Hi Darron, thank you for raising this thoughtful question. You’ve touched on two important but distinct issues: (1) the Small Business Deduction (SBD) and CCPC status when directors emigrate, and (2) corporate instalment payment requirements. Let’s address each point in turn.
1. Small Business Deduction and CCPC Status
A Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC) must, by definition, be controlled by Canadian residents. If all directors/shareholders who control the corporation emigrate and become non-residents, the corporation may no longer qualify as a CCPC. Losing CCPC status generally means:
- The corporation loses access to the Small Business Deduction (SBD) on active business income up to $500,000.
- As a result, its taxable income is subject to the general corporate tax rate (much higher than the small business rate).
- Other CCPC tax benefits (e.g., refundable SR&ED credits, capital gains exemption planning) may also be lost.
However, if residency is maintained in Alberta by at least some controlling shareholders (not just directors), the corporation may retain CCPC status. In your example, if all controlling shareholders emigrate, it is correct that the CCPC status would be lost.
2. Instalment Payments for Corporate Tax
Corporate instalment obligations are based on the amount of tax payable, not on CCPC status or the residency of directors. Here are the general rules under the Income Tax Act:
- A corporation must make monthly or quarterly instalments if its tax payable (federal + provincial, after credits) is more than $3,000 in either:
- the current year, or
- one of the two preceding years.
- If the corporation’s tax payable is consistently under $3,000, no instalments are required; the balance can be paid when the T2 return is filed.
- The Small Business Deduction itself does not exempt a corporation from instalments. It simply reduces tax payable. If, after applying the SBD, the remaining tax payable exceeds $3,000, instalments are still required.
3. Does Future Emigration of Directors Change Instalment Rules?
- The instalment requirement is not based on directors’ future residency intentions, but on actual tax payable.
- If directors know they are emigrating in the next tax year, this may affect the corporation’s CCPC status going forward, but it does not retroactively affect instalment obligations for the current year.
- CRA looks at actual status during the relevant taxation year, not anticipated future changes.
Summary
- If the directors are still Alberta residents today → the company remains a CCPC and may claim the Small Business Deduction (if other criteria are met). Instalment requirements depend solely on whether the annual tax payable exceeds $3,000.
- If directors emigrate in a future year → the corporation may lose CCPC status and the Small Business Deduction in that year, but instalment requirements will still follow the standard $3,000 tax payable rule.
- In short: Instalment obligations are triggered by tax payable, not by CCPC status or director residency.
Disclaimer: This is general information only and not legal or tax advice. Every situation is fact-specific, and corporate control/residency can be complex. I recommend obtaining professional tax advice before making structural or residency changes.
SOCIAL CONNECT