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Gondaliya CPA

IT Consultant Incorporation · Ontario · From $35

Incorporation for IT Consultants in Ontario

We incorporate IT consultants, software developers, data engineers, cloud architects and technology freelancers in Ontario. HST on consulting services, international client zero-rating, SR&ED tax credits, contractor vs. employee structuring, salary vs. dividend optimization and IT-specific tax planning. Flat fee. Done by a licensed CPA.

What Is Included in Our IT Consultant Incorporation Service

Everything you need to incorporate as an IT consultant in Ontario. No regulatory body required. No hourly billing. No hidden fees.

IncludedWhat We Do
Corporation setup (CCPC)We incorporate your Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation under the CBCA (federal) or OBCA (Ontario). No professional college or regulatory body required for IT consultants. Fastest incorporation of any profession.
Articles of IncorporationWe draft Articles with a flexible share structure that supports income splitting, holdco integration and future investors or co-founders. Named or numbered corporation available.
Corporate minute bookComplete minute book with bylaws, organizational resolutions, share certificates, director and officer appointments and registers of shareholders and directors.
Share structure designVoting common shares (founder), non-voting shares (spouse, family trust) for income splitting. Additional share classes for co-founders, investors or option holders if needed.
CRA Business Number and program accountsWe register your BN and all required accounts: Corporate Tax (RC), HST (RT), Payroll (RP) and Import/Export (RM) if applicable.
HST registration with zero-rating setupWe register your corporation for HST and configure your invoicing to charge 13% to Canadian clients and 0% (zero-rated) to US and international clients from day one.
Contractor agreement structure adviceWe advise on structuring your consulting arrangement (corp-to-corp) to satisfy CRA's independent contractor criteria and avoid employee reclassification risk.
Salary vs. dividend optimizationWe model the optimal mix of salary and dividends to minimize combined corporate and personal tax while maintaining RRSP room, CPP contributions and government benefit eligibility.
Fiscal year-end selectionWe select the fiscal year-end that maximizes tax deferral based on your contract income patterns and personal tax situation.
Annual T2 corporate tax returnFiled FREE for every IT consultant bookkeeping client. No additional charge.

For ongoing IT consulting accounting, bookkeeping and tax advisory, visit our accounting services for software developers and IT consultants. For our full incorporation process, see our incorporation services page.

How IT Consultant Incorporation Works

Four steps. No regulatory body. No college application. The fastest professional incorporation in Ontario.

1

Incorporate

We file your Articles with Corporations Canada (federal) or Ontario. No professional college approval needed. Corporation active in 1 to 3 business days.

2

CRA Registration

We register your Business Number, Corporate Tax, HST and Payroll accounts. HST invoicing configured: 13% Canadian, 0% international.

3

Contract Structure

We review your consulting arrangement to ensure it satisfies CRA's independent contractor criteria. Corp-to-corp invoicing configured.

4

Tax Strategy

We configure salary vs. dividend, set the fiscal year-end, assess SR&ED eligibility and project your first-year tax savings.

IT Consultant Incorporation from $35

All-inclusive. Articles, minute book, CRA registration, HST setup and salary vs. dividend analysis. No regulatory body fees.

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Why IT Consultants in Ontario Incorporate

BenefitHow It Works for IT ConsultantsDollar Impact
Small Business Deduction (12.2% tax rate)Your corporation pays 12.2% combined federal and Ontario tax on the first $500,000 of active business income vs. personal rates of 29% to 53.53%.$180,000 contract revenue, $30,000 expenses, $150,000 net. Retain $80,000: $12,264 annual tax deferral.
Contractor credibility (corp-to-corp)Most enterprise clients, staffing agencies and technology companies require corp-to-corp invoicing. Without a corporation, you cannot accept these contracts.Access to contracts paying $100 to $250+/hour that are unavailable to sole proprietors.
International client zero-ratingIT consulting services provided to clients outside Canada are zero-rated (0% HST). You charge nothing but claim full ITCs on all Canadian expenses. Consultants with significant US clients are frequently in a net HST refund position.$100,000 in US client revenue: $0 HST collected. Full ITCs on $20,000 in Canadian expenses = $2,600 HST refund.
SR&ED tax creditsIf your work involves technological advancement, systematic investigation or experimental development, the corporation may qualify for Scientific Research and Experimental Development tax credits. 35% federal refundable credit for CCPCs on the first $3M of qualifying expenditures.$150,000 in qualifying SR&ED wages and materials = $52,500 refundable federal tax credit.
Income splitting with spouseIssue non-voting shares to your spouse. Pay dividends to your spouse in a lower tax bracket. TOSI rules apply but excluded amount provisions can be met through active involvement or capital investment.$40,000 in dividends to a spouse earning under $55,000: up to $8,000 in combined family tax savings per year.
LCGE on future saleIf you build a product, a team or a book of business and sell the corporation, each shareholder can claim up to $1,016,836 in capital gains tax-free.$2,033,672 in tax-free capital gains for founder and spouse on qualifying CCPC shares.

Real IT Consultant Example: A senior cloud architect earning $200/hour on a 12-month enterprise contract generates $400,000 in annual revenue. Expenses: $25,000 (home office, equipment, software, insurance). Net income: $375,000. They pay a salary of $180,000 (generating maximum RRSP room and CPP) and retain $195,000 in the corporation. Tax on the retained $195,000 at 12.2% is $23,790 vs. $90,382 at the top personal rate. Annual deferral: $66,592. Over 5 years: $332,960. Incorporation cost: $35.

Contractor vs. Employee: The Reclassification Risk

CRA can reclassify an incorporated IT consultant as an employee of the client company. If this happens, the client owes retroactive CPP, EI and income tax, and the consultant loses the SBD, ITCs and all corporate tax benefits for the reclassified period. Proper structuring at incorporation prevents this.

CRA FactorLooks Like an Independent ContractorLooks Like an Employee (Risk)
Control over workYou decide how, when and where to perform the work. Client specifies deliverables, not methods.Client dictates hours, location, tools and methods. You follow their internal processes.
Tools and equipmentYou provide your own laptop, software licences, development environment and tools.Client provides all equipment, software, email address and access credentials.
Financial riskYou invoice for completed deliverables. You bear the risk of cost overruns, rework and non-payment. You carry liability insurance.You are paid a fixed hourly or salary rate regardless of project outcome. No financial risk.
Ability to subcontractYou can hire subcontractors or substitutes to complete the work without client approval.Client requires you personally. No substitutes allowed.
Multiple clientsYou serve multiple clients concurrently or in the same year. Not exclusive to one company.You work for one client full-time for an extended period with no other clients.
Integration into client organizationYou are not on the client's org chart. You do not attend all-hands meetings or receive employee benefits.You attend team meetings, have a client email address, participate in performance reviews and receive client swag.

Single-Client, Full-Time Arrangements Are the Highest Risk: An IT consultant who works exclusively for one client, 40 hours per week, at the client's office, using the client's equipment, for 12+ months is the textbook profile CRA reclassifies. If reclassified, the client owes retroactive employer CPP and EI (approximately 8% of gross pay), and you lose the SBD on all income earned during the period. On a $200,000 contract, the retroactive liability is $16,000+ for the client and the lost deferral is $30,000+ for you. Structure correctly from day one: use your own equipment, invoice from the corporation, maintain the right to subcontract and document the independent relationship in a written consulting agreement.

We Structure Your Consulting Arrangement to Withstand CRA Review

Contract review, corp-to-corp invoicing, independent contractor criteria documentation. Included with every incorporation.

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HST Rules for Incorporated IT Consultants

Revenue TypeHST StatusKey Detail
IT consulting services to Canadian clientsTaxable at 13% (Ontario)Every consulting invoice to a Canadian client includes 13% HST. Place of supply rules may apply for clients in other provinces (e.g., 15% for Atlantic provinces).
IT consulting services to US clientsZero-rated (0%)Services to non-resident clients are zero-rated. You charge $0 HST but claim full ITCs on all Canadian business expenses.
IT consulting services to other international clientsZero-rated (0%)Same as US: zero-rated. Full ITCs recoverable. Consultants with 50%+ international revenue are frequently in a net refund position.
SaaS or digital product revenueTaxable (rate depends on buyer location)If your corporation sells a SaaS product, the HST rate is based on the buyer's province. Multi-province selling requires place-of-supply tracking.
Subcontractor invoices receivedITC claimableIf you hire subcontractors who charge HST, you claim the ITC on their invoices.
Home office, equipment, software, advertisingFull ITCsEvery dollar of HST paid on business expenses is recoverable. Laptop, monitors, software subscriptions, coworking, phone, internet (business %).
Quick Method (8.8%)Available if taxable revenue under $400,000 (including HST)Collect 13%, remit 8.8% of HST-inclusive revenue. Not optimal for consultants with significant international (zero-rated) revenue or high expenses.

International Revenue Creates a Refund Position: If 60% of your revenue comes from US or international clients (zero-rated), you collect HST on only 40% of total revenue. But you claim ITCs on 100% of Canadian expenses. The result: your ITCs frequently exceed your HST collected, producing a quarterly or annual refund from CRA. A consultant earning $300,000 (60% US, 40% Canadian) with $30,000 in Canadian expenses receives approximately $2,460 in net HST refunds per year. File quarterly to receive refunds faster. We handle multi-jurisdiction HST for IT consultants across Ontario. Learn more about our IT consultant accounting services.

SR&ED Tax Credits for IT Consultants

The Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) program is the largest federal tax incentive for Canadian businesses. IT consultants and software developers who advance technology, solve technical uncertainties or develop new algorithms, frameworks or systems may qualify.

SR&ED ElementWhat QualifiesWhat Does NOT Qualify
Eligible activitiesDeveloping new algorithms, building novel software architectures, solving technical problems with no known solution, creating new frameworks or tools, experimental development of prototypesRoutine software development, bug fixes, UI/UX design, system administration, data migration, project management, QA testing of existing features
Eligible expendituresSalaries and wages of employees performing SR&ED work, materials consumed in R&D, subcontractor fees (80% eligible), overhead allocationCapital equipment (not eligible for ITC, but CCA applies), marketing costs, administrative salaries not related to R&D
Federal credit rate (CCPC)35% refundable ITC on the first $3,000,000 of qualifying expenditures. 15% non-refundable on amounts above $3M.N/A
Ontario creditOntario Innovation Tax Credit (OITC): 8% non-refundable on eligible Ontario SR&ED expenditures.N/A
Documentation requiredTechnical narrative describing the technological uncertainty, the systematic approach taken, the hypothesis tested and the results. Must be contemporaneous (written during the project, not after).Post-hoc descriptions written at year-end without supporting evidence are frequently rejected by CRA.

SR&ED Is High-Value but Technical to Claim: A CCPC spending $200,000 on qualifying SR&ED wages can receive up to $70,000 in refundable federal tax credits plus $16,000 in Ontario credits. That is $86,000 back from the government. However, CRA reviews SR&ED claims rigorously. The technical narrative must describe a genuine technological uncertainty (not a business problem), a systematic investigation (not trial and error without hypothesis) and results that advance scientific or technological knowledge. We assess SR&ED eligibility for every IT consultant at onboarding and prepare the claim documentation if you qualify.

Salary vs. Dividend for Incorporated IT Consultants

FactorSalaryDividend
Tax treatmentDeductible to the corporation. Taxable as employment income. CPP contributions required (employee and employer share).Paid from after-tax corporate income. Eligible dividend tax credit reduces personal tax. No CPP.
RRSP roomGenerates RRSP room (18% of employment income, max $32,490 for 2026). Essential for retirement savings.Does NOT generate RRSP room. A dividend-only strategy forfeits RRSP contribution room permanently.
CPP contributionsYes. Maximum combined employee and employer: $8,068.20 for 2026. Builds CPP retirement pension.No CPP. Saves $8,068.20 per year but forfeits CPP retirement benefits.
Impact on government benefitsCounts as net income. Higher salary reduces CCB, OTB and other income-tested benefits.Grossed-up dividend amount counts as net income. Lower cash withdrawal may preserve benefits for families with young children.
Optimal strategy for IT consultantsMost IT consultants benefit from salary up to the RRSP room maximum ($180,500 for 2026) plus dividends for additional personal cash needs. Consultants earning $250,000+ who can retain $100,000+ in the corporation see the largest deferral. We model this for every IT consultant client annually.

When Should an IT Consultant Incorporate?

ScenarioIncorporate?Why
Enterprise client or staffing agency requires corp-to-corpYes, immediatelyYou cannot accept the contract without a corporation. Incorporate before the engagement starts. Same-day processing available.
Net consulting income consistently over $75,000YesSBD at 12.2% vs. personal rates saves $5,000+ per year. Deferral compounds annually. Break-even reached in the first quarter.
Significant US or international clients (30%+ of revenue)YesZero-rated international revenue + full ITCs on Canadian expenses = quarterly HST refunds. Sole props miss the ITCs entirely if not registered.
Developing a SaaS product or technology IPYesThe corporation owns the IP. SR&ED credits are available to the CCPC. LCGE applies on the future sale of shares. IP in a sole prop has no entity protection and no LCGE.
Working for one client, salaried, no other contractsMaybe notIf you are a permanent employee receiving a T4, there is nothing to incorporate. If you are a contractor paid on a T4A, incorporation may still benefit you, but the single-client arrangement creates reclassification risk.
Side consulting under $40,000 with no US clientsNot yetSole prop with T2125 is simpler. Annual compliance costs ($500+ T2) may offset the small deferral. Revisit when revenue grows or a client requires corp-to-corp.

Corp-to-Corp Is Often the Trigger: The most common reason IT consultants in Ontario incorporate is that a new client or staffing agency requires corp-to-corp invoicing. When that call comes, you need a corporation ready within 1 to 3 business days. We process same-day incorporations for IT consultants so you never lose a contract because of entity structure. Incorporate for $35 today.

The 10 Incorporation Errors We Prevent for IT Consultant Clients

#ErrorWhat It CostsHow We Prevent It
1Not incorporating before accepting a corp-to-corp contractLose the contract entirely. Or invoicing personally and missing the SBD for the entire engagement period.Same-day or next-day incorporation. Corporation active before the contract starts.
2Single-client arrangement structured as employmentCRA reclassifies as employee. Retroactive CPP, EI and payroll tax. $16,000+ on a $200,000 contract.Contract reviewed at incorporation. Independent contractor criteria documented. Corp-to-corp invoicing configured.
3Charging HST to US and international clientsOvercharging the client. Creates awkward reversal. Damages the relationship.Invoicing configured at incorporation: 13% Canadian, 0% international. Every invoice template verified.
4Not registering for HST before the first invoiceLost ITCs on equipment, software and home office from the start. Cannot zero-rate international revenue without registration.HST registration completed at incorporation, before the first invoice.
5Paying only dividends (no salary)Zero RRSP room generated. Forfeits $32,490/year permanently. No CPP pension.Salary/dividend mix modelled annually. Salary set to generate maximum RRSP room.
6Missing SR&ED eligibility$30,000 to $100,000+ in refundable tax credits unclaimed. Many IT consultants qualify but never assess.SR&ED eligibility assessed at onboarding. If eligible, technical narrative and claim prepared.
7Not selecting the optimal fiscal year-endDecember 31 year-end limits deferral. A strategic year-end provides 11+ months of salary deferral.Fiscal year-end selected based on contract patterns and personal tax situation.
8Mixing personal and corporate bank accountsCRA treats mixed accounts as evidence of no real corporate separation. Pierces the corporate veil on audit.Dedicated corporate bank account opened at incorporation. No personal transactions through the corporate account.
9Not claiming home office ITCs$400 to $700 per year in lost ITCs for a typical Toronto IT consultant working from home.Home office calculated at onboarding. Proportional ITC claimed every quarter.
10No bookkeeping system from day one$3,000+ year-end cleanup, incorrect T2, missed ITCs and late filing penalties.QBO or Xero configured for IT consulting at incorporation. Chart of accounts with Canadian vs. international revenue, contractor expenses, equipment CCA and home office tracking.

Transparent Flat-Fee Pricing for IT Consultant Incorporation

No hourly billing. No hidden fees. No regulatory body application. Fastest incorporation of any profession.

ServiceFeeIncludes
IT consultant incorporation (federal)$35Government fee, NUANS, Articles, minute book, bylaws, share certificates, CRA registration (BN, RC, RP, RT), HST registration with zero-rating setup
IT consultant incorporation (Ontario provincial)$335Same as federal with Ontario-specific filing
Contract structure reviewFREEReview of consulting agreement for independent contractor criteria. Corp-to-corp invoicing guidance.
Salary vs. dividend optimization (first year)FREEModelled at incorporation and recalculated annually for bookkeeping clients
SR&ED eligibility assessmentFREEWe assess whether your development work qualifies for SR&ED tax credits at onboarding
Monthly bookkeeping for IT consultantsFrom $100/monthBank reconciliation, Canadian vs. international revenue tracking, expense categorization, HST filing with zero-rating, contractor expense tracking
Annual T2 corporate tax returnFREEIncluded for every IT consultant bookkeeping client at no additional charge
Holdco setup (for investment assets)$35Separate holding company for retained earnings beyond working capital. Tax-free inter-corporate dividends.

For a complete overview of our IT consulting accounting services including multi-currency reconciliation, international invoicing and ongoing tax advisory, visit our software development and IT consulting services page.

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IT Consultant Incorporation: Cities We Serve

We incorporate IT consultants across every Ontario city and Canada. No distance limits, no extra fees.

Frequently Asked Questions: IT Consultant Incorporation

How much does it cost to incorporate as an IT consultant in Ontario?
$35 for federal incorporation through Gondaliya CPA. All-inclusive: government fee, NUANS, Articles, minute book, share certificates, CRA registration, HST registration with zero-rating setup and contract structure review. No regulatory body fees. No hidden charges. Incorporate for $35 →
Do IT consultants need a professional licence to incorporate?
No. Unlike doctors, dentists or lawyers, IT consultants do not require a professional college licence or Certificate of Authorization. You incorporate as a standard CCPC under the CBCA (federal) or OBCA (Ontario). This makes IT consultant incorporation the fastest of any profession: 1 to 3 business days with no regulatory approval delay.
My client requires corp-to-corp. How fast can I incorporate?
Same-day or next business day for federal online incorporation. We process the Articles, prepare the minute book, register with CRA and configure HST invoicing within 1 to 3 business days total. You can invoice from the corporation immediately after CRA registration is confirmed. Get Started →
How much tax does an IT consultant save by incorporating?
A consultant earning $400,000 with $25,000 in expenses ($375,000 net) who retains $195,000 defers approximately $66,592 per year (12.2% vs. 53.53%). Over 5 years: $332,960. At $150,000 net retaining $50,000: $7,665 annual deferral. The $35 incorporation cost is recovered immediately.
Do I charge HST to US clients?
No. IT consulting services to non-Canadian clients are zero-rated (0% HST). You charge nothing but claim full ITCs on all Canadian business expenses. Consultants with significant US revenue are frequently in a net HST refund position. We configure zero-rated invoicing at incorporation. For more on our approach, see our IT consultant accounting services.
What is the contractor reclassification risk?
CRA can reclassify an incorporated consultant as an employee of the client. This triggers retroactive CPP, EI and payroll tax. The risk is highest for single-client, full-time, long-term arrangements where the client controls how and when the work is done. We review your contract at incorporation and document independent contractor criteria to reduce this risk.
Does my IT work qualify for SR&ED tax credits?
Possibly. If your work involves technological advancement (new algorithms, novel architectures, solving technical problems with no known solution), it may qualify. Routine development, bug fixes and system administration do not qualify. We assess eligibility at onboarding. If you qualify, a $200,000 SR&ED claim can generate $86,000 in combined federal and Ontario credits.
Should I pay myself salary or dividends?
A combination is optimal. Salary generates RRSP room (up to $32,490/year) and CPP pension. Dividends benefit from the eligible dividend tax credit. We model the optimal mix annually. Consultants earning $200,000+ who can retain $80,000+ see the largest benefit from the combined approach.
Should I use the Quick Method for HST?
Rarely optimal for IT consultants. The Quick Method (8.8%) works best when most revenue is Canadian and taxable and expenses are low. IT consultants with international revenue (zero-rated) or significant expenses (home office, equipment, software) almost always save more with the Regular Method. We calculate both and recommend the lower remittance. GST/HST Filing Services →
How much does IT consultant bookkeeping cost?
From $100 per month through Gondaliya CPA. Includes bank reconciliation, Canadian vs. international revenue tracking, HST filing with zero-rating, expense categorization and contractor expense tracking. T2 corporate tax return filed FREE for every bookkeeping client. 60-Day Fees-Matching Policy applies. Know Your Exact Fee →

Incorporate Your IT Consulting Business for $35. All-Inclusive.

Gondaliya CPA incorporates IT consultants and software developers in Ontario. Articles, minute book, CRA registration, HST zero-rating, contract review and salary vs. dividend strategy. From $35. 900+ five-star reviews.

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