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CPA Tax Guide · Canadian Small Businesses

Top 10 Tax Deductions Canadian Small Businesses Miss

These are not the obvious deductions. These are the ones we find missing in 8 out of 10 small business tax returns we review for the first time. Each one includes the exact dollar impact, the CRA form where it belongs and how to claim it properly so it survives an audit. Written by a licensed Ontario CPA.

The 10 Missed Deductions at a Glance

Before the detail, here is the summary. Every deduction below is one we routinely find missing when a new client brings us their prior-year returns for review. The "Typical Amount Missed" column is based on what we see across our 900+ client base.

#Missed DeductionTypical Amount Missed Per YearTax Savings at 12.2% (Corp) or 30% (Personal)
1Immediate Expensing (full CCA in year one)$15,000 to $150,000$1,830 to $18,300
2Home office (detailed method, not simplified)$3,000 to $8,000$366 to $976
3Vehicle CCA (Class 10 or 10.1, not just gas)$4,000 to $12,000$488 to $1,464
4Bad debts written off$2,000 to $25,000$244 to $3,050
5Meals at 50% (business purpose documented)$1,500 to $6,000$183 to $732
6Professional development and training$1,000 to $5,000$122 to $610
7Business-use portion of phone, internet and utilities$1,200 to $3,600$146 to $439
8Startup costs incurred before the first dollar of revenue$2,000 to $20,000$244 to $2,440
9Management fees and salary to spouse (properly structured)$10,000 to $60,000$1,220 to $7,320
10HST ITCs on prior-period expenses (4-year lookback)$1,000 to $15,000Direct cash recovery (not a deduction)

Combined Impact: A typical small business missing 5 of these 10 deductions is overpaying by $3,000 to $15,000 per year in federal and provincial tax. Over 5 years, that is $15,000 to $75,000 permanently lost. The cost of a CPA reviewing your return and claiming these deductions is a fraction of the recovery.

The 10 Deductions in Detail

1Immediate Expensing: Deduct the Full Cost of Equipment in Year One

Since 2022, Canadian-Controlled Private Corporations (CCPCs) can immediately expense up to $1,500,000 in eligible depreciable property per year. This means a $50,000 truck, a $15,000 computer setup or a $200,000 piece of manufacturing equipment can be fully deducted in the year of purchase instead of being depreciated over 5 to 20 years under the normal CCA schedule.

Example PurchaseCCA ClassNormal CCA (Year 1)Immediate Expensing (Year 1)Tax Savings Difference at 12.2%
$50,000 pickup truck (Class 10)10 (30%)$7,500$50,000$5,185
$15,000 computer and monitors (Class 50)50 (55%)$4,125$15,000$1,327
$120,000 CNC machine (Class 53)53 (50%)$30,000$120,000$10,980

Why it is missed: Many bookkeepers and DIY filers use the standard CCA rate and do not know that Immediate Expensing is available for CCPCs. The full deduction is claimed on Schedule 8 of the T2 return. If your accountant is still depreciating your 2023 or 2024 equipment purchases at the normal rate, the first-year deduction was understated and the difference is permanently lost unless the prior return is amended.

2Home Office: The Detailed Method Recovers 2x to 3x More Than the Flat Rate

CRA offers two methods for home office deductions. The simplified flat-rate method ($2/day, max $500/year) is easy but leaves significant money on the table. The detailed method calculates the business-use percentage of your home and applies it to actual expenses: rent or mortgage interest, property tax, home insurance, utilities, internet, maintenance and cleaning.

ExpenseAnnual CostBusiness-Use % (15% of home)Deduction
Rent (or mortgage interest, not principal)$24,00015%$3,600
Property tax$4,80015%$720
Home insurance$1,80015%$270
Utilities (heat, hydro, water)$4,20015%$630
Internet$1,20060% (business portion)$720
Total detailed method$5,940
Total flat-rate method (250 working days x $2)$500

Why it is missed: The flat-rate method is widely promoted because it requires no receipts. But a small business owner working from home full-time with $24,000 in annual rent claims $500 instead of $5,940. The difference of $5,440 saves $663 in corporate tax or $1,632 at a 30% personal rate. The detailed method requires Form T2125 (sole props) or an expense claim in the T2 (corporations). We calculate both methods for every client and claim the higher amount.

3Vehicle CCA: The Depreciation Your Accountant Forgot to Claim

Most small business owners deduct fuel, insurance, maintenance and parking. But many forget to claim Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) on the vehicle itself. A vehicle used for business is a depreciable asset. The annual CCA deduction is in addition to the operating costs you already claim.

Vehicle TypeCCA ClassRateCost Limit (if applicable)Year 1 CCA (with Immediate Expensing)
Passenger vehicle (cost under $37,000 before tax)Class 10 (30%)30%No limitFull cost in year 1
Passenger vehicle (cost over $37,000 before tax)Class 10.1 (30%)30%$37,000 + tax (max $41,810 with HST)$37,000 in year 1
Heavy truck over 11,788 kgClass 16 (40%)40%No limitFull cost in year 1
Zero-emission vehicle (electric, hydrogen)Class 54 (100%)100%$61,000 + tax$61,000 in year 1

Why it is missed: Business owners who lease (not purchase) their vehicles cannot claim CCA but can deduct lease payments. Business owners who purchased their vehicle often do not add it to the CCA schedule because their bookkeeper categorizes it as a one-time "vehicle purchase" expense (incorrect) or ignores it entirely. The vehicle should be added to the correct CCA class and depreciated (or immediately expensed for CCPCs). A $35,000 vehicle fully expensed in year one saves $4,270 at 12.2%. That deduction exists every year the vehicle is owned (declining balance) if Immediate Expensing is not used.

4Bad Debts: Write Off Invoices Your Customers Will Never Pay

If you have invoiced a customer, included the amount in your revenue, and the customer has not paid and is unlikely to pay, you can write off the bad debt as a deduction. This reduces your taxable income by the amount of the uncollectible invoice. Many small businesses carry overdue receivables for years without writing them off.

Condition for Bad Debt DeductionMet?
The amount was previously included in your income (you reported it as revenue)Required
You have made reasonable efforts to collect (emails, calls, collection letters)Required
The debt is genuinely uncollectible (customer bankrupt, dissolved, unreachable, disputes resolved in their favour)Required
You have documentation of the collection efforts and the decision to write offRequired

Why it is missed: Business owners leave unpaid invoices sitting in accounts receivable indefinitely, hoping the client will eventually pay. A $15,000 bad debt that has been uncollectible for 18 months should be written off. The deduction saves $1,830 at 12.2% (or $4,500 at 30% personal). If you also collected HST on the original invoice, you can recover the HST portion by filing an adjustment on your next GST/HST return. That is an additional $1,950 in cash back on a $15,000 bad debt.

5Business Meals: 50% Deductible (80% for Long-Haul Truckers)

Meals with clients, prospects, suppliers or business partners are 50% deductible. This includes restaurant meals, coffee meetings, working lunches and meals during business travel. The 50% limit applies to the food and beverage cost (including tax and tip). Long-haul truck drivers claim meals at 80% using the flat-rate method ($23 per meal).

Meal ScenarioCostDeductible AmountTax Savings at 12.2%
Client lunch (restaurant, 2 people)$85$42.50 (50%)$5.19
Team lunch during a working meeting$120$60.00 (50%)$7.32
100 client meals per year at $80 average$8,000$4,000 (50%)$488
Long-haul trucker: 200 days on the road$13,800 ($69/day flat rate)$11,040 (80%)$1,347

Why it is missed: Business owners either do not keep receipts for meals, do not note the business purpose on the receipt, or assume meals are not deductible at all. CRA requires: the date, the amount, the business purpose and the names of the people present. Write this on the receipt or log it in your expense tracker. Without the business purpose, the deduction is denied on audit. 100 client meals per year at $80 average saves $488 in corporate tax. That is real money left on the table when receipts are thrown away.

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6Professional Development: 100% Deductible, Including Travel

Courses, certifications, conferences, seminars, industry workshops, books, online subscriptions and professional memberships are 100% deductible if they relate to your current business. Travel costs to attend these events (flights, hotel, 50% of meals) are also deductible. This is one of the few categories where training, travel and accommodation are all fully deductible in the same claim.

Professional Development ExpenseDeductible?Example Cost
Industry conference registration100%$1,200
Online course or certification100%$500
Flight and hotel to attend conference100%$1,800
Meals during conference (50% deductible)50%$300 ($150 deductible)
Professional association membership (CPA, engineer, realtor)100%$800
Industry publications and subscriptions100%$400

Why it is missed: Business owners pay for courses out of their personal account and forget to reimburse themselves through the corporation. Or they categorize conference travel as "personal travel" and never claim it. If the training relates to your current business (not a career change), it is 100% deductible. A $4,700 conference trip with registration, flights, hotel and meals generates $4,550 in deductions (after the 50% meal limit). Tax savings at 12.2%: $555.

7Phone, Internet and Utilities: The Business-Use Split You Are Not Claiming

If you use your personal phone, home internet or personal vehicle for business, the business-use portion of each cost is deductible. Most small business owners deduct nothing because they use the same phone and internet for personal and business purposes. CRA allows a reasonable business-use percentage based on actual usage.

ExpenseAnnual CostReasonable Business-Use %Deductible Amount
Cell phone plan$1,44070%$1,008
Home internet$1,20050%$600
Total$2,640$1,608

Why it is missed: Business owners assume that because the phone is in their personal name, it is not deductible. That is not how CRA sees it. If 70% of your phone usage is business calls, texts, emails and app usage, 70% of the cost is deductible. The same applies to internet. A $1,608 deduction saves $196 at 12.2% or $482 at 30% personal. Small individually, but combined with the other 9 deductions on this list, it adds up.

8Startup Costs: Deductible Even Before Your First Dollar of Revenue

Expenses incurred to start your business are deductible in the year they are incurred, even if the business has not yet generated revenue. This includes incorporation fees, legal fees, accounting fees, market research, website development, initial marketing, business cards, signage, equipment purchases and initial inventory. Many new business owners believe expenses "do not count" until they have customers. They do.

Startup ExpenseDeductible?CRA Treatment
Incorporation fee ($35 through Gondaliya CPA)YesDeductible in the year incurred
Legal fees for contracts and agreementsYesDeductible in the year incurred
Website design and developmentYesDeductible or CCA depending on cost
Initial marketing and advertisingYesDeductible in the year incurred
Market research and feasibility studiesYesDeductible in the year incurred
Equipment purchased before first saleYesCCA (or Immediate Expensing for CCPCs)
Training and courses taken before launchYesDeductible if related to the business being started

Why it is missed: First-time business owners do not track pre-revenue expenses. They pay for incorporation, a website, legal advice and marketing out of their personal account and never claim it. A startup with $12,000 in pre-revenue expenses that are not claimed loses $1,464 in corporate tax savings or $3,600 at personal rates. Keep every receipt from the day you decide to start the business. If you incorporate later, the corporation can reimburse you for eligible pre-incorporation expenses.

9Management Fees and Salary to a Spouse: Income Splitting That CRA Allows

If your spouse performs genuine work for your business (bookkeeping, administrative support, customer service, social media, scheduling), you can pay them a salary or management fee. The payment is deductible to the corporation and taxable to the spouse at their lower personal rate. This splits income from the higher-taxed owner to the lower-taxed spouse, reducing the family's overall tax.

ScenarioTax Without Spouse SalaryTax With $40,000 Spouse SalaryFamily Tax Savings
Owner earning $200,000 net, spouse earns $0$57,868 (all taxed to owner at personal rates)$43,268 (owner $160K) + $4,648 (spouse $40K)$9,952

Why it is missed: Business owners either do not realize they can pay their spouse, or they pay their spouse without proper documentation and CRA denies the deduction. Three conditions must be met: (1) the spouse must perform real, documented work, (2) the salary must be reasonable for the work performed (you cannot pay $80,000 for 5 hours per week of data entry), and (3) the payment must flow through payroll with T4 and CPP/EI deductions, or be paid as a management fee with a written contract and invoices. We structure spouse compensation for clients as part of our annual tax planning. Please see our tax preparation and filing services for more on how we approach this.

10Missed HST ITCs: You Have 4 Years to Go Back and Claim Them

If your business is registered for HST and you paid HST on a business expense but did not claim the Input Tax Credit (ITC) on your return, you can go back and claim it for up to 4 years. This is not a deduction against income tax. This is actual HST you paid that CRA will refund directly to your bank account.

Missed ITC ExampleHST PaidCash Refund
$20,000 office renovation (HST: $2,600)$2,600$2,600
$8,000 in professional fees (HST: $1,040)$1,040$1,040
$50,000 equipment purchase (HST: $6,500)$6,500$6,500
$3,000 in software subscriptions (HST: $390)$390$390
Total missed ITCs$10,530$10,530

Why it is missed: Business owners who do their own HST returns often miss ITCs because the expense receipt was not entered into the accounting system, the HST amount was not separated from the total, or the expense was categorized as personal. We review the last 4 years of HST returns for every new client and file adjustments to recover missed ITCs. A $10,530 recovery is not unusual for a business that has been self-filing HST for 3 to 4 years. That is $10,530 deposited directly into your bank account from CRA.

Year-Round Deduction Tracking Checklist

ActionWhenWhy
Keep every receipt (photo or scan into QBO/Xero)At the time of purchaseNo receipt = no deduction on audit. CRA requires original receipts for all claims.
Write the business purpose on every meal receiptAt the time of the mealCRA requires: date, amount, business purpose, names of attendees. Without the purpose, meals are denied.
Maintain a vehicle logbook (trips, km, purpose)Every business tripCRA requires a logbook to support the business-use percentage for vehicle deductions and ITCs.
Calculate home office business-use percentageStart of the year (or when the office is set up)Measure the dedicated space. Calculate the percentage of total home area. Apply to eligible expenses.
Track all pre-revenue startup costsFrom the day you decide to start the businessPre-revenue expenses are deductible. Keep receipts from day one, even before incorporation.
Review accounts receivable for bad debts quarterlyEvery quarterIdentify uncollectible invoices early. Document collection efforts. Write off when genuinely uncollectible.
Document spouse work hours and responsibilitiesOngoing (time log or written scope)CRA will ask what the spouse does, how many hours and what the market rate is. Documentation prevents denial.
Add equipment purchases to CCA schedule immediatelyAt the time of purchaseVehicles, computers, equipment and furniture are CCA assets. Add them to the correct class at purchase.
Separate HST on every expense entryAt the time of data entryIf the HST is not separated, the ITC is not claimed. Every entry should show: net amount + HST + total.
Review prior HST returns for missed ITCs annuallyYear-end or when switching accountants4-year lookback window. Missed ITCs are cash left at CRA. File an adjustment to recover.

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Frequently Asked Questions: Missed Tax Deductions

Can I claim deductions I missed in prior years?
For income tax deductions (CCA, home office, vehicle): you can request an adjustment to a prior-year T1 or T2 within the CRA reassessment period (generally 3 years from the date of the original Notice of Assessment). For HST ITCs: you have 4 years from the due date of the return in which the ITC should have been claimed. We review and amend prior returns for every new client. Book Free Review →
What is the difference between the flat-rate and detailed home office method?
The flat-rate method provides $2/day to a maximum of $500/year. No receipts required. The detailed method calculates the business-use percentage of your home and applies it to actual expenses (rent/mortgage interest, property tax, insurance, utilities, internet). The detailed method typically produces a deduction of $3,000 to $8,000 for a full-time home-based business. We calculate both and claim the higher amount.
Do I need a vehicle logbook?
Yes. CRA requires a logbook to support the business-use percentage for vehicle expenses and CCA. The logbook must include: date, destination, purpose, kilometres driven (business and personal). Without a logbook, CRA can deny 100% of vehicle deductions on audit. Digital logbook apps are accepted. We provide a logbook template at onboarding.
Can I pay my spouse a salary if they help with the business?
Yes, if the spouse performs real work, the salary is reasonable for the work performed and the payment is documented (through payroll with a T4 or through a management fee agreement with invoices). A spouse doing 15 hours/week of bookkeeping and admin at $25/hour generates a $19,500 annual deduction. The spouse pays tax at their lower rate. Combined family savings: $3,000 to $10,000 per year.
What is Immediate Expensing and does my business qualify?
Immediate Expensing allows CCPCs to fully deduct up to $1,500,000 in eligible depreciable property (equipment, vehicles, furniture, computers) in the year of purchase instead of depreciating over multiple years. Available since 2022. Your business qualifies if it is a CCPC. A $50,000 vehicle fully expensed in year one saves $5,185 in tax vs. $915 under normal CCA rates. Tax Preparation Services →
How do I write off a bad debt?
The invoice must have been included in your revenue, you must have made reasonable collection efforts and the debt must be genuinely uncollectible. Write off the amount on your books, deduct it on your T2 or T2125, and if you collected HST on the original invoice, file an HST adjustment to recover the HST portion. A $15,000 bad debt saves $1,830 in tax plus $1,950 in HST recovery.
Are meals deductible in Canada?
Business meals are 50% deductible. Long-haul truck drivers can claim 80% using the flat-rate method ($23/meal). The receipt must include the date, amount, business purpose and names of attendees. Entertainment (concerts, sporting events with a client) is also 50% deductible. Staff holiday parties and team meals are 100% deductible (no 50% limit).
Can I deduct expenses incurred before my business had revenue?
Yes. Startup costs (incorporation, legal, website, marketing, training, equipment) are deductible in the year incurred, even if the business has not generated its first dollar of revenue. For corporations, the business can reimburse the owner for pre-incorporation expenses. Keep every receipt from the day you decide to start the business.
How far back can I claim missed HST ITCs?
4 years from the due date of the return in which the ITC should have been claimed. We review the last 4 years of HST returns for every new client and file adjustments to recover missed ITCs. Recoveries of $2,000 to $15,000 are common for businesses that have been self-filing HST. GST/HST Filing Services →
How much does a CPA cost to find these missed deductions?
Our initial tax review is free. If we find missed deductions, we amend the prior returns for a flat fee. For ongoing tax preparation, our fees start at $100 for basic T1 personal returns and from $500 for T2 corporate returns (FREE for bookkeeping clients). The deductions we find typically save 5x to 20x our fee. 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee applies. Know Your Exact Fee →

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