When a corporation sells something for a gain β€” an investment, a property, goodwill on the sale of the business β€” only half of that capital gain is taxable. The other half is genuinely tax-free at the corporate level. That raises an obvious question: if the corporation eventually pays that money out to you, do you get taxed on it again?

The answer, done right, is no. The tax-free half is tracked in a notional account called the Capital Dividend Account (CDA), and a private corporation can elect to pay it out as a capital dividend β€” received completely tax-free by Canadian-resident shareholders. It's one of the cleanest results in the tax system. It's also routinely missed, because the money only comes out tax-free if you file the right election, and most owners never do.

TL;DR β€” The Short Version
  1. The CDA holds the tax-free portions of certain corporate gains β€” most commonly the non-taxable half of capital gains, plus certain life-insurance proceeds and capital dividends received from other corporations.
  2. A private corporation can pay a capital dividend from its CDA, and the shareholder receives it 100% tax-free.
  3. It's not automatic. You must file an election β€” Form T2054 under ITA 83(2) β€” on or before the dividend becomes payable, with a schedule showing the CDA balance.
  4. Most owners miss it, then pay the same money out as an ordinary taxable dividend and hand the CRA tax they never had to pay.
  5. Get the balance wrong and it's costly: paying a capital dividend that exceeds your CDA triggers a steep penalty tax (Part III, 60% of the excess). Precision matters β€” verify the balance first.

Read on for what feeds the CDA, how the election works, the penalty for over-paying, a real example of money left behind, and how to use it.


A running total of your corporation's tax-free money

The CDA isn't a bank account β€” it's a notional running balance the corporation tracks. The most common things that add to it:

Every time your corporation books a capital gain, half of it is taxed β€” and the other half lands in the CDA, waiting to be paid out tax-free. Over years, that balance can become substantial without anyone noticing.

Source: Income Tax Act, s. 89(1) (definition of "capital dividend account"); CRA, Income Tax Folio S3-F2-C1, Capital Dividends.

A $400,000 corporate capital gain splits in two: the taxable half ($200,000) is taxed in the corporation, while the non-taxable half ($200,000) flows into the Capital Dividend Account and can be paid out as a tax-free capital dividend. A $400,000 CORPORATE CAPITAL GAIN β€” WHERE THE HALVES GO $400,000 capital gain Taxable half β€” $200,000 taxed in the corporation Non-taxable half β€” $200,000 β†’ Capital Dividend Account Pay $200,000 capital dividend β€” TAX-FREE to shareholders (file T2054)
The tax-free half doesn't have to stay locked in the company. Filed correctly, it reaches the owner's pocket with no personal tax.

The election: Form T2054

The tax-free treatment is not automatic β€” it has to be elected. The corporation files Form T2054 (the election under ITA 83(2)) on or before the day the capital dividend becomes payable, along with a schedule showing how the CDA balance was calculated and the directors' resolution authorizing the dividend. Done properly, the shareholder reports nothing β€” the dividend simply isn't taxable.

Miss the election and the same payment is just a regular, taxable dividend. The tax-free opportunity doesn't roll over to the cash; it's tied to filing the form for that specific dividend.

Source: Income Tax Act, s. 83(2) (capital dividend election); CRA, Form T2054 β€” Election for a Capital Dividend Under Subsection 83(2).

Why you can't guess the balance

Because a capital dividend is tax-free, the CRA polices the balance hard. If a corporation elects to pay a capital dividend that exceeds its actual CDA, the excess is hit with a punishing Part III tax β€” 60% of the over-payment (there's an election to mitigate it in some cases, but you don't want to be there). This is why the CDA balance has to be calculated precisely, with the supporting schedule, before any election is filed β€” and why "I think there's some room in there" is not a basis for paying one.

Source: Income Tax Act, s. 83 and Part III tax (s. 184(2)); CRA, Capital dividend accounts.

The owner who paid tax on tax-free money

Meet Gord, who runs Riverbend Holdings Ltd., a small investment-holding company in Nanaimo, British Columbia. A few years ago Riverbend bought a commercial unit; this year it sold it and realized a $400,000 capital gain. Half β€” $200,000 β€” is taxed inside the corporation. The other $200,000 is non-taxable and sits in Riverbend's CDA.

Gord wants the cash out. His plan is simple: pay himself a dividend. So he declares a $200,000 dividend and reports it as an ordinary (non-eligible) taxable dividend on a T5. At his B.C. marginal rate, that dividend costs him somewhere around $80,000 in personal tax.

Here's the problem: that $200,000 was exactly the size of his CDA. Had Riverbend filed a T2054 and paid it as a capital dividend, Gord would have received the entire $200,000 tax-free β€” personal tax of zero.

Same $200,000 to Gord β€” two ways out
As an ordinary taxable dividend (what he did)~$80,000 personal tax
As a capital dividend from the CDA (T2054 filed)$0 personal tax
Cost of not filing one formβ‰ˆ $80,000

Illustrative. The CDA balance existed either way β€” the only difference was the election.

The tax-free money was already sitting in the company. All that stood between it and Gord's bank account was a form nobody filed.

Nothing about Gord's situation was aggressive or unusual β€” realizing a capital gain inside a corporation is ordinary. The roughly $80,000 wasn't lost to the tax rules; it was lost to not using a rule that was sitting right there. And because the dividend matched his CDA exactly, there was no penalty risk β€” just an election that should have been filed and wasn't.

What should have happened

A quick CDA checklist

The CDA is exactly the kind of thing that quietly accumulates and then gets wasted at exactly the moment it matters β€” a property sale, a business sale, an insurance payout. Tracking it and filing the election is part of what's included in every CDL plan, and you can estimate the cost in about a minute.

Don't pay tax on money the system already made tax-free

Every capital gain your corporation earns drops its tax-free half into the CDA. That money can reach you with zero personal tax β€” but only if someone is tracking the balance and files the T2054 when it's time to pay it. Skip that, and you'll pay ordinary tax on dollars that were never meant to be taxed again. It's one of the highest-value, lowest-effort moves a private corporation has, and it hinges entirely on knowing the account is there.

Has your corporation had a capital gain or insurance payout?

If so, there may be a tax-free dividend waiting in your CDA β€” or one you're about to miss. A 20-minute call is enough to check your balance and whether an election makes sense.

Book a Free 20-Minute Call

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. The capital dividend account, the election, and the penalty rules are detailed and change over time, and the figures above are illustrative. Consult a qualified professional before calculating a CDA balance or filing a capital dividend election.


Primary sources, linked so you can read and interpret them yourself. Legislative links open on the official Justice Laws website; agency links open on the Government of Canada website.