Introduction
The term "CCPC" — Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation — appears throughout Canadian corporate tax law as the criterion for access to the most favourable corporate tax treatment. Most owner-operated Canadian corporations are CCPCs without ever having to think about it. But CCPC status is not automatic or permanent — and losing it has significant consequences.
What Makes a Corporation a CCPC
A corporation is a CCPC if it satisfies all of the following:
It is a Canadian corporation: Incorporated under Canadian federal or provincial law, or incorporated elsewhere but resident in Canada.
It is not controlled by non-residents: No non-resident person or group of non-residents controls the corporation. Control is tested based on voting shares and other factors that can give effective control.
It is not controlled by public corporations: No public corporation (listed on a designated stock exchange) controls the CCPC.
It is not listed: The corporation itself is not listed on a designated stock exchange.
It is not controlled by a combination of non-residents and public corporations.
All of these conditions must be satisfied simultaneously. A corporation that meets all conditions except one is not a CCPC.
What CCPC Status Provides
Small Business Deduction: Only CCPCs can access the SBD — the reduced rate of approximately 12.2% on the first $500,000 of active business income.
SR&ED refundable credit at 35%: The most generous SR&ED rate — the refundable credit — is available only to CCPCs. Non-CCPCs receive a non-refundable credit at 15%.
Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption: The LCGE on qualifying small business corporation shares is only available to individuals who dispose of shares of a CCPC that meets the QSBC criteria.
CCPC option tax deferral: Employees who receive stock options in a CCPC can defer the employment benefit until the shares are sold, rather than recognising it at the time of exercise.
What Puts CCPC Status at Risk
Foreign investment: Taking investment from a US or other non-resident investor does not automatically strip CCPC status — the question is control. A minority investment by a non-resident VC fund typically does not constitute control. But if a non-resident investor holds a majority of voting shares, or if a combination of non-resident investors collectively control the corporation through an agreement, CCPC status may be lost.
Board control by non-residents: Even without share control, effective control through board governance arrangements — non-resident investors with veto rights over significant decisions — may constitute control for tax purposes.
Pre-IPO: As a company approaches a public listing, careful attention to CCPC status is required. CCPC status is lost upon listing. Some companies strategically realise certain transactions (SR&ED claims, LCGE-eligible share transactions) before listing to take advantage of CCPC benefits while still available.
Recovering CCPC Status
Once CCPC status is lost, recovering it requires that the control conditions be re-satisfied — typically by restructuring the ownership and control to remove non-resident or public corporation control. This is not always possible depending on the investment commitments made.
When to Speak With a CPA
For any corporation that has taken on — or is considering taking on — foreign investment, a CPA analysis of the control position before and after the investment is essential. The CCPC status determination is a specific legal and factual analysis — not an assumption.
Rotaru CPA advises Canadian corporations on CCPC status, control analysis, and the tax implications of ownership changes. Book a consultation to confirm your corporation's CCPC status.