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Incorporated Professional Tax Guide for Canada in 2026

Updated

Who Can Incorporate by Province

ProvinceDoctorsDentistsLawyersAccountantsEngineersOther Health
OntarioYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated
BCYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated
AlbertaYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated
QuebecNo*No*No*No*No*No*
ManitobaYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated
SaskatchewanYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated
Nova ScotiaYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated
New BrunswickYesYesYesYesYesMost regulated

Quebec allows “expense-sharing companies” but not true professional corporations with the same tax advantages.

Tax Comparison: Incorporated vs Unincorporated (Ontario, $300K Income)

ItemUnincorporatedIncorporated (Salary + Retain)
Practice income$300,000$300,000
Salary paidN/A$100,000
Corporate incomeN/A$200,000
Personal tax (on full/salary)~$110,000~$32,500
Corporate tax (12.2% SBD)N/A~$24,400
Total tax paid now$110,000$56,900
Tax deferred$0~$53,000
After-tax cash (personal)$190,000$67,500 (personal) + $175,600 (corporate)

Optimal Salary/Dividend Mix for Professionals

Practice IncomeSalaryDividendRetain in CorpWhy
$150,000$100,000$0$50,000RRSP room, CPP, modest retention
$200,000$100,000$0$100,000Strong RRSP room, grow corporate investments
$300,000$100,000$30,000$170,000Max RRSP room, dividend for spending, large retention
$500,000$120,000$50,000$330,000Above RRSP max, moderate lifestyle, aggressive saving
$750,000+$120,000$80,000$550,000+Max tax deferral, holdco essential

Common Professional Corporation Structure

EntityPurposeTax Treatment
Professional corporation (PC)Operates the practice12.2% on first $500K (SBD)
Holding company (holdco)Receives dividends, holds investmentsTax-free inter-corporate dividends
Individual professionalOwns holdco, receives salary from PCPersonal income tax on salary/dividends
Family trust (optional)Can hold holdco shares for income splittingTOSI rules limit benefits
Spouse/adult children as shareholdersReceive dividends (if TOSI allows)Must be 25+ and actively involved for lower rates

Tax Planning Strategies for Professionals

StrategyHow It WorksAnnual Benefit
Pay salary for RRSP room$100K salary → $18,000 RRSP room$5,000–$9,000 tax savings
Retain earnings in corporationDefer tax on corporate income$30,000–$100,000+ per year deferred
Pay dividends to holdcoTax-free inter-corporate dividends$0 tax on transfer
Individual Pension Plan (IPP)Defined benefit pension funded by corporation$30,000–$50,000/yr contribution (age-dependent)
Health Spending Account (HSA)Corporation funds health expenses tax-free$2,000–$10,000/yr
Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE)Purify PC shares for $1,016,836 exemption on sale$100,000–$200,000+ on sale
Estate freezeFreeze PC/holdco value, growth to childrenMulti-generational planning
Corporate class life insuranceCash value grows tax-shelteredBypass passive income rules

Individual Pension Plan (IPP) vs RRSP

FeatureRRSPIPP
Max contribution (age 50)~$32,490 (2026 limit)~$40,000+
Max contribution (age 60)~$32,490~$55,000+
Funded byPersonal or corp salaryCorporation (deductible)
Investment controlFull flexibilityMust meet actuarial targets
Creditor protectionYes (except recent contributions)Yes (pension legislation)
Terminal funding on wind-upNoAdditional tax-deductible contribution
Setup cost$0$3,000–$5,000
Annual cost$0$1,500–$3,000 (actuarial)
Best forUnder age 40Age 45+ with high T4 income

Health Spending Account (HSA)

FeatureDetails
How it worksCorporation funds HSA; employee claims eligible medical expenses
Tax to corporationDeductible business expense
Tax to professionalTax-free benefit (if sole employee or <2 employees)
Eligible expensesDental, vision, prescriptions, paramedical, travel medical
Annual limitNo legislated cap; $5,000–$15,000 typical
Family coverageCan cover spouse and dependents
RequirementMust be an employee of the PC (salary)

Passive Income: Impact on Professional Corporations

Passive Investment IncomeSBD AvailableStrategy
Under $50,000Full $500,000No concern
$50,001–$100,000$250,000–$500,000Monitor; consider holdco with life insurance
$100,001–$150,000$0–$250,000Shift to personal TFSA/RRSP, or holdco with insurance
Over $150,000$0Significant planning needed; use IPP, insurance, personal accounts