We’ve been discussing some great tips on helping audit proof your business. In reality the majority of businesses in Canada get audited at some point, unless they are short term in nature. Even the short term businesses do sometimes get audited. So the key is to not hope for an audit, but be prepared in the case you do get audited!
Being prepared for an audit means that you can prove all your transactions with back up documentation and that all flow of funds have good paper trail. One of the things that CRA almost always looks at in an audit is to confirm deposits going into the Company are either reported as income or elsewhere. If the deposits into the corporation do not match the income reported, you will have to prove where the other deposits came from. If you cannot prove where these deposits came from CRA may just deem it as income to the company. An example of this is shareholder loans. If you loan funds to your company, keep a good paper trail for proof of the transaction(s).
Another major area that CRA audits is the Shareholder Loan Accounts of corporations. This is the account that has both incoming and outgoing funds. Every time you, as a shareholder or director, put funds into the Corporation this shows up in the shareholder loan account. Every time you pull funds out of the corporation this typically shows up in the shareholder account, until the Corporation’s year end where it may be cleared to dividends, wages etc. If you cannot document that the payments to you are payments of shareholder loan then CRA could deem it as personal income to you the shareholder. This is especially the case if they find the shareholder balance to be negative, meaning that you owe the corporation. You are typically not allowed to owe the corporation any funds for more than 6 months. In the past many people have set up loans from their corps with interest which used to stand up, but today CRA will just deem it as income to the shareholder or director!
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