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2026 Updated  ·  All Corporations  ·  CRA-Verified Rules

Corporate Tax Installments Canada 2026 — When & How to Pay

A complete guide to corporate income tax installment obligations in Canada — who must pay, the three calculation methods, quarterly due dates by fiscal year-end, interest on deficiencies and what happens when a corporation misses a payment.

Updated January 2026 All provinces CCPCs and general corporations CRA-verified rules
Who Must Pay? Calculation Methods
$3,000Installment ThresholdNet tax owing in current or prior year
QuarterlyPayment Frequency4 installments per fiscal year
3 MethodsCalculation OptionsCurrent year, prior year, 2-year prior
7%Interest Rate 2026Daily compound on deficiencies
No PenaltyLate Installment PenaltyOnly interest — no separate late penalty
End of MonthFinal Balance Due2 or 3 months after fiscal year-end

1. What Are Corporate Tax Installments?

Corporate income tax installments are quarterly prepayments of a corporation's estimated annual income tax liability. Rather than waiting until the corporate tax return is filed and paying the full year's tax in a single payment, CRA requires corporations whose net tax owing exceeds a threshold to spread their payments across the fiscal year in four equal quarterly installments.

The installment system exists because the federal government and provincial governments rely on a steady, predictable stream of corporate tax revenue throughout the year — not a single lump sum once a year. For corporations, installments also prevent the cash flow shock of a large unexpected tax bill at year-end by building the obligation gradually throughout the year alongside the income that generated it.

Installments are required for both federal corporate income tax (Part I tax under the Income Tax Act) and for provincial corporate income tax in most provinces. In Ontario, Alberta and several other provinces, the province administers its own corporate income tax separately and has its own installment requirements — though in practice most provinces follow CRA's quarterly schedule.

Installments vs. Final Balance: Installments are advance payments made during the fiscal year based on an estimate. The final balance of tax owing is calculated when the T2 return is prepared after year-end — total tax minus installments already paid. If installments exceeded the actual tax, the excess is refunded. If installments fell short, the remaining balance is due on the balance-due day with interest on any deficiency from each installment's original due date.

2. Who Must Pay Corporate Tax Installments?

A corporation is required to pay quarterly tax installments if its net tax owing for either the current taxation year or the immediately preceding taxation year exceeds $3,000. This is true for both federal and most provincial income taxes. If either threshold is met, installments are required — not only when both are met.

The installment obligation applies to virtually every type of Canadian corporation — Canadian-Controlled Private Corporations (CCPCs), public corporations, Crown corporations and foreign-controlled private corporations — subject to the $3,000 threshold. There is no size exemption and no revenue threshold. A corporation with a single employee that owes $3,001 in corporate tax for the year is required to pay installments in the following year.

Corporations Required to Pay Installments

  • Any corporation whose net tax owing for the current year is expected to exceed $3,000
  • Any corporation whose net tax owing for the immediately preceding year exceeded $3,000 — regardless of current-year expectations
  • Both conditions are checked independently — either one triggers the installment requirement
  • Applies to Part I federal corporate income tax and to provincial corporate income tax in participating provinces
  • Applies regardless of whether the corporation is a CCPC, non-CCPC, public or private

Corporations that are exempt from paying installments include those whose net tax owing has never exceeded $3,000 in either the current or immediately preceding year — typically very small corporations with minimal taxable income after deductions. New corporations in their very first taxation year are also generally not required to pay installments — though they must still pay the full year's tax by the balance-due day.

3. The $3,000 Threshold — What It Means in Practice

The $3,000 threshold refers to net tax owing — not gross revenue, not taxable income, and not the full tax liability before credits. Net tax owing is calculated as total Part I federal corporate income tax payable minus applicable federal tax credits (including the general tax reduction, small business deduction, foreign tax credits and other applicable credits).

For a Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation qualifying for the Ontario Small Business Deduction, the combined federal-provincial corporate tax rate is 12.2%. At this rate, a CCPC needs approximately $24,590 in net active business income before its net tax owing first reaches $3,000 — triggering the installment requirement in subsequent years.

Corporate Tax RateNet Income to Generate $3,000 TaxInstallment Required the Following Year?
12.2% — Ontario CCPC SBD rate~$24,590Yes — in the following year
26.5% — Ontario general corporate rate~$11,320Yes — in the following year
15% — Federal rate only (Alberta)~$20,000Yes — in the following year
Under threshold — all ratesUnder $3,000 net taxNo — unless current year will exceed $3,000

4. The Three Installment Calculation Methods

CRA permits corporations to calculate their quarterly installment amounts using any one of three methods. Corporations may choose a different method for each taxation year — and may even mix methods within a year in limited circumstances. The goal is always to ensure the total of four installments equals at least the corporation's actual net tax owing for the year — to avoid installment deficiency interest.

Method 1 — Current Year Estimate

Under the Current Year Estimate method, each quarterly installment is one-quarter of the corporation's estimated net tax owing for the current taxation year. The corporation estimates what it will owe at year-end based on projected income, deductions and credits — and pays 25% of that estimate each quarter.

This method produces the most accurate installments — payments closely reflect actual income as it is earned during the year. However, it requires ongoing income projection and creates risk if the year-end tax liability turns out to be higher than estimated. If the actual tax exceeds the current-year estimate, CRA charges interest on the deficiency retroactively from each installment's due date.

Worked Example — Method 1: Current Year Estimate

Ontario CCPC, December 31 fiscal year-end, projected net tax $48,000 for 2026

Estimated annual net tax (2026)$48,000
Each quarterly installment (÷ 4)$12,000
March 31, 2026 — Q1$12,000
June 30, 2026 — Q2$12,000
September 30, 2026 — Q3$12,000
December 31, 2026 — Q4$12,000
Total installments paid$48,000
Actual year-end tax (after T2 prepared)$50,000
Balance owing at filing — plus interest on $2,000 deficiency$2,000 + interest

Method 2 — Prior Year Method

Under the Prior Year method, each quarterly installment is one-quarter of the corporation's actual net tax owing for the immediately preceding taxation year. This method eliminates estimation risk — because the prior year's tax is already known — and is the simplest approach for corporations with relatively stable year-over-year income.

If you pay four installments each equal to one-quarter of last year's tax, CRA will not charge installment deficiency interest even if this year's actual tax turns out to be higher — provided the prior-year installments were paid in full and on time. Any excess of current-year tax over the installment total is paid as a final balance on the balance-due day, without interest on the shortfall.

Worked Example — Method 2: Prior Year Method

Ontario CCPC, December 31 fiscal year-end, prior year (2025) net tax $40,000

Prior year net tax (2025 actual)$40,000
Each quarterly installment (÷ 4)$10,000
March 31, 2026 — Q1$10,000
June 30, 2026 — Q2$10,000
September 30, 2026 — Q3$10,000
December 31, 2026 — Q4$10,000
Total installments paid$40,000
Actual 2026 year-end tax (higher year)$55,000
Balance owing at filing — NO deficiency interest because prior-year method was used correctly$15,000 balance only

Key Advantage of the Prior Year Method: When you use the Prior Year method and pay installments based on last year's actual tax — on time and in full — CRA cannot charge you installment deficiency interest even if this year's income is significantly higher. The balance owing at year-end is paid on the balance-due day without penalty. This is why the Prior Year method is the preferred approach for most growing corporations and the one most CPAs recommend for stability.

Method 3 — Two-Year Prior Year Method (First Two Installments)

The Two-Year Prior Year method is a hybrid approach that CRA also accepts as a safe harbour. Under this method:

  • First two installments (Q1 and Q2): Each equals one-quarter of the net tax owing from the second preceding taxation year (two years ago)
  • Last two installments (Q3 and Q4): Together, they make up the difference needed to reach the total tax from the immediately preceding year (last year)

This method is less commonly used than Method 2 but may be beneficial in specific circumstances — for example, when the corporation had a very high-tax second-preceding year and a significantly lower immediately preceding year. Like Method 2, if the installments are calculated correctly and paid on time, CRA will not assess deficiency interest even if actual current-year tax is higher.

Worked Example — Method 3: Two-Year Prior Year Method

2024 net tax: $60,000 · 2025 net tax: $44,000 · 2026 installments required

Q1 and Q2 (¼ of 2024 tax each)$15,000 × 2
Total paid after Q1 + Q2$30,000
Remaining to reach 2025 total ($44,000)$14,000
Q3 and Q4 (split equally)$7,000 × 2
Total 2026 installments paid$44,000
Safe harbour met — no deficiency interest if actual 2026 tax > $44,000Balance only, no interest

5. Which Calculation Method Is Best for Your Corporation?

SituationRecommended MethodReason
Stable income year over yearMethod 2 — Prior YearSimplest and predictable. No estimation risk. Safe harbour protection.
Income significantly lower than prior yearMethod 1 — Current YearReduces cash outflow. Paying prior-year amounts when income dropped means overpaying and waiting for a refund.
Income growing rapidlyMethod 2 — Prior Year (safe harbour)Use prior-year method for installment protection. Pay larger final balance at year-end without interest.
Uncertain income — variable businessMethod 2 — Prior YearEliminates estimation risk. Conservative approach in uncertain years.
First year with installment obligationMethod 1 or 2Only current and prior year available. Prior year is zero in first installment year.

6. Installment Due Dates by Fiscal Year-End

Corporate tax installment due dates fall at the end of each of the four quarters in your fiscal year. Installments are due on the last day of each complete quarter that falls within your taxation year. The specific calendar dates depend on your fiscal year-end.

When the Due Date Falls on a Weekend or Holiday: If an installment due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday or public holiday, CRA treats the installment as having been made on time if it is received by CRA on the next business day. For direct deposit and online payments, the payment date is the date CRA receives it — not the date you initiate it. Allow at least one business day for processing when paying near a deadline.

7. Due Dates — December 31 Fiscal Year-End

The most common corporate fiscal year-end in Canada is December 31. For a corporation with a December 31 year-end, the four quarterly installment due dates for the 2026 taxation year are:

QuarterDue DatePeriod CoveredInstallment Amount
Q1 — First installmentMarch 31, 2026January 1 – March 31, 2026¼ of annual estimated / prior-year tax
Q2 — Second installmentJune 30, 2026April 1 – June 30, 2026¼ of annual estimated / prior-year tax
Q3 — Third installmentSeptember 30, 2026July 1 – September 30, 2026¼ of annual estimated / prior-year tax
Q4 — Fourth installmentDecember 31, 2026October 1 – December 31, 2026¼ of annual estimated / prior-year tax
Final balanceMarch 31, 2027 (CCPC) or Feb 28, 2027 (general)Year-end balance after T2 preparedTotal tax minus all installments paid

8. Non-Calendar Fiscal Year-Ends

Many Canadian corporations choose a fiscal year-end other than December 31. For corporations with non-calendar fiscal year-ends, the installment due dates shift accordingly — always falling on the last day of each quarter counting from the start of the fiscal year.

Fiscal Year-EndQ1 DueQ2 DueQ3 DueQ4 DueBalance-Due Day (CCPC)
December 31March 31June 30September 30December 31March 31
March 31June 30September 30December 31March 31June 30
June 30September 30December 31March 31June 30September 30
September 30December 31March 31June 30September 30December 31
Any other month-end3 months after FYE start6 months after FYE start9 months after FYE startFYE date3 months after FYE

For corporations with a fiscal year-end that does not fall on a calendar quarter-end, the installment due dates are calculated as the last day of the month that is three, six, nine and twelve months after the start of the taxation year.

9. Final Balance — The 2-Month vs. 3-Month Rule

The final balance of corporate income tax owing after all installments have been paid is due on the balance-due day. The balance-due day differs depending on whether the corporation qualifies as a Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation under the Income Tax Act.

Corporation TypeBalance-Due DayExample (Dec 31 year-end)
Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC) eligible for SBD3 months after fiscal year-endMarch 31, 2027
All other corporations — public, non-CCPC, large CCPC not eligible for SBD2 months after fiscal year-endFebruary 28, 2027

CCPC Qualification for the 3-Month Balance-Due Day: A corporation qualifies for the 3-month balance-due day only if it was a CCPC throughout the entire taxation year and it claimed the Small Business Deduction (or would have if it had taxable income). CCPCs that have passive income above $150,000 — causing the SBD to grind to zero — may still qualify for the 3-month rule if they were otherwise eligible for the SBD. Confirm CCPC status with your CPA each year, particularly if your shareholder structure includes non-resident investors or if there have been changes to share ownership during the year.

10. How to Make Corporate Tax Installment Payments to CRA

CRA provides several methods for making corporate income tax installment payments. Online payment through My Business Account or a major Canadian financial institution is the fastest and most reliable — providing same-day or next-day CRA receipt for payments made before the financial institution's daily cut-off time.

Payment Methods Available

  • My Business Account (CRA online portal): Log in and select "Make a payment" under your corporate income tax account. Payments are processed immediately and credited to your RC account. This is the recommended method for all corporate installments.
  • Online banking — Pay bill: Add CRA as a payee ("Federal — Corporation Tax Payments RT") through your business bank account's bill payment service. Use your 15-digit Business Number (BN) with the RT0001 suffix as the payee account number. Allow at least one business day for processing.
  • My Payment (CRA web tool): Available at canada.ca/cra-my-payment. Accepts Visa Debit, Mastercard Debit and Interac Online for corporate payments. Credit cards are not accepted.
  • Wire transfer or large-payment service: For payments over $25,000, wire transfer through your financial institution's large-value transfer system (Lynx) provides same-day settlement.
  • Cheque: Payable to "Receiver General for Canada." Write your Business Number and the tax year on the memo line. Allow 5–10 business days for processing. Not recommended for deadline payments.

Payment Reference Number: Always include your 15-character Business Number (BN with RC0001 suffix) when making installment payments. If CRA cannot match your payment to your account, it may be applied to the wrong tax account or held as an unallocated credit — which does not count as a timely installment payment. If you are unsure of your BN, confirm it through My Business Account before any payment deadline.

11. Interest on Installment Deficiencies

Unlike late-filed income tax returns, CRA does not impose a separate penalty for late or deficient installment payments. However, CRA does charge compound daily interest at the prescribed rate on any installment deficiency — calculated from the date each installment was due to the date the deficiency is paid.

The prescribed interest rate for amounts owing to CRA in 2026 is 7% per annum, compounded daily. This rate is set quarterly by CRA and can change. The interest calculation is applied separately to each installment shortfall — not to the total annual deficiency.

How Installment Interest Is Calculated — Step by Step

CRA calculates installment interest by comparing the installments actually paid to the amount that would have been required under each of the three methods. The interest is then assessed using the method that produces the least interest — meaning CRA automatically applies whichever safe harbour method results in the lowest interest charge, even if you did not explicitly elect that method.

For each installment due date:

  • Calculate the required installment under each of the three methods
  • Determine the amount by which the actual payment fell short of the lowest required amount
  • Apply 7% daily compound interest on that shortfall from the due date to the payment date
  • The total installment interest is the sum of interest across all four quarters

Installment interest is not deductible as a business expense on the corporation's income tax return. It is a non-deductible cost of cash flow management.

Worked Interest Example

InstallmentAmount Required (Prior Year Method)Amount PaidDeficiencyDays LateInterest at 7%
Q1 — Mar 31$12,500$10,000$2,50092 days to Jun 30$44.14
Q2 — Jun 30$12,500$12,500$0$0
Q3 — Sep 30$12,500$8,000$4,50091 days to Dec 31$78.81
Q4 — Dec 31$12,500$12,500$0$0
Total installment interest assessed$122.95

12. Installment Interest Income — Overpayments

If a corporation's total installments paid exceed its actual net tax owing for the year, the excess is credited to the corporation's account and refunded after the T2 return is assessed. CRA does not pay interest on overpaid installments in the way that it charges interest on deficiencies. The prescribed rate for overpayments is 2% less than the deficiency rate — which means in 2026, CRA pays approximately 5% on excess corporate tax balances held in credit — but this only applies after the return is filed and assessed, not during the year while installments are held.

13. Provincial Corporate Tax Installments

In addition to federal corporate income tax installments, most provinces require corporations to pay provincial income tax installments on the same quarterly schedule. The province's treatment depends on whether it has a tax collection agreement with the federal government.

ProvinceProvincial Tax CollectionInstallment Schedule
OntarioAdministered by CRA under federal-provincial agreementSame CRA quarterly schedule — single combined federal-provincial payment
British ColumbiaAdministered by CRASame CRA quarterly schedule — single combined payment
SaskatchewanAdministered by CRASame CRA quarterly schedule — single combined payment
ManitobaAdministered by CRASame CRA quarterly schedule — single combined payment
Prince Edward IslandAdministered by CRASame CRA quarterly schedule — single combined payment
AlbertaSelf-administered by Alberta FinanceQuarterly, but filed separately with Alberta Finance — same CRA schedule for simplicity
QuebecSelf-administered by Revenu QuébecQuarterly installments filed separately with Revenu Québec under their own QC installment rules

For Ontario corporations — the most common case — both federal and Ontario corporate income tax installments are paid in a single combined quarterly payment to CRA. The T2 return allocates the combined tax between federal and provincial based on the applicable rates. There is no separate Ontario installment payment or Ontario installment form.

14. New Corporations — First-Year Rules

A corporation in its very first taxation year is generally not required to pay quarterly tax installments — because there is no prior year from which to calculate installment amounts, and the current-year income is not yet known. The first-year corporation pays its entire tax liability as a single payment on the balance-due day (three months after fiscal year-end for CCPCs, two months for others).

In the second taxation year, installments are required if the prior year's net tax owing exceeded $3,000 — which it will for any modestly profitable Ontario CCPC. Many first-year corporations are caught off guard when they realise that quarterly installment obligations begin in year two — even when year-two income is uncertain. Planning for the first installment payment in year two should begin in the later months of year one, before the first installment due date arrives.

First-Year Fiscal Period: A new corporation's first taxation year runs from its date of incorporation to its chosen fiscal year-end. If a corporation is incorporated on August 15 and chooses a December 31 year-end, its first taxation year is only 4.5 months long. If it earns taxable income in that short period and owes more than $3,000, installments will be required in the second full fiscal year based on the short-period prior year's tax.

15. The CCPC 3-Month Balance-Due Day — Planning Implications

The extra month that CCPCs receive — paying their final balance 3 months after year-end rather than 2 months — creates a meaningful cash flow planning opportunity. For an Ontario CCPC with a December 31 fiscal year-end, the balance is due March 31 — giving the corporation the full January, February and March to prepare the T2 return, calculate the exact balance owing and arrange payment without interest.

However, this benefit is easily lost if CCPC status is inadvertently compromised. Common ways Ontario CCPCs lose CCPC status mid-year include:

  • Non-resident shareholders acquiring more than 50% of voting shares (directly or indirectly)
  • A public corporation acquiring control through share purchase or convertible instrument
  • Inter-corporate transactions that transfer de facto control to a non-resident or public corporation
  • Sale of shares to an employee share ownership plan with more than 10% participation by non-residents

If CCPC status is lost during the year, the 3-month balance-due day is no longer available — the entire year's tax becomes due 2 months after year-end. For corporations with significant retained earnings and a late-fiscal-year CCPC status change, the cash flow impact of the one-month shortfall can be material. Review CCPC status with your CPA before any significant share transaction.

16. Excess Installments — Overpayment and Refunds

When a corporation's total installments exceed its actual tax for the year, the excess sits as a credit on the corporation's RC account. The credit is applied first against any other outstanding CRA obligations — HST owing, payroll remittances, prior-year balances — and any remaining excess is refunded to the corporation after the T2 return is assessed.

CRA typically takes 4 to 8 weeks to issue a corporate income tax refund after assessing a T2 return. Corporations that expect a refund should file the T2 as early as possible after fiscal year-end — there is no financial benefit to delaying a return when a refund is owed, and the sooner the return is filed, the sooner the refund is issued.

If a corporation knows early in the year that its income will be significantly lower than prior year — and that installments based on prior year will substantially exceed actual tax — it may voluntarily reduce its installment payments to match the lower current-year estimate. This is done by electing Method 1 (current year) rather than Method 2 (prior year) — the corporation must be confident in its lower income estimate to avoid interest if actual tax exceeds the reduced amounts.

17. Common Installment Mistakes

  • Missing the first installment in year two: First-year corporations frequently overlook that installments begin in their second year. The first quarterly payment for a December 31 corporation comes due March 31 of year two — often before the T2 for year one has even been filed. Set a calendar reminder well before the first due date.
  • Using the wrong Business Number: Installments must be directed to the RC (corporate income tax) account — not the RT (GST/HST) account or RP (payroll) account. Payments to the wrong account do not count as tax installments and accrue interest even though the money is held by CRA.
  • Paying a round number not matched to a safe harbour method: Paying an arbitrary round number — $10,000 per quarter when the prior-year-based amount is $12,500 — means you are not protected by the safe harbour and will owe interest on the $2,500 quarterly shortfall from each installment's due date.
  • Assuming the installment requirement disappears in a low-income year: The requirement to pay installments is triggered by the prior year's tax — not the current year's expected tax. Even if this year looks like it will be a low-income year, if last year's net tax exceeded $3,000, installments are still required. Use Method 1 (current year estimate) to reduce payments, but make them.
  • Not adjusting for a change in provincial operations: Corporations that expand or contract their operations across provinces may have changes in their provincial income allocation — affecting both the provincial and federal portions of their installment amounts. Review the allocation annually if your corporation operates in multiple provinces.
  • Treating installment interest as deductible: Interest charged by CRA on installment deficiencies is expressly non-deductible under the Income Tax Act. Claiming it as a business expense on the T2 will result in a reassessment of that deduction.

Need Help Calculating or Managing Your Corporate Tax Installments?

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Frequently Asked Questions — Corporate Tax Installments

Common questions from Canadian business owners about corporate income tax installment obligations.

How do I know if my corporation needs to pay quarterly installments?
Your corporation must pay quarterly installments if its net tax owing for either the current taxation year or the immediately preceding taxation year exceeded $3,000. Check last year's T2 return — if line 770 (net tax owing after credits and deductions) showed more than $3,000, installments are required this year regardless of what this year's income looks like. If your prior year was below $3,000 but you expect this year to exceed $3,000, you must also pay installments this year. CRA will sometimes send installment reminders — but the obligation exists whether or not a reminder is received.
What happens if I miss a corporate tax installment payment?
Missing an installment payment does not result in a separate penalty — but CRA will charge compound daily interest at 7% per annum on the deficiency from the date the installment was due until the shortfall is paid. Interest is charged separately on each installment's shortfall — a missed Q1 installment accrues interest from March 31 through to the date of payment. If the full year-end balance is paid by the balance-due day, installment interest is still assessed retroactively on any quarterly shortfalls. The interest is non-deductible and cannot be avoided once it has accrued — pay each installment in full and on time.
Can I pay all four installments at once at year-end?
Technically yes — you can make a single year-end payment. But CRA will still assess installment interest from each quarterly due date on the amounts that should have been paid at Q1, Q2 and Q3. Paying the full annual tax in December does not eliminate the interest charged on missed March, June and September installments. The interest rate (7% compounded daily) on a $12,500 quarterly shortfall over nine months is approximately $660 — not a catastrophic amount, but entirely avoidable with four timely payments.
My corporation had a much lower income year than last year. Can I reduce my installments?
Yes — you can elect the Current Year Estimate method (Method 1) and base your quarterly installments on your estimated current-year tax rather than last year's actual tax. If your estimate is correct, this eliminates overpayment. However, if your actual current-year tax turns out to be higher than your estimate, CRA will charge interest on the deficiency between what you estimated and what was actually owed. Use Method 1 when you are confident your income will be materially lower — and have your CPA confirm the estimate before each quarter's payment date.
Does my CCPC pay the final balance 2 months or 3 months after year-end?
A Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC) that was a CCPC throughout the entire taxation year and that qualifies for the Small Business Deduction has a balance-due day of 3 months after fiscal year-end. For a December 31 year-end, the final balance is due March 31. All other corporations — public corporations, non-CCPCs and CCPCs that do not qualify for the SBD — have a 2-month balance-due day (February 28 for a December 31 year-end). Confirm your CCPC status with your CPA each year, particularly if your shareholder structure changed during the year.
Are corporate installment payments the same as GST/HST installment payments?
No — they are completely separate. Corporate income tax installments are payments on your Part I federal income tax liability, directed to your RC account. GST/HST installments — required for annual GST/HST filers with net tax over $3,000 in the prior year — are payments on your GST/HST liability, directed to your RT account. The amounts, due dates and calculation methods are different for each. Paying corporate income tax to your RT account — or HST installments to your RC account — does not credit the correct liability and will result in interest on the intended account even though the funds are held by CRA in the wrong account.
My corporation is in its first year. Do I need to pay installments?
No — a corporation in its first taxation year is not required to pay quarterly installments. The entire first year's tax liability is due as a single payment on your balance-due day (3 months after fiscal year-end for CCPCs, 2 months for other corporations). However, installment obligations begin in your second taxation year if your first year's net tax owing exceeded $3,000 — which is common for any profitable CCPC. Plan for the first quarterly installment in year two before it arrives — typically within the first quarter of your second fiscal year.

Need Help Calculating Corporate Tax Installments or Filing Your T2?

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