How to File a T2 Corporate Tax Return in Canada
The complete step-by-step guide to filing your Canadian corporate tax return. Covers who must file, deadlines, required schedules, GIFI codes, net income reconciliation, CCA, electronic filing and the most common errors CRA catches — written by a licensed Ontario CPA.
1. What Is a T2 Corporate Tax Return?
The T2 Corporation Income Tax Return is the annual tax filing that every corporation resident in Canada must submit to the Canada Revenue Agency. The T2 reports the corporation's income, deductions, credits and tax payable for a specific fiscal year — and determines whether the corporation owes additional tax, is entitled to a refund, or has a NIL balance. The T2 is to a corporation what the T1 General is to an individual — but it is substantially more complex, involving up to 40+ schedules, GIFI-coded financial statements and tax calculations that differ based on whether the corporation is a Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC), a general private corporation, or a public corporation.
For Canadian-Controlled Private Corporations — which account for the vast majority of small and mid-sized businesses in Canada — the T2 return determines eligibility for the Small Business Deduction (reducing the combined Ontario rate to 12.2% on the first $500,000 of active business income), the refundable SR&ED credit (35% for qualifying CCPCs), the Manufacturing and Processing credit, and the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption on qualifying share dispositions. Every one of these benefits requires specific schedules to be completed correctly on the T2. Missing a schedule does not just reduce accuracy — it can eliminate access to credits worth tens of thousands of dollars.
2. Who Must File a T2 Return?
Every corporation that is resident in Canada at any time during the taxation year must file a T2 return — regardless of whether it earned any income, incurred any expenses, or has any tax owing. This filing obligation applies to:
- Active corporations with revenue and expenses
- Inactive or dormant corporations that had no business activity during the year
- Corporations with zero revenue (NIL returns)
- Non-profit corporations incorporated under federal or provincial law
- Tax-exempt corporations (still required to file to confirm exempt status)
- Corporations that were dissolved or wound up during the year (a final T2 return is required)
No Revenue Does Not Mean No Filing: One of the most common misconceptions is that a corporation with no revenue does not need to file a T2. This is incorrect. Every active Canadian corporation must file, every year, within six months of its fiscal year-end. Failure to file a NIL return triggers CRA compliance flags, prevents loss carry-forwards, freezes refunds on other accounts and can ultimately lead to CRA filing an arbitrary assessment on the corporation's behalf.
3. Filing Deadlines and Payment Due Dates
The T2 return must be filed within six months after the corporation's fiscal year-end. The tax balance owing must be paid within two months after year-end (three months for qualifying small CCPCs with prior-year taxable income under $500,000). The payment deadline is always earlier than the filing deadline.
| Fiscal Year-End | T2 Filing Deadline | Payment Due (CCPC) | Payment Due (Non-CCPC) |
|---|---|---|---|
| December 31, 2025 | June 30, 2026 | March 31, 2026 | February 28, 2026 |
| March 31, 2026 | September 30, 2026 | June 30, 2026 | May 31, 2026 |
| June 30, 2026 | December 31, 2026 | September 30, 2026 | August 31, 2026 |
| September 30, 2026 | March 31, 2027 | December 31, 2026 | November 30, 2026 |
The 3-Month CCPC Exception: Qualifying small CCPCs — where the corporation and its associated corporations had taxable income under $500,000 in the prior year, and the corporation claimed the Small Business Deduction — get an extra month to pay (3 months after year-end instead of 2). This exception applies only to the payment deadline. The filing deadline remains 6 months after year-end for all corporations.
4. What You Need Before You File
Before starting the T2 return, you need a complete set of supporting documents. Attempting to file without these documents results in inaccurate returns, missed deductions and audit exposure. The essential documents are:
- Year-end financial statements: Trial balance, income statement and balance sheet from your accounting system, reconciled and closed for the fiscal year
- 12 months of bank statements: Every account, every month, reconciled to the balance sheet
- Prior year T2 return and Notice of Assessment: Required for opening balances, CCA continuity (Schedule 8), loss carry-forwards (Schedule 4) and GRIP/LRIP/CDA pool tracking
- All sales invoices and purchase receipts: Complete set for the fiscal year — CRA requires original invoices, not bank statements
- Payroll records: T4 Summary, T4 slips, remittance confirmations — totals must reconcile to salary expense on the income statement
- Capital asset purchase invoices: For every asset acquired during the year — required for Schedule 8 CCA calculations
- Shareholder loan reconciliation: Running balance of shareholder advances and repayments throughout the year
- Corporate minute book: Current-year directors resolution, dividend declarations, salary authorisations
For the complete list, please see our Corporate Tax Filing Checklist which covers all 53 documents across 10 categories.
5. Step-by-Step T2 Filing Process
The T2 filing process follows a specific sequence. Each step builds on the previous one — skipping steps or completing them out of order creates errors that cascade through the entire return.
Close Your Books and Prepare Financial Statements
Complete all bookkeeping entries for the fiscal year, reconcile every bank account to the year-end statement, post all adjusting journal entries (depreciation, prepaid expenses, accrued liabilities) and generate a final trial balance, income statement and balance sheet. The financial statements must be in Canadian dollars and prepared on either an accrual or cash basis — accrual is standard for most corporations. These financial statements become Schedule 100 (Balance Sheet) and Schedule 125 (Income Statement) on the T2.
Map Financial Statements to GIFI Codes
Every line on your financial statements must be mapped to a General Index of Financial Information (GIFI) code. GIFI codes are 4-digit numerical codes that CRA uses to standardise financial reporting across all corporations. Your accounting software (QuickBooks, Xero) may auto-map some accounts, but CPA review is essential because incorrect GIFI mapping is one of the most common reasons for CRA review letters. See Section 6 for the most common GIFI codes.
Complete Schedule 1 — Net Income Reconciliation
Schedule 1 is the bridge between your accounting net income (from the financial statements) and your taxable income (for tax purposes). It adds back non-deductible expenses (meals 50% add-back, penalties, club dues) and removes non-taxable items (capital dividend received, life insurance proceeds). This is the most technically complex schedule on the T2 and the one most frequently prepared incorrectly on self-filed returns. See Section 7 for detailed guidance.
Complete Schedule 8 — Capital Cost Allowance (CCA)
Calculate CCA for every asset class. Start with prior-year closing UCC balances, add current-year acquisitions, subtract dispositions, apply the correct CCA rate for each class and calculate the CCA deduction. The CCA deduction flows to Schedule 1 and reduces taxable income. Incorrect CCA class assignments are the single most common T2 error our CPA team corrects on returns prepared by other accountants. See Section 9 for CCA details.
Complete All Other Required Schedules
Based on your corporation's specific situation, complete the additional required schedules: Schedule 4 (loss carry-forwards), Schedule 5 (provincial allocation), Schedule 7 (aggregate investment income), Schedule 9 (associated corporations), Schedule 50 (shareholder information) and others. Each schedule feeds specific lines on the main T2 return. See Section 8 for the complete schedule reference.
Calculate Tax Payable
Apply the correct federal and provincial tax rates to taxable income, calculate the Small Business Deduction for qualifying CCPCs, apply any investment tax credits (SR&ED, M&P, Clean Technology), subtract instalment payments already made, and determine the final balance owing or refund. The tax calculation is different for CCPCs, general private corporations and public corporations. See Section 10.
File Electronically with CRA
Corporations with annual gross revenues over $1 million are required to file electronically. All other corporations may file electronically or on paper, but electronic filing is strongly recommended — CRA processes electronic returns faster, and the acknowledgement of receipt provides proof of filing date. Electronic filing is done through certified T2 tax software (TaxCycle, Profile, DT Max) by the corporation or its CPA. See Section 11.
Pay Any Balance Owing
If the T2 calculation shows a balance owing, pay before the payment deadline (2 or 3 months after year-end). Payment methods include CRA My Business Account online payment, pre-authorised debit, wire transfer, or payment at any Canadian financial institution using a remittance voucher. Late payment triggers daily compounding interest at CRA's prescribed rate (8% in 2026). If you overpaid through instalments, CRA will issue a refund after processing the return.
6. GIFI Codes — Financial Statement Reporting
The General Index of Financial Information (GIFI) is CRA's standardised coding system for financial statements filed with the T2 return. Every asset, liability, equity, revenue and expense account on your financial statements must be assigned a 4-digit GIFI code. CRA uses GIFI codes for automated risk assessment — unusual ratios or misclassified accounts trigger desk reviews.
| GIFI Code | Description | Schedule |
|---|---|---|
| 1000–1599 | Assets — cash, accounts receivable, inventory, prepaid expenses | Schedule 100 |
| 1600–2599 | Assets — capital assets, intangibles, investments, other assets | Schedule 100 |
| 2600–3139 | Liabilities — accounts payable, loans, taxes payable, other liabilities | Schedule 100 |
| 3140–3499 | Shareholder equity — share capital, retained earnings, contributed surplus | Schedule 100 |
| 8000–8299 | Revenue — sales, fees, commissions, other operating income | Schedule 125 |
| 8300–8519 | Cost of goods sold — materials, direct labour, manufacturing overhead | Schedule 125 |
| 8520–9369 | Operating expenses — rent, salaries, professional fees, advertising, vehicle, meals, insurance, CCA | Schedule 125 |
| 9370–9999 | Other items — extraordinary items, tax provisions, net income | Schedule 125 |
GIFI Auto-Mapping: QuickBooks Online and Xero both have built-in GIFI code mapping that assigns codes to your chart of accounts. However, the auto-mapping is approximate — particularly for industry-specific accounts, shareholder loan accounts and accounts that combine multiple expense types. A CPA reviews and corrects the GIFI mapping before filing to ensure CRA's automated risk scoring does not flag the return for review based on misclassified accounts.
7. Schedule 1 — Net Income Reconciliation (The Most Important Schedule)
Schedule 1 reconciles accounting net income (the bottom line of your financial statements prepared under GAAP or ASPE) to taxable income (the amount on which tax is calculated under the Income Tax Act). These two numbers are almost never the same because accounting rules and tax rules differ on dozens of items. Schedule 1 is where those differences are adjusted.
Common Schedule 1 Additions (Increase Taxable Income)
| Item | Adjustment | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Meals and entertainment — 50% add-back | Add 50% of meals expense | Only 50% of meals and entertainment is deductible for tax — the other 50% is added back |
| Amortisation/depreciation per books | Add back full amount | Accounting depreciation is replaced by CCA (tax depreciation) calculated on Schedule 8 |
| CRA penalties and interest | Add back full amount | Not deductible for income tax purposes |
| Club dues and memberships | Add back full amount | Blocked under the Income Tax Act regardless of business purpose |
| Political contributions | Add back full amount | Not deductible (a separate credit may apply) |
| Life insurance premiums (corporate-owned) | Add back full amount | Not deductible unless assigned to a lender as collateral (limited exception) |
| Reserve for doubtful accounts — general | Add back general reserve | Only specific bad debts written off are deductible — general provisions are not |
Common Schedule 1 Deductions (Decrease Taxable Income)
| Item | Adjustment | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| CCA claimed on Schedule 8 | Deduct full CCA amount | Replaces accounting depreciation — CCA rates and methods differ from GAAP/ASPE |
| Inter-corporate dividends received | Deduct full amount (Schedule 3) | Dividends received from other Canadian corporations are deductible to prevent double taxation |
| Capital gains — non-taxable portion | Deduct 33.33% of capital gains | Only 66.67% of capital gains are included in taxable income (2026 inclusion rate) |
| Charitable donation deduction | Deduct eligible amount | Donations to registered Canadian charities — up to 75% of net income |
Ontario CCPC, December 31, 2025 year-end
8. Key T2 Schedules Explained
The T2 return includes a main form plus a series of schedules. The exact schedules required depend on the corporation's activities, but the following are required or commonly applicable for most Canadian CCPCs.
| Schedule | Name | When Required |
|---|---|---|
| Schedule 1 | Net Income (Loss) for Income Tax Purposes | Always — reconciles accounting to taxable income |
| Schedule 3 | Dividends Received, Taxable Dividends Paid, Part IV Tax | If dividends received from or paid to other corporations |
| Schedule 4 | Corporation Loss Continuity and Application | If non-capital or net capital losses exist from prior or current year |
| Schedule 5 | Tax Calculation Supplementary | If permanent establishment in more than one province |
| Schedule 6 | Summary of Dispositions of Capital Property | If capital property sold during the year |
| Schedule 7 | Aggregate Investment Income and Active Business Income | Always for CCPCs — separates active and investment income |
| Schedule 8 | Capital Cost Allowance | Always — if the corporation owns any depreciable property |
| Schedule 9 | Related and Associated Corporations | If associated corporations share the $500K SBD limit |
| Schedule 21 | Federal and Provincial or Territorial Foreign Income Tax Credits | If foreign-source income earned |
| Schedule 50 | Shareholder Information | Always — if any shareholder holds 10%+ of any share class |
| Schedule 100 | Balance Sheet Information (GIFI) | Always — year-end assets, liabilities, equity |
| Schedule 125 | Income Statement Information (GIFI) | Always — annual revenue and expenses |
| Schedule 141 | Notes Checklist | Always — confirms corporation type, accounting method, filing details |
9. Schedule 8 — Capital Cost Allowance (CCA)
Schedule 8 calculates the tax depreciation (CCA) on all depreciable property owned by the corporation. Unlike accounting depreciation (which uses straight-line or other methods based on useful life), CCA is calculated using prescribed rates and methods set by the Income Tax Act — and the rates differ by asset class. Schedule 8 tracks each CCA class separately with opening UCC, additions, dispositions, CCA claimed and closing UCC.
| CCA Class | Rate | Common Assets |
|---|---|---|
| Class 1 | 4% | Buildings acquired after 1987 |
| Class 8 | 20% | Furniture, fixtures, equipment not in another class |
| Class 10 | 30% | Motor vehicles (cost under $37,000 in 2026) |
| Class 10.1 | 30% | Passenger vehicles over $37,000 — each in separate class |
| Class 12 | 100% | Dies, jigs, patterns, moulds, tooling, computer software |
| Class 13 | Lease term | Leasehold improvements — amortised over lease term + one renewal |
| Class 43 | 30% | Manufacturing and processing equipment |
| Class 50 | 55% | Computer hardware and systems software |
| Class 53 | 50% | Manufacturing and processing machinery (straight-line) |
| Class 54 | 30% | Zero-emission vehicles — cost cap $61,000 (2026) |
Immediate Expensing for CCPCs
Qualifying Canadian-Controlled Private Corporations can immediately expense up to $1,500,000 of eligible capital property in the year of acquisition. This applies to property in Classes 2 through 55 (excluding Classes 1, 4 and certain others). The $1.5M limit is shared among associated corporations. For most Oshawa, Hamilton, Mississauga and GTA manufacturers, this means the first $1.5M of equipment, tooling and vehicle purchases in a year can be written off entirely in year one — producing a substantial first-year tax reduction.
10. How Corporate Tax Is Calculated on the T2
The corporate tax calculation starts with taxable income (from Schedule 1) and applies federal and provincial rates, then subtracts credits and deductions to arrive at the net tax payable.
Taxable income: $178,767 (all active business income, SBD eligible)
11. Electronic Filing (EFILE)
Corporations with annual gross revenues exceeding $1 million are required to file electronically. All other corporations are strongly encouraged to file electronically because CRA processes electronic returns significantly faster than paper returns and provides an immediate confirmation of receipt that serves as proof of filing date.
Electronic filing is completed through CRA-certified T2 tax preparation software — TaxCycle, Profile by Intuit, and DT Max are the most widely used in Canada. The software generates the complete T2 return including all schedules, GIFI-coded financial statements and XML file for electronic transmission. The CPA or authorised representative transmits the return directly to CRA and receives a confirmation number within seconds.
12. Filing a NIL Return
If your corporation had no revenue, no expenses and no activity during the fiscal year, you must still file a T2 return — called a NIL return. The NIL return reports zero income, zero expenses and zero tax payable, but it serves several important purposes: it maintains CCA continuity on Schedule 8 (preserving UCC balances for future years), it preserves non-capital loss carry-forward periods, it keeps the corporation in good standing with CRA for compliance certificate purposes, and it prevents CRA from issuing an arbitrary assessment based on estimated income.
13. First-Year T2 Return — Special Rules
A corporation's first fiscal year begins on the date of incorporation and can end on any date the corporation chooses — but the first fiscal year cannot exceed 53 weeks. Most CPAs recommend choosing a fiscal year-end that aligns with the corporation's natural business cycle or with the calendar year (December 31) for simplicity.
Special considerations for the first T2 return include: the Small Business Deduction is prorated for short fiscal years (if the first year is less than 12 months, the $500,000 SBD limit is prorated proportionally), CCA is not prorated for short years (the full CCA rate applies regardless of whether the year is 3 months or 12 months), and pre-incorporation expenses (legal fees, accounting fees, registration costs) incurred to start the business are deductible on the first T2 return under Section 20(1)(b).
14. Most Common T2 Filing Mistakes
Incorrect CCA Class Assignments
Manufacturing equipment classified under Class 8 (20%) instead of Class 43 (30%) or Class 53 (50%). Tooling placed in Class 8 instead of Class 12 (100%). Passenger vehicles over $37,000 not separated into individual Class 10.1 pools.
Missing Schedule 1 Adjustments
Filing Schedule 1 with zero adjustments — meaning accounting net income equals taxable income. This is almost never correct. At minimum, the amortisation/CCA swap must be completed.
Shareholder Loan Balance Not Reported
Failing to report the shareholder loan balance on Schedule 100 or not tracking the balance throughout the year. CRA actively audits shareholder loans under Section 15(2).
No Schedule 50 Filed
Omitting Schedule 50 (Shareholder Information) which reports shareholders owning 10%+ of any class of shares. CRA uses this schedule for associated corporation analysis and TOSI rules.
GIFI Code Misclassification
Revenue mapped to the wrong GIFI range, operating expenses classified as COGS, or shareholder equity accounts mapped incorrectly. CRA's automated system flags returns with unusual GIFI ratios.
Filing After the Deadline with a Balance Owing
Assuming the 6-month filing deadline also applies to payment. The payment deadline is 2–3 months after year-end — waiting until the filing deadline to pay means 3–4 months of daily compounding interest at 8%.
15. CPA-Filed vs. Self-Filed T2 Returns
A corporation can prepare and file its own T2 return using certified software — there is no legal requirement to use a CPA. However, the complexity of the T2 return means self-filed returns carry significantly higher risk of errors that result in overpaid tax, missed credits, CRA review letters and reassessments.
| Factor | Self-Filed T2 | CPA-Filed T2 |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | Software cost only ($200–$500) | Flat fee from $400 (Gondaliya CPA) |
| Schedule 1 accuracy | Frequently incomplete — adjustments missed | Complete reconciliation with all adjustments |
| CCA class assignment | Default Class 8 applied to most assets | Correct class for every asset — Class 12, 43, 50, 53 where applicable |
| SR&ED identification | Rarely identified or claimed | Assessed on every return — 35% refundable credit for qualifying CCPCs |
| CRA audit support | Owner handles CRA directly | CPA communicates with CRA on your behalf — included free |
| Average tax savings — first CPA-prepared return | Baseline | $4,000–$12,000 in recovered deductions and credits |
Need a CPA to File Your T2 Return?
Gondaliya CPA prepares and files complete T2 returns with all required schedules — flat-fee from $400 including HST, virtual across Ontario and Canada. Director's T1 and CRA audit support included free.
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Need a CPA to File Your T2 Corporate Tax Return?
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