One of the most common questions we get from incorporated business owners is simple: should I pay myself a salary, dividends, or some combination of both? The frustrating-but-honest answer is: it depends. But it's not arbitrary — there are specific factors that determine the right answer for your situation, and once you understand them, the decision becomes straightforward.

The Core Concept: Integration

Canada's tax system is built around the concept of integration — the idea that income earned through a corporation should be taxed at roughly the same rate as income earned personally. In theory, it shouldn't matter whether you earn $200,000 personally or through a corporation; the total tax should be similar.

In practice, it's never perfectly integrated, which means there are always opportunities to optimize — usually in favor of one method over the other depending on your province and income level.

Key principle: Salary reduces corporate income and creates personal income. Dividends are paid from after-tax corporate income and are taxed personally at a lower rate (because the corporation already paid tax). The goal is to find the split that minimizes the combined corporate + personal tax bill.

The Case for Salary

Salary has several advantages that are often overlooked by business owners focused purely on the tax rate comparison:

The Case for Dividends

Dividends have their own set of advantages:

The Ontario Numbers in 2026

For an Ontario resident in 2026, the rough comparison looks like this at different income levels. These are marginal rates on the next dollar of income:

The provincial piece matters enormously here. Quebec, Alberta, and B.C. all have different provincial tax rates that shift the optimal mix.

Bottom line: For most Ontario owner-managers in the $80K–$180K personal income range, a combination of salary (to maximize RRSP room and cover living expenses) plus eligible dividends (from retained earnings taxed at the general rate) tends to produce the best outcome. But this needs to be modelled with your actual numbers — the generic answer is never precise enough to rely on.

The Factor Most People Miss: The RDTOH Connection

If your corporation has passive investment income — interest, rental income, non-eligible dividends from investments — it accumulates Refundable Dividend Tax on Hand (RDTOH). This balance is refunded to the corporation at the rate of 38.33 cents per dollar of taxable dividends paid. If you're not paying dividends, you're not recovering your RDTOH — meaning you're leaving money with CRA unnecessarily.

This creates a situation where the right answer isn't purely about salary vs. dividends — it's about what combination recovers your RDTOH most efficiently while minimizing personal tax.

How to Actually Make This Decision

The right process is straightforward:

This is something we do as part of every Growth and Full Service engagement. If you haven't had this conversation with your accountant, it's worth having.

This article is for general informational purposes. Tax planning is fact-specific — the right answer for your situation depends on your province, income level, corporate structure, and long-term goals. Book a consultation to get numbers specific to you.