Table of Contents
- ๐งพ 1. Understanding Shareholder Benefits (The Core Rule)
- ๐จโ๐ผ 2. Shareholder vs Employee โ Why It Matters
- โ๏ธ 3. Adequate vs Inadequate Consideration
- ๐ฐ 4. Shareholder Loans โ What Are They?
- ๐ 5. Shareholder Loans in Real Life
- ๐ฐ 6. Shareholder Loan Repayment Rules
- ๐ 7. Series of Loans Trap (Very Important)
- ๐ 8. Corporate vs Personal Vehicle (Big Decision)
- ๐ 9. Company-Owned Vehicle Pitfalls
- ๐ 10. Personally-Owned Vehicle (Simpler Option)
- ๐ฆ Final Takeaway
- ๐ Final Insight
๐งพ 1. Understanding Shareholder Benefits (The Core Rule)
When you own a corporation, itโs easy to think:
๐ก โThis is my company, so the money is mine.โ
But legally, thatโs not true.
๐ A corporation is a separate entity, even if you own 100%.
๐ What This Means
- Corporate money belongs to the company, not you
- You cannot freely take money without tax consequences
๐ผ Proper Ways to Take Money
| Method | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Salary | Reported on T4 |
| Dividends | Reported on T5 |
โ ๏ธ When Problems Start
If you:
- Use corporate money personally
- Buy personal assets through company
- Avoid salary/dividends
๐ CRA may treat it as a shareholder benefit (taxable income)
๐จโ๐ผ 2. Shareholder vs Employee โ Why It Matters
As an owner, you have two roles:
- Employee
- Shareholder
๐ง Key Question
Did you receive the benefit because you WORK there or because you OWN it?
๐ Example
| Situation | Tax Result |
|---|---|
| Health plan for all employees | Employee benefit โ |
| Tuition paid only for ownerโs child | Shareholder benefit โ |
โ ๏ธ CRA Rule
If benefit is:
- Available to everyone โ OK
- Only for owner โ taxable
โ๏ธ 3. Adequate vs Inadequate Consideration
Whenever money or assets move between you and your company:
๐ก You must pay fair market value (FMV)
๐ Example
Corporation owns a property worth $1,000,000
| Scenario | CRA Treatment |
|---|---|
| Sold for $1,000,000 | OK โ |
| Sold for $100,000 | โ Benefit = $900,000 |
โ ๏ธ Key Rule
Selling cheap = hidden benefit = taxable
๐ฐ 4. Shareholder Loans โ What Are They?
A shareholder loan happens when money moves outside normal channels.
๐งพ Examples
- You take money for personal use
- Company pays your personal expenses
- You deposit personal funds into company
๐ Two Types
| Situation | Meaning |
|---|---|
| You owe company | Loan from corporation |
| Company owes you | Your investment |
๐ก Real Example
- Took $20,000 from company
- Paid back $5,000
๐ Loan balance = $15,000 owed
๐ 5. Shareholder Loans in Real Life
In real businesses, this happens daily.
๐งพ Common Situations
- Paying groceries using company card
- Paying mortgage from business account
- Using corporate funds for family expenses
๐ Important Rule
If itโs not a business expense โ it becomes a shareholder loan
๐ก Insight
The shareholder loan account tells:
- How owner uses company money
- Potential tax risks
๐ฐ 6. Shareholder Loan Repayment Rules
Here is the most important rule:
๐๏ธ Loan must be repaid by end of next fiscal year
๐ Example
- Loan taken: August 2024
- Year-end: December 2024
- Deadline: December 2025
โ If Not Repaid
| Result | Impact |
|---|---|
| Loan becomes income | Tax payable |
| Personal tax applies | Cash outflow |
๐ Alternative
If you cannot repay:
- Convert to salary
- Convert to dividend
โ ๏ธ Hidden Rule
Interest-free loan โ taxable imputed interest benefit
๐ 7. Series of Loans Trap (Very Important)
Some people try this trick:
- Repay loan before deadline
- Borrow again right after
โ CRA Response
This is NOT a real repayment
๐ Example
| Action | Result |
|---|---|
| Repay Dec 31 | Looks fine |
| Borrow Jan 2 | โ Still taxable |
๐ก Key Insight
Repayment must be REAL, not temporary
๐ 8. Corporate vs Personal Vehicle (Big Decision)
Vehicles are tricky because they are used for:
- Business
- Personal
โ๏ธ Two Options
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| Company-owned | Corporation buys vehicle |
| Personal-owned | You own and get reimbursed |
๐ Rule
Only business portion is deductible
๐ 9. Company-Owned Vehicle Pitfalls
Sounds attractive, but has risks.
๐ฐ Benefits
- Corporation deducts expenses
- CCA (depreciation allowed)
โ Problems
If used personally:
๐ You get taxable benefits:
- Standby charge
- Operating cost benefit
๐ Example
Car cost: $80,000
- Limited deduction (~$30,000 base)
- But personal benefit calculated on full value
โ ๏ธ Result
You may pay MORE tax than expected
๐ 10. Personally-Owned Vehicle (Simpler Option)
This is often the safest method.
๐งพ How It Works
- You own the car
- Track business kilometres
- Company reimburses you
๐ Example
- Business driving: 5,000 km
- Rate: $0.58/km
๐ Reimbursement = $2,900
โ Tax Treatment
| Party | Result |
|---|---|
| You | Tax-free cash |
| Company | Deduction |
โ ๏ธ Important
- Keep logbook
- Do not inflate kilometres
- Do not mix expenses
๐ฆ Final Takeaway
๐ง What You Must Understand
- Corporation โ you
- Personal use of corporate money = taxable
- Loans must be repaid on time
- Fake repayments = CRA risk
- FMV must be used in all transactions
- Vehicles can create hidden tax problems
๐ Final Insight
The biggest mistake business owners make is treating their corporation like a personal bank account
If you understand this topic, you can:
- Avoid CRA audits โ ๏ธ
- Save thousands in tax ๐ฐ
- Advise clients like a professional ๐ผ

