible vs non-eligible dividends.
Video Explanation
๐๏ธ The Two Core Income Pools
Corporations separate income into two conceptual pools:
| Pool | Full Form | Tax Treatment | Dividend Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| ๐ข LRIP | Lower Rate Income Pool | Small business tax rate | Non-eligible dividends |
| ๐ต GRIP | General Rate Income Pool | General corporate tax rate | Eligible dividends |
๐ข Understanding LRIP (Lower Rate Income Pool)
LRIP represents:
โ Income taxed at the small business rate
โ Typically the first $500,000 of active business income
๐ Example (Ontario context):
- Small business rate โ ~12.2%โ12.5%
๐ก Key Characteristics of LRIP
- Default pool for most small businesses
- Not explicitly tracked in detail
- Residual category (anything not in GRIP falls here)
๐ Important Note Box
LRIP is not directly calculated like GRIP.
Instead, we track GRIP โ and everything else automatically becomes LRIP.
๐ต Understanding GRIP (General Rate Income Pool)
GRIP represents:
โ Income taxed at the general corporate tax rate
โ Income NOT eligible for the small business deduction
๐ Example rate:
- General corporate rate โ 26.5%
๐ก What Flows Into GRIP?
โ Income above $500,000
โ Income denied small business deduction
โ Eligible dividends received from other corporations
๐ฏ Why GRIP Is So Important
๐ก GRIP determines how much eligible dividends a corporation can pay.
๐ Key Rule
โ GRIP balance = Maximum eligible dividends allowed
๐งพ Schedule 53 โ The Engine Behind GRIP
๐งฎ What Is Schedule 53?
Schedule 53 is a mandatory tax schedule used to:
โ Track GRIP balance
โ Record additions and deductions
โ Determine eligible dividend capacity
๐ What Happens Inside Schedule 53?
It tracks:
- Opening GRIP balance
- Additions (income taxed at general rate)
- Deductions (dividends paid)
๐ฆ SEO Note Box: Schedule 53 = GRIP Tracker
If you remember one thing:
๐ Schedule 53 tells you how much eligible dividend you can pay
โ๏ธ Tax Logic Behind GRIP vs LRIP
This system ensures tax integration:
๐ต GRIP Income
- Taxed HIGH at corporate level
- Taxed LOWER at personal level (eligible dividends)
๐ข LRIP Income
- Taxed LOW at corporate level
- Taxed HIGHER at personal level (non-eligible dividends)
๐ก Integration Principle:
The total tax (corporate + personal) should be roughly equal.
๐งฎ Step-by-Step Example (Beginner Friendly)
๐ Scenario
A corporation earns:
- Total income = $600,000
๐งฉ Step 1: Split Income
| Portion | Amount | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Small Business Portion | $500,000 | 12.5% |
| General Rate Portion | $100,000 | 26.5% |
๐งพ Step 2: Calculate Corporate Tax
๐ข Small Business Tax
- $500,000 ร 12.5% = $62,500
๐ต General Rate Tax
- $100,000 ร 26.5% = $26,500
๐ Total Corporate Tax
โก $89,000
๐งฎ Step 3: Calculate GRIP Balance
GRIP formula:
โก GRIP = General rate income ร 0.72
๐ Calculation
- $100,000 ร 0.72 = $72,000
๐ก Important Rule Box
The 0.72 factor adjusts for corporate taxes already paid.
It converts pre-tax income into eligible dividend capacity.
๐ฐ Step 4: Determine Dividend Types
If the corporation wants to pay:
โก $100,000 in dividends
๐ต Eligible Dividend Portion
- Limited to GRIP = $72,000
๐ข Non-Eligible Portion
- Remaining = $28,000
๐ Final Breakdown
| Dividend Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Eligible Dividend | $72,000 |
| Non-Eligible Dividend | $28,000 |
๐ฏ Key Insight from Example
โ You cannot exceed GRIP for eligible dividends
โ Remaining dividends automatically become non-eligible
โ ๏ธ What If There Is NO GRIP?
Many small corporations:
โ Earn under $500,000
โ Fully use small business deduction
๐ Result:
โ No GRIP balance
โ Can ONLY pay non-eligible dividends
๐ง Strategic Implications for Tax Preparers
๐ฏ Why This Matters in Real Life
As a tax preparer, you must:
โ Check GRIP before declaring dividends
โ Avoid accidental overpayment of eligible dividends
โ Optimize shareholder tax outcomes
๐งฉ Decision Checklist
Before advising on dividends:
- โ What is the GRIP balance?
- โ How much dividend is planned?
- โ Is eligible dividend beneficial?
- โ What is shareholder tax bracket?
๐ฆ Summary Box
| Concept | Meaning |
|---|---|
| GRIP | Eligible dividend capacity |
| LRIP | Default pool for non-eligible dividends |
| Schedule 53 | Tracks GRIP |
| 0.72 Factor | Converts income into dividend capacity |
โ ๏ธ Common Beginner Mistakes
๐ซ Ignoring GRIP entirely
๐ซ Paying all dividends as eligible
๐ซ Not checking Schedule 53
๐ซ Misunderstanding 0.72 adjustment
๐ Final Takeaway
๐ก GRIP is the gateway to eligible dividends
Mastering GRIP means you can:
โ Control dividend types
โ Optimize tax efficiency
โ Understand corporate distribution strategy
๐ง Pro Insight
The most skilled tax preparers donโt just calculate GRIP โ they:
๐ Use it to design tax-efficient dividend strategies
๐ Align corporate and personal taxation
๐ Plan distributions across multiple years
๐ข Case Study: Building Eligible Dividend Capacity โ Amco Windows & Doors and GRIP Strategy in Canadian Corporate Tax Planning
๐ง Why This Case Study Is Important
This example brings everything together and shows you how GRIP actually works in real life.
By the end of this section, you will understand:
โ How GRIP is built over multiple years
โ How to calculate eligible dividends
โ How to plan dividends for shareholders
โ What happens when you exceed GRIP
๐ Big Picture:
This is where theory becomes practical tax preparation skill
Video Explanation
๐จโ๐ผ Meet the Corporation: Amco Windows & Doors Ltd.
Amco is a growing corporation owned by:
- ๐ค Frank
- ๐ค Enzo
They are:
โ Active in the business
โ Paid salaries of $120,000 each
โ Now looking to withdraw profits via dividends
๐ Financial Performance Over 3 Years
| Year | Taxable Income | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $300,000 | Fully small business rate |
| Year 2 | $400,000 | Fully small business rate |
| Year 3 | $800,000 | Mixed (small + general rate) |
๐ These figures form the basis of GRIP calculation
๐งฉ Step 1: Understanding GRIP in Early Years
๐ Year 1
- Income = $300,000
- Entire amount taxed at small business rate
๐ Result:
โ No GRIP created
๐ Year 2
- Income = $400,000
- Still below $500,000 threshold
๐ Result:
โ No GRIP created
๐ฆ Important Insight Box
If income is fully taxed at the small business rate โ
๐ GRIP = 0
๐ Only non-eligible dividends can be paid
๐ Step 2: Year 3 โ Where GRIP Begins
๐ Income Breakdown
| Portion | Amount | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Small Business Portion | $500,000 | 12.5% |
| General Rate Portion | $300,000 | 26.5% |
๐งฎ Step 3: Calculate Corporate Tax
- $500,000 ร 12.5% = $62,500
- $300,000 ร 26.5% = $79,500
โก Total Tax = $142,000
๐ต Step 4: Calculate GRIP Balance
GRIP formula:
โก General rate income ร 0.72
๐ Calculation
- $300,000 ร 0.72 = $216,000
๐ก Key Rule Box
GRIP = Maximum eligible dividends allowed
๐ฐ Step 5: Dividend Planning for Frank & Enzo
Now Amco can:
โก Pay up to $216,000 as eligible dividends
๐ Example Scenario
If total dividends declared = $300,000
| Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Eligible Dividends | $216,000 |
| Non-Eligible Dividends | $84,000 |
๐ฏ Key Takeaway
โ Eligible dividends are limited by GRIP
โ Any excess automatically becomes non-eligible
๐ Step 6: GRIP Carryforward Concept
๐ก GRIP is NOT lost if unused
If Amco does NOT pay dividends:
โ GRIP carries forward
โ Future profits increase GRIP further
๐ฆ Example
- Year 3 GRIP = $216,000
- No dividends paid
๐ Year 4 starts with:
โ Opening GRIP = $216,000
โ ๏ธ Step 7: Overpaying Eligible Dividends (Critical Warning)
๐จ What Happens If You Exceed GRIP?
If Amco pays:
โก Eligible dividends above $216,000
๐ This triggers:
โ Part III.1 Tax (Penalty Tax)
๐จ Danger Box: Part III.1 Tax
Overpaying eligible dividends results in heavy penalties
This is a common mistake among beginners
๐ง Practical Rule
โ Always check:
๐ Schedule 53 (GRIP balance)
๐ Before declaring eligible dividends
๐ Important Observation: No Investment Income Yet
At this stage:
โ No RDTOH
โ No ERDTOH / NERDTOH
๐ฏ What This Means
๐ก The system behaves like the old regime
โ No restrictions on refund planning
โ No dividend-type complications
โ Simple GRIP-based decision
๐ Decision Logic (Current Scenario)
| Condition | Strategy |
|---|---|
| GRIP Available | Pay eligible dividends |
| No GRIP | Pay non-eligible dividends |
| Exceed GRIP | Avoid (penalty applies) |
๐ง Tax Strategy Insight
Since:
โ Eligible dividends โ lower personal tax
๐ Frank & Enzo should:
โ Maximize eligible dividends up to GRIP
๐ฆ Summary Box
| Concept | Result |
|---|---|
| Year 1 & 2 | No GRIP |
| Year 3 GRIP | $216,000 |
| Eligible Dividend Limit | $216,000 |
| Excess Dividends | Non-eligible |
| Overpayment | Part III.1 Tax |
โ ๏ธ Common Beginner Mistakes
๐ซ Forgetting GRIP from prior years
๐ซ Paying all dividends as eligible
๐ซ Ignoring Schedule 53
๐ซ Not calculating 0.72 adjustment
๐ซ Overpaying eligible dividends
๐ Final Takeaway
๐ก GRIP is your dividend ceiling for tax efficiency
Mastering this allows you to:
โ Control dividend types
โ Minimize shareholder tax
โ Avoid penalties
โ Plan distributions strategically
๐ง Pro-Level Insight
The real expertise is:
๐ Not just calculating GRIP
๐ But timing dividends across years
โ Use GRIP when tax rates are favorable
โ Combine with salary strategies
โ Integrate with RDTOH (next level)
โ ๏ธ Avoiding Expensive Tax Traps: How Excess Eligible Dividends and Part III.1 Penalties Work in Canadian Corporations (with Solutions & Case Study)
๐จ Why This Topic Is Critical for Tax Preparers
When working with dividends, one mistake can cost thousands of dollars in penalties.
This section teaches you:
โ What happens when you exceed GRIP
โ How Part III.1 tax is calculated
โ How to fix mistakes
โ How to avoid penalties completely
๐ก Reality Check:
Even experienced accountants make this mistake โ but good tax preparers know how to fix it.
Video Explanation
๐ง What Is Part III.1 Tax?
Part III.1 tax is a penalty tax applied when a corporation:
โก Declares eligible dividends beyond its GRIP balance
โ ๏ธ Core Rule
๐จ You cannot pay more eligible dividends than your GRIP balance
If you do:
๐ The excess is penalized at 20% tax
๐ Quick Formula
| Component | Calculation |
|---|---|
| Excess Eligible Dividend | Declared โ GRIP |
| Penalty Tax | Excess ร 20% |
๐ Real Case: Amco Windows & Doors
From our previous case:
- GRIP = $216,000
โ Mistake Scenario
Amco declares:
โก Total dividends = $300,000
โก All marked as eligible
๐งฎ Step-by-Step Calculation
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Eligible Dividends Declared | $300,000 |
| GRIP Available | $216,000 |
| Excess | $84,000 |
๐ธ Penalty Calculation
- $84,000 ร 20% = $16,800 penalty tax
๐จ Danger Box
This penalty is paid by the corporation, not the shareholder
๐งพ Where Is This Calculated?
โ Schedule 55 (Part III.1 tax calculation)
โ Automatically computed in tax software
๐ง Why This Rule Exists
The government wants to prevent:
๐ซ Corporations paying too many low-tax eligible dividends
๐ซ Avoiding proper tax integration
๐ก Purpose of the Rule:
Ensure fairness between corporate and personal taxation
โ๏ธ Practical Reality
Most corporations will:
โ Never intentionally trigger this tax
โ Adjust dividends properly before filing
๐ What If You Made a Mistake?
Good news โ there is a fix available
๐ ๏ธ Solution: Election to Reclassify Dividends
You can:
โก Convert excess eligible dividends into non-eligible dividends
๐ Legal Mechanism
Election under:
โก Subsection 184(3) (commonly referenced in practice)
๐ What Happens After Election?
โ Excess eligible dividend โ becomes non-eligible
โ Part III.1 tax โ removed
โ Shareholder โ pays higher personal tax instead
๐ฆ Important Insight Box
The system ensures:
๐ You donโt escape tax, you just pay it correctly
โณ Deadline for Election
You must file:
โก Within 90 days of Notice of Assessment
๐ Where to File?
โ Submit to your local tax services office
โ ๏ธ Critical Warning: When CRA Denies Relief
If CRA believes:
๐ซ The excess dividend was intentional tax planning
Then:
โก Penalty increases to 30%
๐จ Consequences of 30% Penalty
โ No election allowed
โ No correction possible
โ Permanent penalty
๐จ High-Risk Box
Aggressive tax planning can backfire heavily
Always ensure defensible reporting
๐ง Real-World Causes of This Mistake
๐ Common Scenarios
- Bookkeeper issues wrong T5 slips
- Accountant fails to track GRIP
- Internal team unaware of rules
- Manual dividend declarations without review
๐งพ Example
โ Corporation pays dividend
โ Labels entire amount as โeligibleโ
โ Ignores GRIP limit
๐ CRA reassesses โ penalty applied
๐ง How Professionals Prevent This
โ Best Practices
โ Always check Schedule 53 (GRIP)
โ Review dividend declarations before filing
โ Coordinate with bookkeeping team
โ Double-check T5 classifications
๐ Decision Checklist Before Declaring Dividends
- โ What is current GRIP balance?
- โ How much dividend is planned?
- โ Are we exceeding eligible limit?
- โ Should we split dividend types?
๐ฏ Smart Strategy to Avoid Penalty
โ Correct Approach
Instead of:
โ Declaring $300,000 eligible
Do this:
โ $216,000 โ Eligible
โ $84,000 โ Non-eligible
๐ก Result
โ No penalty
โ Proper tax treatment
โ Fully compliant
๐ฆ Summary Box
| Concept | Explanation |
|---|---|
| GRIP Limit | Max eligible dividends |
| Excess Eligible Dividend | Penalized |
| Penalty Rate | 20% (or 30% if abusive) |
| Fix Available | Election within 90 days |
| Best Practice | Split dividends correctly |
โ ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid
๐ซ Ignoring GRIP balance
๐ซ Declaring all dividends as eligible
๐ซ Missing election deadline
๐ซ Poor coordination with accounting team
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก Eligible dividends are powerful โ but dangerous if misused
As a tax preparer, your job is to:
โ Protect clients from penalties
โ Ensure compliance
โ Optimize tax outcomes
๐ Pro-Level Insight
The best tax professionals:
๐ Donโt just calculate GRIP
๐ They control dividend classification with precision
โ Plan ahead
โ Review every dividend
โ Avoid last-minute corrections
๐ก Unlocking NERDTOH Refunds: Amco Windows & Doors Investment Income Strategy for Effective Dividend Planning & Tax Recovery
๐ง Why This Section Is a Game-Changer
Up until now, dividend planning was relatively straightforward.
But once investment income enters the picture, everything changes:
โ Refundable taxes are introduced
โ Dividend type becomes critical
โ Strategy becomes multi-layered
๐ Key Shift:
You are no longer just deciding how much dividend to pay โ
You are deciding what type of dividend to pay and why
Video Explanation
๐ข Updated Scenario: Amco Windows & Doors
We now analyze Amco with investment income included.
๐ Opening Balances & Current Year Data
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Opening GRIP | $68,000 |
| Active Business Income | $750,000 |
| Investment Income (Interest) | $42,600 |
๐ These values drive both GRIP and RDTOH calculations
๐งฉ Step 1: Understanding the New Layer โ Investment Income
Investment income (like interest from GICs):
โ Is taxed at a very high rate (~50.17%)
โ Creates refundable taxes
โ Feeds into RDTOH accounts
๐ฆ Important Concept Box
Investment income introduces refundable tax mechanics
๐ This is where ERDTOH & NERDTOH begin to matter
๐งฎ Step 2: Corporate Tax Breakdown
๐ข Active Business Income Tax
| Portion | Calculation | Tax |
|---|---|---|
| First $500,000 | ร 12.5% | $62,500 |
| Remaining $250,000 | ร 26.5% | $66,250 |
โก Total Active Income Tax = $128,750
๐ต Investment Income Tax
- $42,600 ร 50.17% = $21,371
๐ Total Corporate Tax
โก $150,121
๐ Step 3: Calculating NERDTOH
๐ก What Goes Into NERDTOH?
Investment income creates refundable tax:
โก Refundable portion = 30.67%
๐ Calculation
- $42,600 ร 30.67% = $13,064
๐ก Key Rule Box
This $13,064 is stored in NERDTOH
๐ It is NOT automatically refunded
๐ต Step 4: Updating GRIP Balance
๐ GRIP Calculation
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Opening GRIP | $68,000 |
| Addition: ($250,000 ร 0.72) | $180,000 |
โก Ending GRIP = $248,000
๐ฐ Step 5: Dividend Goal
Frank & Enzo want:
โก $200,000 total dividends
($100,000 each)
๐ฏ Option 1: All Eligible Dividends
โ What Happens?
- $200,000 paid as eligible dividends
- Within GRIP limit โ โ Allowed
โ Problem
- NERDTOH refund NOT triggered
- $13,064 remains trapped
โ ๏ธ Insight Box
Eligible dividends DO NOT unlock NERDTOH refunds
๐ฏ Option 2: Optimized Strategy (Mixed Dividends)
To recover the refundable tax:
๐งฎ Step 1: Calculate Required Non-Eligible Dividend
Formula:
โก Required Dividend = NERDTOH รท 38.33%
๐ Calculation
- $13,064 รท 38.33% = $34,080
๐งฉ Step 2: Split Dividends
| Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Non-Eligible Dividend | $34,080 |
| Eligible Dividend | $165,920 |
| Total | $200,000 |
๐ Step 3: Result
โ NERDTOH refunded = $13,064
โ Corporate tax reduced
โ Shareholders receive full dividend
๐ Trade-Off
| Benefit | Cost |
|---|---|
| Corporate refund gained | Higher personal tax on $34,080 |
๐ก Professional Insight
This is a classic tax trade-off decision
โ๏ธ Strategy Comparison
๐ Option Comparison Table
| Strategy | Corporate Refund | Personal Tax | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Eligible | โ No | Lower | High-income shareholders |
| Mixed Dividends | โ Yes | Higher | When refund is valuable |
๐ง Decision-Making Framework
๐งฉ Ask These Questions:
- โ Do we want the RDTOH refund now?
- โ What is the shareholder tax bracket?
- โ Is deferring refund beneficial?
๐ฆ Strategic Insight Box
๐ก You are balancing:
๐ Corporate tax recovery
vs
๐ Personal tax minimization
๐ Important Flexibility Rule
You are NOT forced to recover NERDTOH immediately.
โ Alternative Strategy
- Pay only eligible dividends today
- Leave NERDTOH balance untouched
- Recover refund in future years
๐ก Advanced Planning Tip
Timing of refunds is a strategic decision, not a requirement
โ ๏ธ Critical Rule to Remember
๐จ To recover NERDTOH โ You MUST pay non-eligible dividends
๐ Summary Box
| Concept | Key Rule |
|---|---|
| NERDTOH | Comes from investment income |
| Refund Trigger | Non-eligible dividends only |
| GRIP | Controls eligible dividends |
| Strategy | Mix dividends for optimization |
โ ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid
๐ซ Paying only eligible dividends and expecting refund
๐ซ Ignoring NERDTOH balance
๐ซ Not calculating 38.33% rule
๐ซ Forgetting corporate vs personal tax trade-off
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก Investment income transforms simple dividend planning into advanced tax strategy
You must now:
โ Manage GRIP
โ Track NERDTOH
โ Choose dividend types wisely
๐ Pro-Level Insight
The best tax preparers:
๐ Donโt just calculate numbers
๐ They design dividend strategies
โ Optimize timing
โ Balance tax layers
โ Align with client goals
๐ต Amco Windows & Doors: Unlocking ERDTOH Flexibility with Eligible Dividend Income for Optimal Corporate Dividend Planning
๐ง Why This Scenario Is So Important
This is where everything finally clicks together.
Unlike interest income (NERDTOH), this scenario shows:
โ How eligible dividend income behaves differently
โ How ERDTOH allows full flexibility
โ How corporations can achieve perfect tax efficiency
๐ Big Insight:
This is the most tax-efficient scenario โ and the one every tax planner prefers.
Video Explanation
๐ข Updated Scenario: Investment Income = Eligible Dividends
Instead of earning interest income, Amco now earns:
โก $42,600 of eligible dividend income
๐ Everything else remains the same
๐ Key Inputs
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Opening GRIP | $68,000 |
| Active Business Income | $750,000 |
| Eligible Dividend Income | $42,600 |
๐งฉ Step 1: Tax Treatment of Eligible Dividend Income
๐ Key Rule
๐ก Dividends received from Canadian corporations are:
โ Deductible under Section 112
โ Not taxed as regular income
โ ๏ธ But There Is a Catch
Corporations must pay:
โก Part IV Tax = 38.33%
๐ Calculation
- $42,600 ร 38.33% = $16,330
๐ฆ Important Box
This tax is refundable, not permanent
๐งฎ Step 2: Corporate Tax Breakdown
๐ข Active Business Income Tax
| Portion | Tax |
|---|---|
| First $500,000 | $62,500 |
| Remaining $250,000 | $66,250 |
โก Total = $128,750
๐ต Part IV Tax (Dividend Income)
โก $16,330
๐ Total Corporate Tax
โก $145,080
๐ต Step 3: ERDTOH is Created
๐ง Where Does the Refundable Tax Go?
โก Entire $16,330 goes into:
๐ต ERDTOH (Eligible RDTOH)
๐ก Key Difference from Previous Scenario
Interest income โ NERDTOH
Dividend income โ ERDTOH
๐ Step 4: GRIP Balance Increases Further
๐ GRIP Calculation
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Opening GRIP | $68,000 |
| Addition (Active Income) | $180,000 |
| Addition (Eligible Dividends) | $42,600 |
โก Total GRIP = $290,600
๐ก Powerful Insight
Eligible dividend income increases GRIP
โ More capacity to pay eligible dividends
๐ฐ Step 5: Dividend Strategy for Shareholders
Frank & Enzo want:
โก $200,000 total dividends
๐ฏ Option: All Eligible Dividends
โ Is This Allowed?
YES โ
- GRIP = $290,600
- Dividend = $200,000
โ What Happens?
- Entire $200,000 paid as eligible dividends
- Shareholders enjoy lower personal tax
๐ Step 6: Refund Trigger
Because:
โ ERDTOH exists
โ Eligible dividends are paid
โก FULL refund triggered:
- Refund = $16,330
๐ Final Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Dividend Type | 100% Eligible |
| Corporate Refund | $16,330 |
| Personal Tax | Lower |
| Remaining RDTOH | $0 |
๐ Perfect Alignment Achieved
โ Low personal tax
โ Full corporate refund
โ๏ธ Compare With Previous (Interest Income) Scenario
๐ Comparison Table
| Feature | Interest Income | Eligible Dividend Income |
|---|---|---|
| RDTOH Type | NERDTOH | ERDTOH |
| Refund Trigger | Non-eligible dividends | Eligible dividends |
| Dividend Mix Required | Yes | No |
| Tax Efficiency | Lower | Higher |
๐ง Strategic Insight
๐ก Eligible dividend income is far more flexible
โ No forced ineligible dividends
โ No trade-off required
โ Cleaner tax planning
๐ What If You Paid Non-Eligible Dividends Instead?
โ Result
- ERDTOH refund NOT triggered
- Refund remains trapped
โ ๏ธ Critical Rule Box
ERDTOH can ONLY be refunded using eligible dividends
๐งฉ Decision Framework
๐ง Ask These Questions:
- โ What type of RDTOH do we have?
- โ What dividend type triggers refund?
- โ Do we want refund now or later?
๐ฆ Strategy Summary Box
| Situation | Best Action |
|---|---|
| ERDTOH exists | Pay eligible dividends |
| NERDTOH exists | Pay non-eligible dividends |
| Both exist | Plan dividend mix |
โ ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid
๐ซ Assuming all RDTOH works the same
๐ซ Paying wrong dividend type
๐ซ Ignoring GRIP increase from dividends
๐ซ Forgetting Part IV tax mechanism
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก This is the ideal tax scenario
Eligible dividend income allows you to:
โ Increase GRIP
โ Pay eligible dividends
โ Get full refund
โ Minimize total tax
๐ Pro-Level Insight
The best tax planners:
๐ Prefer dividend income over interest income
๐ Structure investments for maximum ERDTOH benefits
๐ฏ Ultimate Concept to Remember
๐ง Golden Rule of RDTOH
- NERDTOH โ requires non-eligible dividends
- ERDTOH โ requires eligible dividends
๐ ERDTOH Flexibility Unlocked: What Happens If Amco Receives Non-Eligible Dividends? (Debunking Myths and Mastering Refund Rules in Canadian Corporate Tax Planning)
๐ง Why This Concept Is Extremely Important
At this stage, most learners assume:
โ โERDTOH can only be refunded using eligible dividendsโ
๐ That is NOT fully correct
This section reveals a powerful and often misunderstood rule:
๐ ERDTOH can be refunded using BOTH eligible AND non-eligible dividends
Video Explanation
๐ The Big Rule (Must Remember)
| Account | Refund Trigger |
|---|---|
| ๐ก NERDTOH | ONLY non-eligible dividends |
| ๐ต ERDTOH | Eligible OR non-eligible dividends |
๐ก Golden Insight Box
ERDTOH gives you flexibility
NERDTOH gives you restrictions
๐ข Scenario Recap: Amco Windows & Doors
We continue with the same setup:
- ERDTOH balance exists (from eligible dividend income)
- Total dividends planned = $200,000
๐ฏ What We Previously Saw
โ Paying eligible dividends:
- Triggered full ERDTOH refund
- Lower personal tax
- Ideal outcome
๐ New Scenario: Pay ONLY Non-Eligible Dividends
Now letโs change strategy:
โก Entire $200,000 paid as non-eligible dividends
๐ค What Happens?
โ Result
- ERDTOH refund is STILL triggered
- Corporation still receives full refund
- No restriction violated
๐ This behavior is confirmed in practice
๐ง Why Does This Work?
๐ก Tax Logic Explanation
The governmentโs concern is:
๐ Preventing under-taxation at the personal level
๐ต Eligible Dividends
- Lower personal tax
- More tax-efficient
๐ก Non-Eligible Dividends
- Higher personal tax
- Government collects more tax
๐ก Key Insight Box
Government is fine refunding ERDTOH when:
๐ Personal tax paid is HIGHER (non-eligible dividends)
โ๏ธ Strategic Meaning
๐ฏ ERDTOH = Flexible Planning Tool
You can choose:
| Option | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Eligible dividends | Lower personal tax |
| Non-eligible dividends | Higher personal tax |
| Both | Still get refund |
๐ง Compare With NERDTOH (Critical Contrast)
๐ซ NERDTOH Rules
| Action | Result |
|---|---|
| Pay eligible dividends | โ No refund |
| Pay non-eligible dividends | โ Refund |
๐ต ERDTOH Rules
| Action | Result |
|---|---|
| Pay eligible dividends | โ Refund |
| Pay non-eligible dividends | โ Refund |
๐จ Critical Comparison Box
NERDTOH = Strict
ERDTOH = Flexible
๐งฉ Practical Example
๐ Scenario
- ERDTOH balance = $16,330
- Dividends declared = $200,000
๐ข Option 1: Eligible Dividends
โ Refund = $16,330
โ Lower personal tax
๐ก Option 2: Non-Eligible Dividends
โ Refund = $16,330
โ Higher personal tax
๐ฏ Outcome
โ Same corporate result
โ Different personal tax impact
๐ง When Would You Choose Non-Eligible Dividends?
๐ Real-Life Planning Situations
๐น Situation 1: High Income Year
- Shareholder already in top tax bracket
- Additional income taxed heavily anyway
๐ Might not matter if dividend is non-eligible
๐น Situation 2: Income Smoothing
- Shift income across years
- Use different dividend types strategically
๐น Situation 3: Tax Attribute Planning
- Coordinate with losses, credits, or deductions
๐ก Advanced Planning Box
Dividend type selection is not just tax โ
๐ Itโs timing + personal situation + strategy
โ ๏ธ Common Beginner Misunderstanding
๐ซ โERDTOH must use eligible dividendsโ
๐ซ โAll refundable taxes behave the sameโ
๐ Both are incorrect
๐ Quick Summary Table
| Feature | NERDTOH | ERDTOH |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Interest / passive income | Eligible dividends |
| Refund via eligible dividend | โ No | โ Yes |
| Refund via non-eligible dividend | โ Yes | โ Yes |
| Flexibility | Low | High |
๐ฆ Strategy Summary Box
๐ก If you see ERDTOH on the balance sheet:
โ You have freedom in dividend choice
โ Focus on personal tax optimization
โ Refund is not restricted by dividend type
โ ๏ธ Key Planning Warning
Even though ERDTOH is flexible:
๐ซ Always check GRIP before paying eligible dividends
๐ซ Avoid Part III.1 penalties
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก ERDTOH is the most flexible and powerful account in dividend planning
It allows you to:
โ Choose dividend type freely
โ Still recover refundable taxes
โ Optimize based on shareholder needs
๐ Pro-Level Insight
Top tax professionals think like this:
๐ โWhat type of dividend gives the best overall tax outcome, not just corporate refund?โ
๐ฏ Ultimate Rule to Remember
๐ง Hierarchy of Dividend Planning
- Check GRIP (eligible capacity)
- Check NERDTOH (requires non-eligible dividends)
- Check ERDTOH (flexible โ optimize freely)
๐งพ Case Study: Optimizing Eligible vs Non-Eligible Dividends for Barnes Dentistry PC โ Finding the Best Tax-Efficient Dividend Mix with ERDTOH & NERDTOH Balances
๐ง Why This Section Is Crucial
This is where everything you’ve learned comes together into real-world decision making.
You are no longer just calculating taxes โ you are now:
โ Advising clients
โ Optimizing dividend strategies
โ Balancing corporate vs personal tax
๐ Big Shift:
Tax preparation becomes tax planning
Video Explanation
๐ข Scenario Overview: Barnes Dentistry Professional Corporation
Natasha owns the corporation and now wants to:
โก Pay herself $100,000 in dividends
๐ Step 1: Understanding the RDTOH Breakdown
Previously, RDTOH was seen as a single number:
โก Total RDTOH = $17,212
But under the new system, it is split into:
| Account | Amount |
|---|---|
| ๐ต ERDTOH | $8,395 |
| ๐ก NERDTOH | $8,817 |
| Total | $17,212 |
๐ These balances are derived from the corporationโs tax calculations
๐ Where Did These Come From?
๐ต ERDTOH ($8,395)
- Comes from Part IV tax
- Generated by eligible dividends received
โ Refund triggered by:
- Eligible dividends
- OR non-eligible dividends
๐ก NERDTOH ($8,817)
- Comes from investment income (interest, etc.)
- Includes refundable Part I taxes
โ Refund triggered ONLY by:
- Non-eligible dividends
๐ฆ Critical Rule Box
NERDTOH = Requires non-eligible dividends
ERDTOH = Flexible (both types allowed)
๐ฏ Step 2: Natashaโs Goal
Natasha wants:
โก $100,000 dividend
Now the key question becomes:
๐ก How should we split this dividend between eligible and non-eligible?
โ๏ธ Step 3: Strategy Options
๐ข Option 1: All Eligible Dividends
โ What Happens?
- Natasha pays lower personal tax
- ERDTOH refund โ โ triggered
- NERDTOH refund โ โ NOT triggered
๐ Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| ERDTOH Refund | โ $8,395 |
| NERDTOH Refund | โ $8,817 stuck |
| Personal Tax | Lower |
โ ๏ธ Insight Box
This strategy ignores part of the refundable tax
๐ก Option 2: All Non-Eligible Dividends
โ What Happens?
- Both ERDTOH and NERDTOH refunds โ โ triggered
- Natasha pays higher personal tax
๐ Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| ERDTOH Refund | โ $8,395 |
| NERDTOH Refund | โ $8,817 |
| Personal Tax | Higher |
๐ก Observation
This maximizes corporate refund but increases personal tax
๐ Option 3: Optimized Mixed Strategy (Best Practice)
๐งฎ Step 1: Recover NERDTOH First
To recover NERDTOH:
โก Required non-eligible dividends:
- $8,817 รท 38.33% โ $23,000
๐งฉ Step 2: Allocate Remaining Dividends
- Total dividend = $100,000
- Non-eligible = ~$23,000
- Eligible = ~$77,000
๐ Final Allocation
| Dividend Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| Non-Eligible | $23,000 |
| Eligible | $77,000 |
| Total | $100,000 |
๐ฏ Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| ERDTOH Refund | โ $8,395 |
| NERDTOH Refund | โ $8,817 |
| Personal Tax | Optimized |
๐ Best of Both Worlds
โ Full refund
โ Lower personal tax on majority
๐ง Step 4: Strategic Thinking Process
As a tax preparer, your job is to think like this:
๐งฉ Decision Flow
- โ Check NERDTOH balance
- โ Calculate required non-eligible dividends
- โ Allocate remaining as eligible
- โ Ensure GRIP supports eligible portion
๐ฆ Strategy Box
๐ก Always unlock NERDTOH first, then optimize with eligible dividends
โ ๏ธ Important Consideration: You Are NOT Forced
Natasha could choose:
โ All eligible dividends
โ Leave NERDTOH for future
๐ง When Would You Do That?
- High personal tax year
- Expect lower income in future
- Prefer deferring refund
โ๏ธ Trade-Off Summary
| Strategy | Corporate Refund | Personal Tax | Flexibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Eligible | Partial | Lower | High |
| All Non-Eligible | Full | Higher | Low |
| Mixed | Full | Balanced | Best |
โ ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid
๐ซ Ignoring NERDTOH balance
๐ซ Paying all eligible dividends blindly
๐ซ Forgetting 38.33% rule
๐ซ Not considering personal tax impact
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก Dividend planning is about balance, not extremes
The optimal strategy:
โ Recovers refundable taxes
โ Minimizes personal tax
โ Uses both dividend types intelligently
๐ Pro-Level Insight
Top tax professionals always:
๐ Start with RDTOH breakdown
๐ Then design the dividend mix
๐ฏ Ultimate Rule to Remember
๐ง Dividend Strategy Formula
- Recover NERDTOH โ use non-eligible dividends
- Recover ERDTOH โ any dividend works
- Optimize remainder โ use eligible dividends
๐ฏ Optimizing Dividend Strategy for Professional Corporations: Maximizing Refunds and Minimizing Tax for Barnes Dentistry (NERDTOH, ERDTOH & GRIP Best Practices Explained)
๐ง Why This Is the Most Important Skill So Far
At this stage, you are no longer just learning rules โ you are learning how real tax professionals think.
This section teaches you how to:
โ Recover ALL refundable taxes (RDTOH)
โ Minimize personal tax for the shareholder
โ Design the perfect dividend mix
๐ This is the core skill of corporate tax planning
Video Explanation
๐ข Scenario Overview: Natashaโs Goal
Natasha wants:
โก $100,000 dividend
โก Recover as much as possible from RDTOH = $17,212
๐ Step 1: RDTOH Breakdown
| Account | Amount |
|---|---|
| ๐ต ERDTOH | $8,395 |
| ๐ก NERDTOH | $8,817 |
| Total RDTOH | $17,212 |
๐ These balances determine the dividend strategy
๐ง Step 2: Check GRIP Availability
Assume:
โก GRIP = $121,900
โ Enough to pay full eligible dividends if desired
๐ก Key Insight Box
GRIP determines how much eligible dividend you CAN pay
RDTOH determines what type you SHOULD pay
โ๏ธ Step 3: Analyze All Possible Strategies
๐ข Option 1: All Eligible Dividends ($100,000)
โ What Happens?
- ERDTOH refunded โ โ $8,395
- NERDTOH remains โ โ $8,817 stuck
๐ Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Total Refund | $8,395 |
| Personal Tax | Lower |
| Efficiency | โ Not optimal |
โ ๏ธ Problem:
You leave money trapped in the corporation
๐ก Option 2: All Non-Eligible Dividends ($100,000)
โ What Happens?
- ERDTOH refunded โ โ $8,395
- NERDTOH refunded โ โ $8,817
๐ Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| Total Refund | $17,212 |
| Personal Tax | Higher |
| Efficiency | โ ๏ธ Overpaying tax personally |
โ ๏ธ Problem:
Natasha pays unnecessary personal tax
๐งฉ Option 3: Optimal Dividend Mix (Best Strategy)
๐งฎ Step 1: Unlock NERDTOH First
To recover NERDTOH:
โก Required non-eligible dividend:
- $8,817 รท 38.33% โ $23,000
๐งฎ Step 2: Allocate Remaining as Eligible
- Total dividend = $100,000
- Non-eligible = $23,000
- Eligible = $77,000
๐ Final Optimal Mix
| Dividend Type | Amount |
|---|---|
| ๐ก Non-Eligible | $23,000 |
| ๐ต Eligible | $77,000 |
| Total | $100,000 |
๐ฏ Final Result
| Component | Outcome |
|---|---|
| ERDTOH Refund | โ $8,395 |
| NERDTOH Refund | โ $8,817 |
| Total Refund | โ $17,212 |
| Personal Tax | โ Optimized |
๐ Perfect Strategy Achieved
โ Full refund
โ Lower personal tax overall
๐ง Step 4: Why This Works
๐ Core Logic
- NERDTOH requires non-eligible dividends
- ERDTOH works with any dividend type
- Eligible dividends reduce personal tax
๐ก Golden Formula Box
โ Pay just enough non-eligible dividends to unlock NERDTOH
โ Pay the rest as eligible dividends
๐ Step 5: Verification Insight
After applying optimal mix:
โ Both ERDTOH and NERDTOH balances โ $0
โ Corporation receives full refund
โ Tax liability reduced efficiently
โ ๏ธ Important Flexibility Rule
Natasha is NOT forced to use this strategy.
๐ง Alternative Approach
She could:
โ Take full eligible dividends
โ Leave NERDTOH for future
๐ When Would You Do That?
- High personal income year
- Expect lower tax rate next year
- Want to defer tax
๐ก Advanced Planning Box
Timing of dividends = strategic decision, not mandatory rule
๐ Strategy Comparison Summary
| Strategy | Refund | Personal Tax | Efficiency |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Eligible | Partial | Low | โ |
| All Non-Eligible | Full | High | โ |
| Mixed (Optimal) | Full | Balanced | โ Best |
โ ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid
๐ซ Ignoring NERDTOH
๐ซ Paying all eligible dividends blindly
๐ซ Forgetting 38.33% calculation
๐ซ Not aligning with clientโs personal tax
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก The goal is NOT just to pay dividends โ
๐ It is to design the perfect dividend mix
๐ Pro-Level Insight
Every experienced tax preparer follows this mental model:
- Check NERDTOH โ calculate required non-eligible dividend
- Use remaining GRIP โ pay eligible dividends
- Balance corporate vs personal tax impact
๐ฏ Ultimate Rule to Remember
๐ง Optimal Dividend Strategy = Precision, Not Guesswork
โ Recover refunds efficiently
โ Minimize personal tax
โ Use both dividend types intelligently
๐ง Comprehensive Guide to ERDTOH vs NERDTOH Rules and the Professional Thought Process for Corporate Dividend Tax Planning
๐ง Why These Rules Exist (The Big Picture)
At first glance, ERDTOH and NERDTOH feel overly complex.
But the reality is simple:
๐ก The government is trying to eliminate tax deferral advantages
Video Explanation
๐ What Was Happening Before?
Under the old system:
โ Corporations had one RDTOH account
โ ANY dividend triggered a refund
โ Tax planners would:
โก Pay eligible dividends (lower personal tax)
โก Still recover full corporate refund
๐จ The Problem
This created:
โ Tax deferral advantage (โ 6%โ8%)
โ Lower personal tax than intended
โ ๏ธ Government Concern Box
Too much flexibility = unfair tax savings
โ๏ธ The Solution: Split Into Two Accounts
Now we have:
| Account | Purpose |
|---|---|
| ๐ก NERDTOH | Restrict refunds |
| ๐ต ERDTOH | Allow flexibility |
๐ง Core Philosophy of New Rules
๐ก Match type of income โ type of dividend โ tax outcome
๐ What Goes Into Each Account
๐ก NERDTOH (Non-Eligible RDTOH)
๐ฅ Sources
โ Interest income
โ Rental income
โ Portfolio income
โ Non-eligible dividends
โ Refundable Part I tax
๐ Rule
๐จ ONLY non-eligible dividends trigger refund
๐ต ERDTOH (Eligible RDTOH)
๐ฅ Sources
โ Eligible dividends received
โ Part IV tax on eligible dividends
๐ Rule
๐ก BOTH eligible and non-eligible dividends trigger refund
๐ฆ Golden Comparison Box
| Feature | NERDTOH | ERDTOH |
|---|---|---|
| Income Type | Passive / non-eligible | Eligible dividends |
| Refund Trigger | Non-eligible ONLY | Any dividend |
| Flexibility | โ Low | โ High |
๐ง The Logic Behind the Rules
๐ฏ Key Concept: Personal Tax Rates
| Dividend Type | Personal Tax |
|---|---|
| Eligible Dividend | LOWER |
| Non-Eligible Dividend | HIGHER |
๐ Government Thinking
Scenario 1: Eligible Dividend
- Shareholder pays less tax
- Government loses revenue
Scenario 2: Non-Eligible Dividend
- Shareholder pays more tax
- Government collects more
๐ก Critical Insight Box
Government forces use of non-eligible dividends
๐ to prevent tax deferral
โ๏ธ Understanding the โOrder of Operationsโ
๐ก NERDTOH
โ Must pay non-eligible dividends first
โ No workaround
๐ต ERDTOH
โ No strict order
โ Flexible usage
๐จ Memory Trick Box
- NERDTOH = Needs Non-Eligible
- ERDTOH = Easy (Flexible)
๐งฎ Real Tax Impact Example
๐ Scenario
Shareholder receives $100,000 dividend:
| Type | Approx Tax |
|---|---|
| Eligible Dividend | ~39% |
| Non-Eligible Dividend | ~47% |
โ๏ธ Difference
โก ~8% higher tax on non-eligible dividends
๐ก Key Insight
This 6โ8% difference is what the government is targeting
๐ How the New System Fixes the Problem
๐งฉ Old Strategy (No Longer Works Fully)
โ Pay eligible dividends
โ Get refund
โ Pay less personal tax
๐ง New System Forces Choice
Option A: Pay Eligible Dividends
โ Lower personal tax
โ Lose NERDTOH refund
Option B: Pay Non-Eligible Dividends
โ Get full refund
โ Pay higher personal tax
๐ก Outcome:
You cannot maximize both simultaneously
๐ฏ The Tax Preparerโs Thought Process
๐งฉ Step-by-Step Framework
1๏ธโฃ Identify RDTOH Balances
- NERDTOH?
- ERDTOH?
2๏ธโฃ Understand Income Source
- Passive income? โ NERDTOH
- Eligible dividends? โ ERDTOH
3๏ธโฃ Decide Dividend Type
- Need refund? โ Use required dividend type
- Optimize tax? โ Balance both
4๏ธโฃ Consider Personal Tax Situation
- High income year?
- Low income year?
- Future planning?
๐ก Strategy Box
Tax planning = timing + type + balance
โ ๏ธ Key Rules You Must Memorize
๐ Rule 1
NERDTOH โ requires non-eligible dividends
๐ Rule 2
ERDTOH โ works with any dividend type
๐ Rule 3
GRIP โ controls eligible dividend limit
๐ Rule 4
Optimal strategy = minimum non-eligible + maximum eligible
โ ๏ธ Common Beginner Mistakes
๐ซ Treating ERDTOH and NERDTOH the same
๐ซ Ignoring refund sequencing rules
๐ซ Paying only eligible dividends blindly
๐ซ Not considering personal tax impact
๐ฆ Final Summary Box
| Concept | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|
| NERDTOH | Restricted refund |
| ERDTOH | Flexible refund |
| Eligible Dividend | Lower personal tax |
| Non-Eligible Dividend | Higher personal tax |
| Goal | Balance both |
๐ง Final Takeaway
๐ก These rules are NOT about complexity โ they are about fair taxation
The system ensures:
โ No unfair tax deferral
โ Proper alignment of tax rates
โ Balanced corporate-personal taxation
๐ Pro-Level Insight
Top tax preparers donโt just calculate:
๐ They strategize dividend timing and mix
โ When to trigger refunds
โ When to defer
โ How to minimize total tax
๐ฏ Ultimate Rule to Remember
๐ง You are always balancing two forces:
โ Corporate refund
vs
โ Personal tax efficiency

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