Payroll

Salary vs. Dividends: How to Pay Yourself from a Canadian Corporation

One of the first questions every new corporation owner faces is: how do I actually get money out of this business and into my pocket? Two main options exist — salary and dividends — and neither is universally better. The optimal choice depends on your personal income, whether you want RRSP room, how much CPP you care about, and your province. Here's a practical breakdown.

How Each Method Works

Salary

You pay yourself as an employee of your corporation. The corporation deducts CPP contributions and income tax from each paycheque and remits them to the CRA. The salary is a deductible expense to the corporation, which reduces corporate taxable income. You receive the net amount and report the gross salary on your personal T1 return.

Dividends

You declare a dividend from the corporation's after-tax retained earnings. No CPP or payroll deductions — you receive the full declared amount. Dividends are not deductible to the corporation (the corporation already paid tax on the earnings before distributing them). On your personal return, you apply the dividend gross-up and federal/provincial dividend tax credit, which partially offsets the double taxation.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor Salary Dividends
Corporate tax deductionYes — reduces corporate incomeNo — paid from after-tax profits
CPP contributionsYes — both employee & employer share (~11.9% combined)No CPP on dividends
RRSP contribution roomYes — 18% of earned incomeNo — dividends are not "earned income"
Childcare expense deductionsYes — requires earned incomeNo — dividends don't qualify
EI eligibilityNo — business owners >40% of shares not eligibleNo
Administrative complexityHigher — payroll account, remittances, T4Lower — just a dividend declaration
Personal marginal tax rateTaxed at full marginal rateTaxed at preferential dividend rate (via gross-up & credit)
Year-end flexibilityMust be paid in the year or shortly afterCan be declared anytime; flexible timing

The Tax Integration Theory

The Canadian tax system is designed around the concept of "integration" — the idea that total taxes paid on income flowing through a corporation should roughly equal what you'd pay if you earned it personally. In theory, it shouldn't matter whether you use salary or dividends — the total tax burden should be similar.

In practice, integration is imperfect. The actual result varies by:

  • Your personal income level (marginal tax rate)
  • Your province (provincial tax rates differ significantly)
  • Whether the corporation qualifies for the Small Business Deduction (SBD)
  • Whether you're paying "eligible" dividends (from income taxed at the general corporate rate) or "non-eligible" dividends (from SBD-taxed income)

Generally, in Quebec and Ontario, the integration is close to neutral at moderate income levels, with salary slightly better at higher incomes and dividends sometimes better at lower ones. Work through the numbers with your accountant each year.

The CPP Question: Is It an Expense or an Investment?

If you pay yourself a salary, both you and your corporation contribute to CPP. In 2026:

  • Employee share: 5.95% of pensionable earnings (up to YMPE of $74,600)
  • Employer share: another 5.95%
  • Total CPP cost: ~11.9% of eligible salary, or up to $8,581 combined

Many business owners see CPP as a mandatory cost to minimize. But CPP is also building a guaranteed pension income for your retirement. A business owner who pays only dividends for 20 years contributes nothing to CPP and receives a much smaller CPP pension at 65. Whether that trade-off makes sense depends on your other retirement savings and risk tolerance.

RRSP Room: The Salary Advantage

This is one of the most important practical differences. RRSP contribution room is generated by earned income — employment income, self-employment income, and rental income. Dividends do not generate RRSP room.

If you pay yourself $100,000 in salary, you generate $18,000 in RRSP room for the following year (18% of $100,000). If you pay yourself $100,000 in dividends, you generate $0 in new RRSP room.

For business owners who rely on RRSPs as their primary retirement savings vehicle, this matters enormously. A $18,000 RRSP contribution saves approximately $7,000–$9,000 in current-year taxes at a 40–50% marginal rate — while also building tax-sheltered retirement savings.

The Optimal Strategy: A Mix of Both

Most tax advisors recommend a combination approach rather than choosing one method exclusively:

  1. Pay a salary equal to your RRSP contribution room needs — enough earned income to generate the RRSP room you want to maximize
  2. Also pay enough salary to cover your personal basic exemption (~$15,705 in 2026) — tax-free at the personal level
  3. Take the rest as dividends — from retained earnings, with no additional CPP burden

This blended approach optimizes across CPP, RRSP room, personal tax rates, and corporate cash flow flexibility. The exact mix varies by province and income level and should be reviewed annually.

Important: The Tax on Split Income (TOSI) rules introduced in 2018 limit the ability to split dividends with family members who aren't actively involved in the business. Paying dividends to a spouse or adult child who doesn't work in the corporation can now trigger the highest personal tax rate on those dividends. Get professional advice before any income-splitting arrangement.

Timing Flexibility with Dividends

One underrated advantage of dividends: flexibility. You can declare and pay a dividend at any point during the fiscal year or even after year-end (within certain limits). This allows you to:

  • Wait until year-end to see how much the corporation earned before deciding how much to take out
  • Adjust your personal income strategically to stay below a tax bracket threshold
  • Skip dividend payments in a bad year without the payroll commitment of salary

Salary, by contrast, is typically paid on a regular schedule throughout the year and creates an employment record.

We Help You Structure Your Compensation Correctly

The salary vs. dividends decision should be revisited every year with your accountant. Our team works with incorporated business owners across Canada to optimize their compensation strategy — get the full picture before you pay yourself.

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