How a Holding Company Structure Works
| Component | Role | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Operating company (opco) | Runs the business, earns active income | 9–12.2% on first $500K (SBD rate) |
| Holding company (holdco) | Receives dividends from opco, holds investments | Tax-free inter-corporate dividends |
| Shareholder (you) | Owns holdco shares, receives dividends | Personal tax on dividends received |
| Investment portfolio (in holdco) | Grows inside holdco | Passive income taxed at ~50.2%, refundable on dividend payout |
Flow of funds:
- Opco earns profit → pays corporate tax (9–12.2%)
- Opco pays tax-free dividend to holdco
- Holdco invests or holds funds
- When you need personal income, holdco pays dividend to you (personal tax applies)
Benefits of a Holding Company
| Benefit | How It Works | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Asset protection | Business liabilities stay in opco; investments protected in holdco | Creditors can’t access holdco assets |
| Tax-free dividend flow | Inter-corporate dividends between connected corporations are tax-free | $0 tax on dividends from opco to holdco |
| Investment portfolio | Holdco can invest retained earnings in stocks, bonds, real estate | $50K–$200K+/yr available to invest |
| Income splitting (limited) | Pay dividends to family members who are shareholders (TOSI rules apply) | Savings for adult children 25+ |
| Estate planning | Freeze value of shares, issue new growth shares to next generation | Minimize estate taxes |
| Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption | Purify opco to qualify for $1,016,836 LCGE on sale (2025) | $100K–$200K+ tax savings on business sale |
| Creditor protection | Investment assets sheltered from business risk | Peace of mind |
Costs of a Holding Company
| Expense | One-Time | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Incorporation (federal) | $200 | — | Corporations Canada |
| Legal setup (shareholder agreement, structuring) | $2,000–$5,000 | — | Corporate lawyer |
| Accounting setup | $500–$1,500 | — | Initial structure, chart of accounts |
| Corporate tax return (holdco) | — | $1,000–$2,500 | T2 filing for holdco |
| Corporate tax return (opco) | — | $1,000–$2,500 | Separate T2 for opco |
| Annual corporate filings | — | $12–$40 | Federal + provincial returns |
| Bookkeeping | — | $500–$2,000 | Track dividends, investments |
| Total setup | $2,700–$7,200 | — | — |
| Total annual | — | $2,500–$7,000 | — |
When Does a Holding Company Make Sense?
| Scenario | Holdco Worth It? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Business profit under $50K/year | No | Costs outweigh benefits |
| Business profit $50K–$100K/year (retained) | Maybe | Depends on growth plans |
| Business profit $100K+/year (retained) | Yes | Tax-free dividend flow, investment growth |
| Plan to sell business in future | Yes | LCGE planning, purification |
| Multiple businesses | Yes | Separate liabilities, centralize investments |
| Real estate portfolio (investment) | Yes | Asset protection, estate planning |
| Single rental property | Probably not | Costs may exceed benefits |
| Professional corporation | Yes | Common for doctors, lawyers, dentists |
Passive Investment Income Rules
| RDTOH/GRIP Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Passive income in CCPC | Taxed at ~50.2% (federal + provincial) |
| Refundable Dividend Tax on Hand (RDTOH) | $30.67 refunded per $100 of taxable dividends paid |
| Small Business Deduction grind | $5 reduction in SBD limit for every $1 of passive income over $50,000 |
| SBD eliminated | When passive income exceeds $150,000/year |
| Impact | $100K passive income → SBD limit drops from $500K to $250K |
The passive income rules mean you should balance retained earnings between the holdco and personal investments (RRSP, TFSA) for optimal tax efficiency.
Estate Freeze Using a Holding Company
| Step | What Happens | Tax Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Exchange common shares for preferred (freeze) | Your current shares are exchanged for fixed-value preferred shares | No immediate tax; value frozen |
| 2. Issue new common shares to children/trust | Future growth accrues to new common shares | Growth passes to next generation |
| 3. You continue receiving dividends on preferreds | Ongoing income stream | Taxed as dividends |
| 4. On death, only frozen value is taxed | Capital gain on preferred shares only | Estate tax on frozen value only |