Corporation vs. Sole Proprietorship in Ontario
The most consequential decision for Ontario business owners — incorporation vs. sole proprietorship. This guide compares tax rates, liability, ITCs, CCA, salary vs. dividends, the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption and shows the exact dollar difference at every income level from $50,000 to $500,000.
The $41,330 Question: Should You Incorporate in Ontario?
On $100,000 of business income in Ontario, a sole proprietor pays up to $33,428 in combined federal and provincial income tax (at 2026 marginal rates). An incorporated CCPC pays $12,200 on the same income through the small business deduction rate of 12.2%. That is a $21,228 difference in year one — but the real savings compound because the corporation retains the after-tax earnings inside the company for reinvestment, equipment purchases, hiring or investment. Over five years at $100,000 annual income, the cumulative tax deferral exceeds $100,000.
For Ontario business owners earning over $50,000 per year, incorporation is almost always the correct structure. Below $50,000, the administrative costs of maintaining a corporation (annual T2 filing, corporate minute book, separate bank account) may outweigh the tax deferral benefit — but the liability protection that incorporation provides has value at any income level. This guide walks through every factor that matters for the Ontario corporation vs. sole proprietorship decision in 2026.
Sole Proprietorship vs. Corporation at a Glance
Sole Proprietorship
An unincorporated business owned by one individual. The business and the owner are legally the same entity. All income is reported on the owner's personal T1 return.
- Simplest and cheapest to start — Ontario business name registration $60
- No separate tax return required — report on T2125
- Business losses deductible against personal income
- No annual corporate compliance requirements
- Unlimited personal liability — personal assets at risk
- All income taxed at personal marginal rates — up to 53.53%
- No access to 12.2% CCPC small business rate
- No Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption on business sale
- No salary vs. dividend planning or income deferral
- No holdco or investment income separation
- Business name not protected (federal incorporation protects name nationally)
Corporation (CCPC)
A separate legal entity — the corporation owns the business, not you personally. Income stays in the corporation until paid out as salary or dividends. Filed on a T2 return.
- 12.2% combined Ontario rate on first $500,000 of active business income
- Limited liability — personal assets protected from business debts and lawsuits
- Salary vs. dividend flexibility — control when and how much you take out
- Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption — up to $1,016,836 tax-free on share sale (2026)
- Holdco structure available for investment income separation
- Income splitting via family shareholder dividends (where TOSI permits)
- Immediate Expensing — up to $1.5M equipment write-off in year of purchase
- Corporate name protected nationally (federal incorporation)
- Annual T2 filing required — from $400 through Gondaliya CPA
- Corporate minute book and annual resolutions required
- Separate bank account and bookkeeping required
- Incorporation cost — $35 federal or $335 Ontario through Gondaliya CPA
Complete Comparison: Corporation vs. Sole Proprietorship in Ontario
| Factor | Sole Proprietorship | Corporation (Ontario CCPC) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Not separate from owner | Separate legal entity |
| Tax rate on first $500K active income | Personal marginal rates — 20.05% to 53.53% | 12.2% combined (9% federal + 3.2% Ontario) |
| Tax rate on income over $500K | Personal marginal rates — up to 53.53% | 26.5% combined general rate |
| Tax form | T1 with T2125 schedule | T2 Corporate Income Tax Return |
| Fiscal year-end | December 31 (mandatory) | Any month-end (choice at incorporation) |
| Filing deadline | June 15 (payment due April 30) | 6 months after fiscal year-end |
| Personal liability | Unlimited — personal assets at risk | Limited to corporate assets (with director liability exceptions) |
| Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption | Not available | Up to $1,016,836 tax-free on qualifying share sale (2026) |
| Salary vs. dividend planning | Not applicable — all income is personal | Full control — salary for RRSP room and CPP, dividends for lower tax |
| Income deferral | Not possible — all income taxed in the year earned | Retain earnings at 12.2% — defer personal tax until withdrawn |
| Business losses | Deductible against personal income | Carried forward in the corporation (not against personal income) |
| HST registration | Required at $30,000 revenue | Required at $30,000 revenue |
| ITCs (Input Tax Credits) | Claimable on taxable supplies | Claimable on taxable supplies |
| CCA (Capital Cost Allowance) | Claimable on T2125 | Claimable on T2 — Immediate Expensing up to $1.5M for CCPCs |
| Holdco / investment corp | Not available | Holdco receives dividends at 0% effective rate (inter-corporate deduction) |
| CPP contributions | Both employee and employer portions (2x CPP) | Salary: employer + employee CPP. Dividends: no CPP |
| EI premiums | Not required (unless opted in) | Salary: employer + employee EI. Dividends: no EI. Owner >40% shares can opt out |
| RRSP contribution room | 18% of net business income | 18% of T4 salary (dividends do not create RRSP room) |
| Startup cost | $60 (Ontario business name registration) | $35 federal / $335 Ontario through Gondaliya CPA |
| Annual compliance cost | $100–$300 (T1 with T2125) | From $400 (T2 filing through Gondaliya CPA — includes director's T1 free) |
Tax Rate Comparison at Every Income Level — Ontario 2026
The following table shows the approximate total tax payable for a sole proprietor vs. a CCPC at different income levels in Ontario. The sole proprietor column reflects combined federal and Ontario personal tax. The CCPC column reflects the 12.2% SBD rate on active business income retained in the corporation.
| Business Income | Sole Proprietor Tax | Effective Rate | CCPC Tax (SBD) | Effective Rate | Annual Tax Deferral |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $9,831 | 19.7% | $6,100 | 12.2% | $3,731 |
| $75,000 | $16,913 | 22.6% | $9,150 | 12.2% | $7,763 |
| $100,000 | $23,428 | 23.4% | $12,200 | 12.2% | $11,228 |
| $150,000 | $40,107 | 26.7% | $18,300 | 12.2% | $21,807 |
| $200,000 | $58,920 | 29.5% | $24,400 | 12.2% | $34,520 |
| $300,000 | $100,694 | 33.6% | $36,600 | 12.2% | $64,094 |
| $500,000 | $189,676 | 37.9% | $61,000 | 12.2% | $128,676 |
Tax Deferral vs. Tax Savings: The corporation does not eliminate tax — it defers it. When you eventually pay yourself salary or dividends from the corporation, personal tax applies. However, the deferral allows you to reinvest the retained earnings at the lower corporate rate, generating investment returns on money that would otherwise have been paid to CRA. The deferral also gives you control over the timing and form (salary vs. dividend) of your personal income — which is the foundation of all corporate tax planning.
Salary vs. Dividends — The Corporation's Most Powerful Tool
Once you incorporate, you control how and when business income reaches your personal bank account. The two options — salary and dividends — have different tax consequences, CPP/EI implications and RRSP impacts.
| Factor | Salary | Dividends (Eligible) |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate deduction | Yes — reduces corporate taxable income | No — paid from after-tax corporate earnings |
| Personal tax rate | Marginal rate — up to 53.53% | Dividend gross-up and credit — effective rate approximately 39.34% at top bracket |
| CPP contributions | Yes — employer portion paid by corp, employee portion deducted from salary | No CPP on dividends |
| EI premiums | Yes — unless owner >40% shares opts out | No EI on dividends |
| RRSP contribution room | Yes — 18% of T4 salary creates RRSP room | No — dividends do not create RRSP room |
| Childcare expense deduction | Yes — requires earned income | No — dividends are not earned income for childcare deduction |
| Timing control | Must process payroll at time of payment | Can declare at year-end — flexible timing |
Optimal Strategy for Most Ontario Business Owners: Pay yourself enough salary to maximise your RRSP contribution room ($32,490 salary for the 2026 maximum $5,848 RRSP room) and to fund CPP contributions (which build retirement and disability benefits). Take the remaining income as eligible dividends to benefit from the lower effective rate. This is the standard recommendation — but the exact split depends on your personal income, spousal income, RRSP room carried forward and whether you need childcare deductions. We model the optimal salary-dividend split for every corporate client annually.
Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption — Only Available Through a Corporation
When you sell your business, the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE) allows you to shelter up to $1,016,836 (2026 indexed amount) of capital gains on the sale of qualifying small business corporation shares from tax. This exemption is only available to individuals selling shares of a corporation — it is not available to sole proprietors selling business assets.
For a family of three shareholders (founder plus spouse plus one adult child, each holding non-voting shares), the combined LCGE shelter is $3,050,508 — meaning up to $3,050,508 in capital gains on the sale of the business can be received tax-free. This is one of the most valuable tax planning tools in Canada and it is available exclusively to incorporated businesses.
Worked Example: Business Sale — Corporation vs. Sole Proprietorship
You sell your Ontario business for $1,500,000 above the tax cost of the assets. As a sole proprietor, the gain is taxed as business income or capital gain depending on the nature of the assets — with no LCGE available. If treated as a capital gain, the taxable portion (66.67%) at top marginal rates produces approximately $399,000 in personal tax.
As a corporation with three family shareholders each claiming the LCGE: $1,500,000 gain is fully sheltered by three LCGE claims ($1,016,836 x 3 = $3,050,508 available). Tax on the sale: $0.
Corporation saves $399,000 on the business sale — sole proprietorship pays it in fullLCGE Qualification Requirements: The shares must be of a Qualified Small Business Corporation (QSBC). At least 90% of the corporation's assets must be used in active business at the time of sale. At least 50% of assets must have been used in active business throughout the preceding 24 months. The shares must have been held by the individual (or related person) for at least 24 months. CRA actively audits LCGE claims — share structure, asset mix and holding period must all be documented. We review LCGE eligibility for every corporation annually.
Personal Liability Protection — The Non-Tax Reason to Incorporate
Even if the tax savings were zero, the liability protection alone justifies incorporation for most Ontario business owners. As a sole proprietor, you are personally liable for every business debt, contract, lawsuit, product defect, employee claim and CRA assessment. A creditor can pursue your personal bank accounts, your home (if not in a spouse's name), your car and your investments.
As an incorporated business owner, creditors can only pursue the corporation's assets — your personal assets are protected behind the corporate veil. There are exceptions: directors are personally liable for unremitted payroll source deductions, unremitted HST, unpaid employee wages (up to six months) and environmental liabilities. But these are specific, manageable obligations — not the unlimited exposure of a sole proprietorship.
| Liability Scenario | Sole Proprietor | Corporation |
|---|---|---|
| Client sues for breach of contract ($200,000 claim) | Personal assets at risk — home, savings, investments | Only corporate assets at risk — personal assets protected |
| Supplier obtains judgment for unpaid invoice ($50,000) | Personal assets at risk | Only corporate assets at risk |
| Employee workplace injury claim | Personal assets at risk (WSIB may not cover all) | Only corporate assets at risk (plus WSIB coverage) |
| CRA payroll source deduction assessment | Personal liability — same as corporate (you are the business) | Director personal liability for unremitted source deductions |
| CRA HST assessment | Personal liability | Director personal liability for unremitted HST |
| Product liability claim | Personal assets at risk | Only corporate assets at risk |
When a Sole Proprietorship May Be the Right Choice
Incorporation is not the correct answer for every Ontario business. A sole proprietorship may be more appropriate in the following situations.
| Scenario | Why Sole Proprietorship May Be Better |
|---|---|
| Business income under $30,000 per year | The 12.2% vs. personal rate differential produces less than $2,000 in savings — which may be consumed by the annual T2 filing cost and corporate maintenance |
| Startup expects losses in year one | Sole proprietor losses are deductible against personal income (salary from a job, spousal income). Corporate losses are trapped in the corporation and can only offset future corporate income |
| Testing a business concept before committing | If you are validating a side business and may shut it down within 12 months, the simplicity of a sole proprietorship may be preferred |
| All income will be withdrawn immediately | If you need every dollar of business income for personal living expenses and will withdraw 100% as salary, the tax deferral benefit of incorporation is minimal |
Our Recommendation: If your Ontario business is earning or expects to earn over $50,000 per year, incorporation is almost always the right structure. At $50,000, the annual tax deferral of $3,731 exceeds the cost of maintaining a corporation — and the liability protection, LCGE eligibility, salary vs. dividend flexibility and holdco planning opportunities add significant value beyond the tax rate differential alone. We incorporate Ontario businesses for $35 (federal) — the lowest rate in Canada. Incorporate Now →
How to Incorporate in Ontario — Step by Step
| Step | Action | Cost (Gondaliya CPA) | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Choose federal or Ontario incorporation | Federal $35 / Ontario $335 | Same day |
| 2 | NUANS name search (federal) or name reservation | Included in incorporation fee | Instant (online) |
| 3 | File Articles of Incorporation | Included | Same day (federal online) |
| 4 | Create corporate minute book (directors, officers, shares) | Included | Same day |
| 5 | Register CRA Business Number, HST, Payroll accounts | Included | 1–3 business days |
| 6 | Open corporate bank account | N/A (bank fees vary) | 1–2 business days |
| 7 | Set up QuickBooks Online or Xero | Included with bookkeeping engagement | Same day |
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Frequently Asked Questions — Corporation vs. Sole Proprietorship Ontario
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