Incorporation is not just paperwork. It is the financial foundation your business grows on.

Corporate structure affects taxation, compensation, ownership flexibility, and succession, while cheap incorporations often become costly to unwind later.

Wefinx helps Canadian business owners incorporate properly so the structure supports where the business is headed, not just where it starts.

Most incorporation problems are created when decisions are made too quickly.

Many incorporations are completed with little discussion around share classes, CCPC status, compensation strategy, or how profits will move through the business over time. The corporation exists legally but was never designed for growth.

Shareholder loans become messy. Compensation becomes tax inefficient. HoldCos are added under pressure instead of planned from the start. Restructuring that could have been avoided at incorporation becomes expensive once the business has assets, retained earnings, and multiple stakeholders.

A Wefinx incorporation engagement connects the legal setup, tax planning, accounting structure, and financial systems before operations begin.

What Business Incorporation Looks Like Inside Your Business

These are the areas a Wefinx incorporation engagement manages for Canadian business owners.

Incorporation Structure and CCPC Planning

The nature of the business, ownership goals, expected profitability, and future growth plans all affect how the corporation should be structured. Canadian-controlled private corporation status determines access to the small business deduction, enhanced SR&ED credits, and LCGE eligibility on a future sale. Ownership decisions that compromise CCPC status at incorporation are difficult and expensive to reverse later.

What changes:

The corporation is structured intentionally with CCPC status protected and the tax advantages that flow from it preserved.

Federal and Provincial Incorporation

Federal incorporation provides name protection across Canada and suits businesses planning to operate in multiple provinces. Provincial incorporation is simpler for businesses operating within one province. The right choice depends on where the business will operate, expansion expectations, and how the structure may evolve.

What changes:

The incorporation jurisdiction aligns with the operational and growth reality of the business.

Share Structure and Ownership Planning

Share classes, voting rights, ownership percentages, and shareholder structure need to be considered before incorporation documents are finalized. Poorly designed share structures limit future tax planning, complicate investor entry, and create problems when ownership needs to change. A shareholders agreement should be in place from the beginning, not drafted after a disagreement surfaces.

What changes:

Ownership structure supports future tax planning, investment, and succession flexibility without requiring expensive reorganization later.

CRA Program Account Registration

Corporations typically require a CRA business number, HST/GST account, payroll account, and potentially import/export or other program registrations before operations begin. Missing registrations create compliance gaps that compound quickly once transactions start flowing.

What changes:

CRA registrations and compliance obligations are established cleanly before operations scale.

Owner Compensation and Initial Tax Planning

Salary, dividends, shareholder loans, retained earnings strategy, and TOSI implications should all be considered early in the corporation’s life. An initial compensation framework established at incorporation prevents the reactive, tax-inefficient decisions that owners make when they have never been walked through the options.

What changes:

The owner compensation structure is intentional from the start rather than assembled under pressure at year-end.

Section 85 Rollover and Asset Transfer Planning

Owners transferring existing business assets, intellectual property, or a client book into a new corporation need to consider a Section 85 rollover. Without it, transferring appreciated assets triggers immediate capital gains. A properly executed rollover defers the gain until shares are eventually disposed of, preserving the tax advantage of incorporating existing value.

What changes:

Existing assets are transferred into the corporation on a tax-deferred basis rather than triggering an avoidable gain at the outset.

Not sure whether your records would hold up under CRA review?

Many businesses file on time without knowing their records may not fully support reported numbers. The Financial Health Check identifies bookkeeping, payroll, tax compliance, and documentation risks that could create CRA exposure before reviews or compliance questions arise.

Built for Canadian Entrepreneurs and Growing Owner-Managed Businesses

Revenue, profitability, liability exposure, or growth expectations are reaching the point where incorporation should be evaluated properly rather than treated as a simple administrative step.

Owners who want accounting, bookkeeping, tax, and reporting systems established correctly before operations become more complex.

Ownership structure, share classes, and corporate setup need to support future financing, additional shareholders, or operational scaling without requiring a full restructuring.

The corporation already exists but the share structure, compensation setup, or accounting framework no longer fits where the business is today.

The structure you start with affects every financial decision that follows.

Incorporation affects bookkeeping, payroll, tax planning, owner compensation, HST/GST compliance, retained earnings strategy, and long-term exit planning. Businesses that establish strong financial systems and a properly designed corporate structure early avoid the restructuring, cleanup, and compliance issues that surface as complexity increases.

What Our Clients Are Saying

Real feedback from real business owners. We let the work speak.

Services That Work Alongside This

Clean bookkeeping and financial reporting from day one establish the foundation for reliable corporate records and CRA compliance.

Clean books support accurate financial statements, year-end work, lender requests, and reliable CRA-ready financial reporting.

Corporate tax planning, owner compensation, and long-term structure planning all begin with how the corporation is established at the outset.

Incorporation should support where the business is going, not just where it starts.

Every Wefinx incorporation engagement starts with a structured review of your business goals, ownership plans, tax considerations, and financial reporting needs before incorporation decisions are finalized.

A 30-minute discovery call is all it takes.

Questions About Business Incorporation Services

What is the difference between operating as a sole proprietor and incorporating?

A sole proprietor and the owner are legally the same entity. A corporation is a separate legal entity that can retain income at lower corporate tax rates, provide some liability separation, and create flexibility for compensation planning, ownership structuring, and eventual succession. Incorporation also introduces corporate compliance and reporting obligations that do not exist for sole proprietors. The right time to incorporate depends on profitability, liability exposure, growth expectations, and how much income is being retained inside the business.

What is a CCPC and why does it matter at incorporation?

A Canadian-controlled private corporation qualifies for preferential tax treatment not available to other corporations. The small business deduction reduces the corporate tax rate on the first $500,000 of active business income to approximately 9% combined federal and provincial. CCPCs also qualify for the enhanced 35% refundable SR&ED tax credit and for the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption on qualifying shares at a future sale. CCPC status is determined by who owns and controls the corporation. Ownership decisions made at incorporation that compromise CCPC status are difficult and expensive to unwind later.

Should I incorporate federally or provincially?

Federal incorporation provides name protection across Canada and suits businesses planning to operate in multiple provinces. Provincial incorporation is simpler and lower cost for businesses operating within one province. The decision depends on where the business operates today, where expansion is expected, and how the structure may evolve. There is no universal right answer and the choice should be made with both operational and long-term planning considerations in view.

Do professional corporations require different planning?

Yes. Professional corporations introduce additional regulatory and ownership considerations depending on the profession and provincial rules involved. Compensation planning, shareholder restrictions, retained earnings strategy, and corporate structure all need to be coordinated properly from the outset.

What share classes should I set up at incorporation?

Most incorporations benefit from multiple share classes even if only one owner is involved at the start. Multiple share classes provide flexibility for future income splitting where permissible, bringing in investors or partners without disturbing existing ownership, estate planning, and succession arrangements. Keeping the share structure simple is reasonable but eliminating flexibility entirely at incorporation often creates an unnecessary problem later. A shareholders agreement should also be in place from the beginning regardless of how well the founding parties know each other.

Can incorporation structures be changed after the fact?

Yes, but restructuring after the fact is more expensive and complicated than planning properly at the beginning. Ownership changes, adding a HoldCo, share reorganizations, and tax restructuring all become significantly more complex once the business has retained earnings, multiple stakeholders, or existing financing arrangements. The cost of a properly planned incorporation is almost always less than the cost of fixing a structure that was set up without adequate planning.