4 – πŸ’Ό Corporate Distributions & Compensating Shareholders (Canada Guide)


Table of Contents

  1. 🧾 1. Salary vs Dividends – Why Compensation Planning Matters
  2. πŸ’° 2. Salary as Shareholder Compensation
  3. βš™οΈ 3. Payroll Process for Owner Salary
  4. πŸ“ˆ 4. Dividends as Compensation
  5. βš™οΈ 5. How Dividends Are Paid (Process)
  6. πŸ“Š 6. Salary vs Dividends (Accounting View)
  7. 🌍 7. Dividends: Resident vs Non-Resident
  8. πŸ’Ό 8. Paid-Up Capital (PUC) – Tax-Free Withdrawals
  9. πŸ’Ž 9. Capital Dividend Account (CDA)
  10. πŸ“Š 10. Eligible vs Ineligible Dividends
  11. πŸ“Š 11. Example – Eligible vs Ineligible Dividends
  12. ⚠️ 12. TOSI Rules (Tax on Split Income)
  13. 🚦 13. TOSI Exceptions (When It’s Allowed)
  14. πŸ“¦ Final Takeaway
  15. πŸš€ Final Insight

🧾 1. Salary vs Dividends – Why Compensation Planning Matters

When you own a corporation, one key question always comes up:

πŸ’‘ β€œHow do I take money out of my company?”

You have three main options:

  • Salary πŸ’°
  • Dividends πŸ“ˆ
  • A mix of both πŸ”„

πŸ‘©β€πŸ’Ό Example

Amanda owns a corporation earning $120,000

She can choose:

  • Salary β†’ $120,000
  • Dividends β†’ $120,000
  • Mix β†’ $70,000 salary + $50,000 dividends

Each choice affects:

  • Corporate tax
  • Personal tax
  • Retirement planning

πŸ’° 2. Salary as Shareholder Compensation

Salary means you are treated as an employee of your own company.


πŸ“Œ How It Works

  • Corporation pays salary
  • Issues T4 slip
  • Deducts tax, CPP (and sometimes EI)

πŸ“Š Example

ItemAmount
Salary$80,000
Tax + CPP deducted~$20,000
Net received~$60,000

βœ… Key Benefit

Salary is a deductible expense, so it reduces corporate tax


βš™οΈ 3. Payroll Process for Owner Salary

Even if you own the company, payroll rules still apply.


🧾 Steps

  • Register payroll account with CRA
  • Add yourself as employee
  • Deduct income tax and CPP
  • Remit by 15th of next month
  • Issue T4 by end of February

⚠️ Important

Missing payroll remittances = penalties + interest


πŸ“ˆ 4. Dividends as Compensation

Dividends are payments made to you as a shareholder, not employee.


πŸ“Œ Key Difference

Dividends come from profits after tax


πŸ“Š Example

ItemAmount
Corporate income$100,000
Corporate tax$12,000
Dividend paid$88,000

βœ… Benefits

  • No CPP
  • No payroll
  • Simpler administration

βš™οΈ 5. How Dividends Are Paid (Process)

Paying dividends is simpler than salary but must follow rules.


🧾 Steps

  • Decide dividend amount
  • Allocate based on shares
  • Pay shareholders
  • Issue T5 slips
  • Record in minute book

⚠️ Important Rule

Dividends must match share ownership


πŸ“Š 6. Salary vs Dividends (Accounting View)

The biggest difference is how they affect corporate income.


βš–οΈ Comparison

FeatureSalaryDividend
Deductibleβœ… Yes❌ No
Reduces corporate taxβœ… Yes❌ No
Paid before taxYesNo
Paid after taxNoYes

πŸ’‘ Example

  • Salary $100K β†’ corporate income becomes $0
  • Dividend $100K β†’ corporation still pays tax first

🌍 7. Dividends: Resident vs Non-Resident

Tax treatment depends on where the shareholder lives.


πŸ‡¨πŸ‡¦ Canadian Resident

  • No withholding tax
  • Reported on T5

🌎 Non-Resident

  • 25% withholding tax (may reduce via treaty)
  • Reported on NR4

πŸ“Š Example

TypeDividendTaxCash
Resident$10,000$0$10,000
Non-resident$10,000$2,500$7,500

πŸ’Ό 8. Paid-Up Capital (PUC) – Tax-Free Withdrawals

PUC is the original money you invested in your company.


πŸ’‘ Key Idea

You can withdraw PUC tax-free


πŸ“Š Example

ItemAmount
Investment$100,000
Withdrawal$60,000
Tax$0

⚠️ Rule

You cannot withdraw more than your PUC tax-free.


πŸ’Ž 9. Capital Dividend Account (CDA)

CDA allows corporations to pay tax-free dividends.


πŸ’‘ Where It Comes From

  • Non-taxable portion of capital gains
  • Life insurance proceeds

πŸ“Š Example

Capital gain$100,000
Taxable$50,000
Non-taxable β†’ CDA$50,000

πŸ‘‰ That $50,000 can be paid tax-free


⚠️ Important

Must file Form T2054


πŸ“Š 10. Eligible vs Ineligible Dividends

Not all dividends are taxed the same.


🧠 Two Types

TypeSourceTax
IneligibleSmall business incomeHigher personal tax
EligibleHigh-tax corporate incomeLower personal tax

πŸ“Œ Simple Rule

Low corporate tax β†’ higher personal tax
High corporate tax β†’ lower personal tax


πŸ“Š 11. Example – Eligible vs Ineligible Dividends


🧾 Scenario

Corporation earns:

  • $500K β†’ small business rate
  • $200K β†’ general rate

Result

IncomeDividend Type
First $500KIneligible
Next $200KEligible

πŸ’‘ Insight

Corporations track:

  • LRIP β†’ ineligible dividends
  • GRIP β†’ eligible dividends

⚠️ 12. TOSI Rules (Tax on Split Income)

TOSI prevents income splitting with family members.


🚫 Example

  • Paying dividends to spouse with no involvement
  • Giving shares to children just to reduce tax

❌ Result

Taxed at highest tax rate


🚦 13. TOSI Exceptions (When It’s Allowed)

Not all dividend splitting is blocked.


βœ… Allowed If

  • Family member works in business
  • Owns significant shares
  • Is actively involved

πŸ’‘ Example

Spouse works full-time β†’ dividends allowed
Child does nothing β†’ TOSI applies


πŸ“¦ Final Takeaway

🧠 What You Must Understand

  • Salary = expense, reduces corporate tax πŸ’°
  • Dividends = profit distribution πŸ“ˆ
  • PUC = tax-free capital return πŸ’Ό
  • CDA = tax-free dividends πŸ’Ž
  • Eligible vs ineligible affects personal tax πŸ“Š
  • TOSI prevents unfair tax savings ⚠️

πŸš€ Final Insight

Corporate compensation is not just about taking money out
It is about tax planning, compliance, and strategy

If you master this topic, you can:

  • Advise clients properly πŸ’Ό
  • Avoid CRA penalties ⚠️
  • Optimize tax outcomes πŸ“ˆ

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