Real Estate Builds Wealth. The Wrong Financial Structure Quietly Erodes it.

We work with Canadian real estate investors, developers, and landlords who need more than annual filings. Capital gains treatment, GST/HST on new construction, holding company structuring, and flipping rules all require expertise built around how Canadian real estate actually works. We bring that expertise and the structure to match.

Most Real Estate Portfolios Are Built Faster Than The Financial Systems That Support Them

The rent comes in. The mortgages get paid. The portfolio keeps growing. And then a property is sold without proper capital gains planning, or a GST/HST obligation surfaces on a development that was not anticipated.

Most real estate businesses are not running on bad finances. They are running on financial systems that were never updated as the tax exposure grew.

Wefinx works with real estate investors and developers to close that gap so the structure supports the portfolio rather than quietly working against it.

How We Support Canadian Real Estate Businesses

These are the areas where real estate investors and developers need more than a generalist accountant.

Property-Level Profitability and Portfolio Reporting

Most real estate portfolios look stronger on paper than they actually are when the numbers are broken down at the property level.

Without property-level reporting it is impossible to know which assets are generating real returns and which are underperforming after all expenses, financing costs, and capital expenditures are accounted for. Decisions about what to hold, refinance, and reconsider require visibility that aggregate reporting cannot provide.

What changes:  Every property carries its true financial picture. Performance gaps are visible before they compound and capital allocation decisions are based on what is actually happening across the portfolio.

Capital Gains, Income Treatment, and the Flipping Rules

The difference between capital gains treatment and business income on a property disposition can be significant in dollar terms. Most investors only think about it after the fact.

The residential property flipping rule deems profits on residential properties sold within 365 consecutive days to be fully taxable business income with no principal residence exemption available. Properties held longer are not automatically capital gains. CRA considers original intent, frequency of transactions, and activities undertaken when determining treatment. In British Columbia a separate provincial home flipping tax applies to properties sold within 730 days of purchase on or after January 1, 2025.

What changes:  Dispositions are planned with a clear understanding of how CRA is likely to treat them. Holding periods, intent documentation, and structure are reviewed proactively so the tax outcome reflects the investment strategy.

GST/HST on Real Estate Transactions

GST/HST in Canadian real estate is one of the most complex and frequently mishandled areas in the entire tax system.

Used residential properties are generally exempt. New residential construction, substantially renovated properties, and commercial real estate are taxable. The new residential rental property rebate allows landlords purchasing new properties for long-term residential rental to recover a portion of GST/HST paid. Assignment sales and short-term rental conversions each carry their own implications. CRA actively audits real estate transactions and typically reviews income tax and GST/HST simultaneously.

What changes:  GST/HST treatment is determined correctly before transactions close. Rebates are claimed accurately, input tax credits are recovered where available, and compliance exposure is managed proactively rather than discovered during an audit.

Portfolio Structuring and Long-Term Tax Planning

How a real estate portfolio is structured today determines how much of it you keep tomorrow. Most structures are never reviewed as the portfolio grows.

Personal versus corporate ownership, holding company structures, how properties are titled across family members, and how rental income flows through the structure all affect both the annual tax position and the eventual disposition outcome. Passive investment income rules reduce the small business deduction when corporate passive income exceeds $50,000 annually, which becomes meaningful as portfolios scale inside a corporation. For investors building toward an eventual sale or intergenerational transfer, the structure in place years before the transaction determines how efficiently wealth transfers.

What changes:  Your structure is reviewed against where the portfolio is today and where it is going. Annual tax position, disposition planning, and intergenerational transfer objectives are considered together so the structure serves the portfolio at every stage.

Section 85 Rollovers and Corporate Restructuring

Transferring real estate into a corporation is a taxable disposition unless properly structured. Most investors only discover this after the fact.

Transferring personally held properties into a holding company triggers a deemed disposition at fair market value, realizing any accrued capital gain in the year of transfer. A Section 85 rollover allows the transfer to occur on a tax-deferred basis by electing a transfer price below fair market value. The election requires a joint filing, must be supported by defensible valuations, and must be filed correctly and on time. Land transfer tax applies to the transfer regardless of the Section 85 election and is a meaningful cost that must be modelled before the decision is made.

What changes:  Restructuring decisions are modelled before they are made. Section 85 elections are structured correctly, valuations are defensible, and land transfer tax implications are planned for so the restructuring achieves what it is intended to achieve.

Financing Strategy, Debt Structure, and Refinance Readiness

Financing decisions made without a clear long-term strategy quietly constrain portfolio growth. Most investors optimize for the next deal rather than the full portfolio.

Debt service coverage ratios, lender reporting requirements, refinance timing, covenant compliance, and CMHC financing strategy all affect how a portfolio grows and what it costs to carry. Lenders evaluating refinance applications or new credit facilities expect financial reporting that reflects true property-level performance, not consolidated numbers that obscure what is happening asset by asset. For developers, construction financing draws require reporting that keeps pace with project progress. Getting the financial infrastructure right directly affects both borrowing capacity and borrowing cost.

What changes:  Financing decisions are made with a clear financial model behind them. Lender-ready reporting is produced consistently so refinance applications, credit facility reviews, and new acquisition financing are supported by numbers that reflect the portfolio’s actual performance and position.

Rental Income, Cash Flow, and CCA Management

Strong rental assets do not always translate into strong cash flow. CCA decisions made without an exit strategy in mind create tax exposure that surprises most investors.

Mortgage payments, carrying costs, vacancy periods, and capital expenditures all create cash flow dynamics requiring active management. Capital cost allowance on rental buildings provides tax deductions but recapture on disposition is taxed at full marginal rates, not at the preferential capital gains inclusion rate. Many investors claim CCA to reduce current year tax without accounting for the recapture liability created on eventual sale. Whether to claim CCA and how much requires modelling against the expected disposition scenario.

What changes:  Cash flow is forecasted and managed across the full portfolio. CCA decisions are made with a clear view of the recapture implications so deductions taken today do not create unexpected tax bills when a property is sold.

Development Cost Tracking and Project Accounting

Large development projects require financial infrastructure that tracks costs accurately and supports the financing and reporting that lenders and partners expect.

Development costs, land carrying charges, soft costs, and construction expenditures all interact in ways that affect both the financial statements and the tax position on completion or disposition. GST/HST obligations on new residential construction require management throughout the project. Lenders and equity partners expect reporting that reflects the true state of the project at every stage, not a summary assembled at milestone draws.

What changes:  Project costs are tracked accurately at the development level. GST/HST is managed throughout rather than surfacing as a liability at completion. Lender reporting gives partners a clear and current picture of where the project stands.

Built For Real Estate Businesses At Every Stage

Individual investors and portfolio owners managing residential, commercial, and mixed-use properties. We provide property-level reporting, capital gains planning, holding company review, flipping rule compliance, and financial visibility for decisions on holding, refinancing.

Residential and commercial developers managing project costs, GST/HST on new construction, multi-entity structures, and development financing. We build the financial infrastructure that keeps projects clear and controlled from land acquisition through to disposition.

Agents operating through personal real estate corporations managing commission income, HST remittances, and salary versus dividend planning strategically structured to maximize after-tax retention of professional earnings.

What Our Clients Are Saying

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

Bookkeeping, Tax, Accounting, And Advisory. All Under One Roof

The tools, the insights, the people, and the strategic guidance your business actually needs to move forward.

A financial picture you can actually make decisions from, every month, without wondering if the numbers are right.

Timely financial reporting that shows true performance with clear insights and accuracy.

Year-round tax planning, CRA compliance, and proactive strategy so your tax position works in your favor.

Strategic guidance on cash flow, financial planning, and the decisions that drive profitability and real growth.

We help you strengthen the drivers of enterprise value so your business is worth more, whether you plan to sell or not.

A successful exit often starts years before the transaction. We carefully align your goals so you leave fully on your terms.

The Right Financial Structure Protects What You Have Built And Supports What Comes Next

Building a real estate portfolio is demanding enough without the tax structure working against you. Whether the priority is cleaner property reporting, better capital gains planning, a holding structure that actually serves the portfolio, or preparing for an eventual disposition, we handle the complexity so you can focus on the investments. Not sure where your financial setup stands today? The Financial Health Check takes three minutes.

Financial support for real estate businesses at every stage.

Real estate businesses vary widely in structure, scale, investment strategy, and the financial complexity they face. The needs of an individual investor with a few rental properties are genuinely different from those of a developer managing large-scale projects, a property management firm operating on behalf of owners, or a real estate agent building a practice through a personal real estate corporation. We tailor our support to where your real estate business is today and adapt as it grows.

Real Estate Investors and Portfolio Owners

Investors need simple, reliable systems aligned with goals. Changing rate cycles impact costs and valuations, requiring clear financial visibility, clean books, efficient tax structure, and confident investment decisions.

“I own a number of properties but I am not sure how well each one is actually performing after all the expenses, financing costs, and taxes are properly accounted for.”

Bookkeeping

Property-Level Reporting

Tax Planning

GST/HST Guidance

Cash Flow Management

CRA Compliance

Principal Residence Planning

Flipping Rule Compliance

Capital Gains Planning

Built for Real Estate Investors and Portfolio Owners →

Real Estate Developers and Builders

Developers managing multiple entities face complex costs, taxes, reporting, and financing. Without proper systems, growth causes confusion. We ensure financial visibility and control across projects and entities.

“I have multiple projects and entities running simultaneously and the financial complexity is significant. I need consolidated visibility, proper cost tracking, and a tax strategy that reflects the full structure.”

Project Cost Tracking

GST/HST on New Construction

Multi-Entity Reporting

Tax Structuring

Virtual CFO

Budgeting and Forecasting

Exit Planning

Built for Real Estate Developers and Builders →

Property and Asset Management Businesses

Property and asset management firms face unique needs like trust accounts, taxes, payroll, and compliance. We build financial systems and frameworks tailored to support efficient operations and growth.

“We manage a growing number of properties on behalf of our clients and the compliance and financial reporting requirements have become significantly more complex. I need a financial partner who understands how property management businesses actually work.”

Trust Account Management

HST on Management Fees

Bookkeeping

Payroll

CRA Compliance

Financial Reporting

Multi-Client Reporting

Built for Property and Asset Management Businesses →

Real Estate Agents and Brokerages

Real estate agents and brokerages face tax, trust, and compliance complexities. Proper corporate structuring enables tax efficiency, income planning, and financial control, ensuring practices are managed strategically.

“I have been operating through my personal real estate corporation for several years but I have never had anyone properly review whether my compensation structure and tax planning are actually optimized.”

Personal Real Estate Corporation Review

Income Splitting Strategy

Tax Planning

Bookkeeping

CRA Compliance

HST on Real Estate Commissions

Value Growth

Built for Real Estate Agents and Brokerages →

You are not the first real estate business to face this.

These are the four financial patterns we see most consistently when a real estate business first comes to us. If any of these sound familiar, you are not alone and there is a clear path to addressing them.

Property Performance Is Not Fully Clear

The portfolio is growing but it is genuinely difficult to tell which properties are actually performing well after all costs are properly accounted for. Rental income is coming in and expenses are being paid but without proper property-level reporting, true profitability after financing costs, maintenance, vacancies, and capital expenditures is not always visible. Most real estate investors are surprised by how different the numbers look when performance is measured accurately at the property level rather than across the portfolio as a whole.

Cash Flow Feels Tight Despite Strong Assets

There is significant value in the portfolio, but cash flow remains inconsistent and often uncomfortably tight. Carrying costs that have shifted from recent rate cycles, vacancies, and rental timing create ongoing pressure on available cash, reducing stability, flexibility, growth potential, and the ability to act on new opportunities with confidence. Many real estate businesses are asset-rich and cash-constrained, creating financial pressure that stronger cash flow forecasting, better financing strategies, and more intentional planning could significantly reduce.

 
 

FAQs About Real Estate Accounting

How does the passive income threshold affect a real estate holding company in Canada?

When a Canadian Controlled Private Corporation earns more than $50,000 in passive investment income annually, the small business deduction begins to phase out and is eliminated entirely at $150,000. For real estate holding companies generating significant rental income this is a meaningful planning consideration. Rental income is generally treated as passive unless the operation qualifies as an active business, which CRA typically requires five or more full-time employees to establish. As passive income grows inside a corporation the tax cost of retaining income changes materially. How income flows between operating and holding entities, and whether a separate property management company makes sense, needs to be reviewed against these thresholds proactively.

How should a multi-entity real estate structure be organized to support lender reporting and refinancing?

Lenders evaluating refinance applications expect financial reporting that reflects true property-level performance including net operating income, debt service coverage ratios, and vacancy rates by asset. Consolidated statements blending multiple properties across entities are rarely sufficient for underwriting without supporting property-level schedules. Separate financial statements for each entity, supported by a consolidated overview, give lenders the granularity they need. Organizations that maintain clean current financials at both the property and entity level access refinancing faster, negotiate from a stronger position, and avoid assembling lender packages under time pressure. CMHC insured financing for multi-unit residential properties carries additional reporting requirements that need to be built into the financial infrastructure from the start.

What is a Section 85 rollover and when does it make sense for a real estate investor?

A Section 85 rollover allows a taxpayer to transfer appreciated property into a corporation at an elected amount below fair market value, deferring the capital gain that would otherwise be triggered on transfer. The election requires a joint filing between the transferor and the corporation, must be supported by a defensible fair market value determination, and must be filed within the required deadline. Land transfer tax applies to the transfer regardless of the Section 85 election and can be significant enough to affect whether the restructuring makes financial sense. The rollover defers the gain rather than eliminating it. The holding corporation’s adjusted cost base reflects the elected amount and the deferred gain will be realized on eventual disposition.

How are inter-entity transactions structured and reported in a multi-entity real estate group?

Related party transactions between entities including management fees, inter-company loans, and property leases must be conducted at fair market value and documented with proper agreements. Management fees paid from a holding company to a related management company require that the services actually be performed, the fee be reasonable, and contemporaneous documentation support the arrangement. Inter-company loans must charge interest at least equal to CRA’s prescribed rate to avoid shareholder benefit implications and income attribution. The arm’s length standard governs what CRA will accept on audit and undocumented or poorly structured arrangements are a consistent audit focus in real estate groups.

What are the tax implications of an estate freeze on a real estate holding company?

An estate freeze allows the current owner to crystallize the value of their equity at today’s value while future appreciation accrues to the next generation or a family trust. The freeze is typically implemented through a share exchange where the owner exchanges common shares for fixed-value preferred shares, with new common shares issued to family members or a trust at nominal value. The preferred shares carry a redemption value equal to current fair market value, locking in the owner’s capital gains exposure and capping the eventual deemed disposition at death. For real estate holding companies with significant accrued appreciation, freezing at current value and having future growth accrue outside the estate can meaningfully reduce the tax cost of intergenerational transfer.

How should capital expenditures on investment properties be classified for CRA purposes?

The distinction between a current expense, deductible in full in the year incurred, and a capital expenditure, added to the cost base and depreciated through CCA, is one of the most frequently audited areas in CRA’s real estate compliance program. A current expense maintains the property in its existing condition. A capital expenditure improves it, extends its useful life, or adds something new. Replacing worn carpet is generally current. Installing new flooring where none existed is capital. Repairing a roof is current. Replacing it entirely is capital. CRA considers the nature of the work, relative cost, frequency, and whether the result is a betterment or a restoration. A consistent capitalization policy applied across the portfolio and documented contemporaneously is the most defensible position on audit.