Every incorporated business owner has heard some version of it. Salary is taxed one way, dividends another. Use a mix. Got it. (If you need a refresher on how salary, dividends, and shareholder loans actually work, we broke it down here.)
But that conversation skips the part that actually moves the needle: given how your business generates money, when should you take dividends, and how much?
Take too much in the wrong period and you're either creating a personal tax problem or pulling cash out of a business that needs it. Take too little and retained earnings pile up in the corporation, which creates its own tax consequences down the road.
The answer starts with your revenue type (feel free to skip to yours)
Your business generates predictable income every month. Retainers, subscriptions, service contracts, recurring clients.
When to take dividends: You have the most flexibility here. Because you can forecast revenue with reasonable confidence, you can plan dividend distributions ahead of time rather than reactively. Quarterly is usually the right cadence: you take a distribution after each quarter once you have a clean profit picture, and you do a final pass at year-end.
How much to take: Start with what you need personally to cover your baseline (living expenses, personal debt, planned purchases). That's your floor. Then calculate how much additional dividend income you can take before hitting a personal tax bracket that costs more than leaving the money in the corporation. What's left after that threshold stays in the business.
The risks to watch:
Your business earns in chunks. Project-based work, consulting engagements, large B2B contracts, construction, real estate transactions. Revenue comes in, then goes quiet.
When to take dividends: After confirmed revenue events, not when the account looks full. The cash sitting in your business account after a big project close is doing two jobs: covering your upcoming slow period and representing distributable profit. Separating those two is the work.
Before any distribution, calculate: three months of operating expenses, upcoming tax remittances, and any known large costs in the next 90 days. What remains after setting those aside is what's actually available.
How much to take: Less than you think in the good periods. Most lumpy revenue owners over-distribute after strong stretches and then either borrow or cut corners during the quiet ones. The discipline is taking a sustainable amount consistently and treating windfalls as retained earnings first, distributions second.
The risks to watch:
Your revenue is predictable in pattern but concentrated in timing. A tax preparation firm, a landscaping company, a retail business with a holiday peak. You know when the money comes and when it doesn't.
When to take dividends: Aligned with your revenue calendar, not the standard quarterly schedule. If 70% of your revenue comes in Q1, that's when your distributable profit is confirmed. A year-end dividend in December may make accounting sense but cash flow sense only if your slow season hasn't already drained the account.
How much to take: Build a 12-month cash flow model, even a rough one. Identify your slow months and the fixed costs you need to cover through them. Your dividend amount should leave enough in the corporation to carry operations through the low season without touching a line of credit.
The risks to watch:
Regardless of which category describes your business, these factors will adjust how aggressive or conservative your dividend approach should be.
If you're actively reinvesting, hiring, or building infrastructure, the corporation needs that cash. Taking large distributions while also funding growth creates unnecessary strain. Decide intentionally: are you in extraction mode or reinvestment mode this year? They require different dividend approaches.
If you've been accumulating profit for years and not distributing it, you may have a passive income problem. Once corporate passive income exceeds $50,000 in a year, Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) begins reducing your access to the small business deduction at a rate of $5 for every $1 over the threshold. In that situation, distributing more aggressively now may be more tax-efficient than continuing to accumulate.
What else are you earning? Rental income, a spouse's income, investment income, income from a second business all affect which bracket a dividend lands in. A $60,000 dividend means something very different to someone with $40,000 in other personal income versus someone with $140,000. Run this number before you decide on an amount, not after.
The framework above applies across Canada, but the tax cost of dividends varies meaningfully by province.
Alberta has the lowest personal tax rates in the country. Dividend distributions are generally more efficient here than elsewhere, and the threshold before you hit punishing brackets is higher.
Ontario and British Columbia have top marginal rates on non-eligible dividends near 47–49%. Lumpy revenue owners in these provinces are most exposed when they take large, infrequent distributions. The argument for spreading dividends across years is stronger here.
Quebec operates its own provincial tax system with different rates and credits. The general guidance applies, but the specific math needs Quebec-specific advice.
The practical rule: before you set an amount, ask your accountant to run it against your province's current rates. The difference between a slightly optimized and an unplanned dividend can easily be $5,000–$10,000 in a single year.
Dividends are the most flexible part of how you pay yourself through a corporation. You can take more in a good year, less in a slow one, and time it to minimize what you give to CRA.
But flexibility without a framework is just guessing. And when you're guessing with dividends, the cost shows up on your personal tax return, in your business's cash account, or both.