Originally posted by flea beetle
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Leasing or buying is the same for tax, the only difference is timing of the deduction. If you want a deduction faster you are probably making much bigger payments under a lease which then is hard on cash flow. I don't know if many have ever bragged about having fantastic cash flow
For your final question, the tax should end up similar if done right. I take a small salary to keep CPP entitlement, disability benefits fully eligible, some cash land rent to get to $50,000 and then dividends of 50-75,000 on top of that. I am trying to use the personal tax brackets to my advantage while the rates are reasonable. My marginal rate on total dollars over income is 20-22% which I feel is acceptable. Once over $50,000 income, every dollar more is approx. 33-35% if salary or rent. When taking a dividend, the easiest to explain is its the difference between 33-35% and what the company has paid (in your question 17%). So a dividend of $50,000 would be around 18% on the personal side.
Ignoring the partnership benefits, a corporation is like an RRSP and someday you pay. Manage the deferral wisely by dealing with the right amount annually. If you don't you just end up buying shit you don't need, falling for the leasing scam or paying a pile of interest - imo
And if you are over 500,000 in a company, just accept some of the high rate after buying your inputs. It still is the cheaper alternative and if over 500 then obviously very profitable or it hasn't been managed in the years prior.
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