Ask ten business owners why they incorporated and most will say "for the tax savings." Ask them to explain the savings and the answer gets fuzzy. That's because the headline benefit — the very low corporate tax rate on small business income — is widely misunderstood. It's a powerful tool, but it works very differently from how people imagine.
Once you understand what incorporation actually does for your taxes, the "should I?" question becomes much easier to answer honestly.
- A CCPC pays a very low combined tax rate — roughly 9–13% — on its first $500,000 of active business income, thanks to the small business deduction (SBD). Compare that to personal rates that climb past 50%.
- But that low rate is a deferral, not a permanent saving. When you eventually take the money out personally as salary or dividends, you pay the rest of the tax. Canada's system is built so the combined corporate-plus-personal tax roughly equals what a sole proprietor would have paid — this is called integration.
- So incorporation saves real tax mainly when you don't need all the profit personally and can leave it in the company to reinvest or invest. The more you leave in, the bigger the deferral advantage.
- If you spend everything you earn, the tax benefit of incorporating is small — and the added costs (a separate corporate return, more bookkeeping, annual filings) can outweigh it.
- Tax isn't the only reason to incorporate. Limited liability, credibility, income splitting where permitted, and access to the lifetime capital gains exemption on a future sale are all real, non-tax factors.
Read on for how the small business deduction works, why integration means deferral, and a clear-eyed view of when incorporating is worth it.
The small business deduction
A Canadian-controlled private corporation (CCPC) can claim the small business deduction, which lowers the federal corporate tax rate on its active business income. Combined with provincial small-business rates, the result is a combined rate in the neighbourhood of 9% to 13%, depending on your province, on the first $500,000 of qualifying active business income each year. That $500,000 ceiling is the "business limit."
Set that against personal tax. A sole proprietor pays personal rates on every dollar of profit, and the top marginal rate exceeds 50% in most provinces. On the surface, the gap looks enormous — and that's where the "incorporate and save a fortune" story comes from.
Source: Income Tax Act section 125 (the small business deduction, the definition of active business income, and the $500,000 business limit; the SBD is available only to CCPCs); CRA, Corporation tax rates.
Why it's deferral, not a free lunch
Here's what the headline leaves out. That low corporate rate applies while the money is inside the corporation. The moment you take it out to live on — as salary or as dividends — you pay personal tax on it. The corporate tax was only the first layer.
Canada's tax system is deliberately designed so that the total tax (corporate tax paid by the company plus personal tax paid by you when you extract the money) comes out roughly the same as if you'd earned the income personally in the first place. Tax professionals call this integration. It's not perfect, but it's close enough that you shouldn't expect incorporation to cut your lifetime tax bill on money you need to spend.
The low corporate rate isn't a discount. It's a "pay later" — and "later" only helps you if the money stays in the company working in the meantime.
So when is incorporation actually worth it?
You earn more than you spend
If your business generates more profit than you need to live on, you can leave the surplus in the company taxed at ~9–13% and reinvest it. That deferral is the single biggest tax reason to incorporate.
You want limited liability
A corporation is a separate legal person. In many situations it can shield your personal assets from business liabilities — a non-tax reason that matters on its own.
You're planning to sell one day
Shares of a qualifying small business corporation may be eligible for the lifetime capital gains exemption — potentially a very large tax-free amount on a future sale. That requires a corporation.
You have income to split (carefully)
Where family members genuinely contribute, dividends can sometimes be split — but the TOSI rules now limit this heavily. It's a real factor, with real conditions.
When to stay a sole proprietor (for now)
Incorporation isn't free, and for some businesses the costs swamp the benefits:
- You spend essentially all your profit — integration means little tax to defer.
- Your income is modest and the deferral on what's left is small.
- You're not ready for the added cost and admin: incorporation fees, a separate T2 corporate return, more bookkeeping, payroll if you take a salary, and annual corporate filings.
- Your work would make the corporation a personal services business (a contractor who's really an employee in disguise) — which strips away the small business deduction entirely and is taxed punitively.
None of these are permanent. Plenty of businesses start as sole proprietorships and incorporate later, exactly when the numbers start to favour it.
It's a math problem, and a life problem
Whether to incorporate isn't a yes/no rule of thumb — it's the intersection of your numbers (how much you earn, how much you keep) and your situation (liability, family, exit plans). The mistake is incorporating because someone said you'd "save on taxes," then discovering you spend everything you make and now have a corporate return to file for a benefit you're not actually capturing.
The good news: this is a very answerable question once someone runs your actual numbers. There's a clear line where the deferral starts to outweigh the costs, and a good accountant can show you where you sit relative to it.
Sam incorporated for the tax savings — and got a tax return instead
Meet Sam, a freelance developer in Victoria earning about $95,000 a year. An online forum convinced him to incorporate "to save on taxes," so he did. The problem: Sam spends almost everything he earns to live — rent, life, a little travel.
Because of integration, paying that income out to himself as salary and dividends leaves his combined corporate-plus-personal tax roughly where it would have been as a sole proprietor. The low corporate rate only helps on profit you leave inside the company — and Sam leaves in nothing. What he did add to his life: incorporation costs, a separate T2 return every year, more bookkeeping, and annual filings. The promised savings never showed up.
Incorporation rewards the profit you leave in. Sam left in nothing.
What should have happened: run the numbers first. If you spend essentially everything you earn, the deferral advantage has nothing to work with — and staying a sole proprietor (for now) is often the cheaper, simpler call.
Wondering if incorporating is worth it for your situation?
Let's run your real numbers. A 20-minute call is usually enough to tell whether incorporation would actually help you — or just add a tax return.
Book a Free 20-Minute CallThis article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax or legal advice. Corporate and personal tax rates vary by province and change over time, and incorporation decisions depend on your full situation. Consult a qualified professional before incorporating.
Primary sources, linked so you can read and interpret them yourself. Legislative links open on the official Justice Laws Website; agency links open on Government of Canada websites.
- Income Tax Act (Canada), Justice Laws Website: section 125 — the small business deduction, the definition of "active business income," the $500,000 business limit, and the CCPC requirement (subsection 125(7) also defines "personal services business")
- CRA — Corporation tax rates (federal and provincial small-business rates)
- CRA — T2 Corporation Income Tax Guide, Chapter 4 (small business deduction)
- Related reading: Salary vs. Dividend (how to take money out once you've incorporated), Employee or Contractor? (the personal-services-business trap), and Shareholder Benefits Explained