Salary vs dividends: integration theory, CPP implications, RRSP room, and a side-by-side calculator for Canadian owner-managers
One of the first questions every incorporated Canadian business owner faces is: how do I pay myself? The two main options — salary and dividends — have very different tax, CPP, and planning implications. The "right" answer depends on your income level, RRSP contribution room needs, CPP goals, and how much you want to leave in the corporation. This guide explains both options thoroughly and lets you compare them with a calculator.
Canada's tax system is built around the principle of "integration" — the idea that whether income flows through a corporation or directly to an individual, the total tax paid should be roughly the same. When a corporation earns income, pays corporate tax, and then pays a dividend to the shareholder, the dividend tax credit system is designed to credit the shareholder for the corporate tax already paid, preventing true double taxation.
In practice, integration is imperfect — it varies by province, income level, and whether dividends are eligible (from income taxed at general rate) or non-eligible (from income taxed at the small business rate). But the key takeaway is: salary vs dividends is largely a timing and planning question, not a "one is obviously better" question.
| Factor | Salary | Dividends |
|---|---|---|
| CPP contributions | Yes — both employer + employee shares | No CPP on dividends |
| RRSP contribution room | Yes — 18% of salary | No — dividends don't create RRSP room |
| Payroll administration | Required — payroll account, T4, remittances | Simple — board resolution, T5 slip |
| Corporate tax impact | Salary reduces corporate taxable income | Dividends paid from after-tax corporate income |
| Personal tax rate | Taxed at full marginal rates | Gross-up + dividend tax credit reduces effective rate |
| EI eligibility | Incorporated employees typically not eligible for EI | N/A |
| Benefits deductibility | Health/dental benefits from salary are deductible | Benefits must be tied to salary employment |
Many accountants recommend paying yourself a salary that:
A common strategy: pay yourself a salary equal to $73,200 (YMPE) to maximize CPP and generate approximately $13,176 in RRSP room. Pay any remaining needed funds as dividends. The salary reduces corporate taxable income; the dividends draw down retained earnings efficiently.
Eligible dividends come from income taxed at the general corporate rate (15%+) and carry a higher dividend tax credit — resulting in lower personal tax. Non-eligible dividends come from income taxed at the small business rate (9%) and carry a lower tax credit. Most owner-manager dividends are non-eligible. The distinction affects your personal tax rate on dividends — eligible dividends can be received virtually tax-free at lower personal income levels in some provinces.
KOHO helps Canadian business owners keep corporate funds clearly separated from personal spending — essential for clean corporate records and smooth tax filing.