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March Is Not Just Tax Season — It’s Strategy Season for Tax Planning and Tax Planning

tax planning

For many business owners, March feels reactive. Documents arrive. Questions pile up. Deadlines loom.

But sophisticated finance leaders understand something different:

March is a decision month.

The decisions you make now affect:

  • Your 2026 tax liability

  • Your cash flow for the next 12 months

  • Your compensation structure

  • Your risk exposure with CRA

At Outsourced Finance, we work with founders who want clarity — not surprises. Below are the strategic areas that deserve attention this month.

Effective tax planning can ensure your financial success and sustainability. Our experts in tax planning are here to guide you through the process.

Effective tax planning can ensure your financial success and sustainability. Our experts in tax planning are here to guide you through the process.

1. Corporate Tax Planning (Before It’s Too Late)

If your corporate year-end falls between September and December, your T2 filing deadlines are approaching quickly.

Now is the time to review:

  • Shareholder loan balances

  • Salary vs dividend strategy

  • Accrued expenses and bonuses

  • HST filings and remittances

  • Installment requirements

Too often, tax planning happens after the numbers are finalized. By then, options are limited.

Strategic review before filing allows room for:

  • Bonus accrual optimization

  • Income smoothing

  • Cash preservation planning

Effective tax planning can transform potential pitfalls into strategic opportunities.

2. Personal Tax Strategy — Beyond Filing

Remember, tax planning is not just about compliance; it’s about strategic advantage.

Remember, tax planning is not just about compliance; it’s about strategic advantage.

Filing a T1 is compliance.
Planning is strategy.

In March, business owners should assess:

  • RRSP contribution room

  • TFSA optimization

  • Tuition credit transfers

  • Rental property income reporting

  • Loss carryforwards

For incorporated owners, compensation decisions directly affect both personal and corporate tax outcomes. Integrated planning ensures efficiency across both layers. Understanding corporate tax planning is essential for maximizing your benefits. Tax planning strategies can make a huge difference in your overall financial health.

3. Salary vs Dividend Review (Incorporated Owners)

Reviewing your salary vs dividend choices is a vital part of your tax planning. This helps in optimizing your tax outcomes.

Reviewing your salary vs dividend choices is a vital part of your tax planning. This helps in optimizing your tax outcomes.

Many owners default to the same compensation mix every year.

This is rarely optimal.

Your compensation should consider:

  • CPP impact

  • RRSP room creation

  • Corporate tax bracket

  • Personal marginal rate

  • Cash flow requirements

  • Future lending or mortgage needs

A structured compensation strategy prevents overpayment of tax while maintaining flexibility.

4. Cash Flow vs Profit — The Hidden Gap

Effective cash flow management is a key component of tax planning. Ensure you are prepared for tax obligations ahead of time.

Effective cash flow management is a key component of tax planning. Ensure you are prepared for tax obligations ahead of time.

One of the most common issues we see:
Businesses showing profit but struggling with liquidity.

March is an excellent checkpoint to evaluate:

  • Accounts receivable aging

  • Inventory turnover

  • Payroll commitments

  • Tax installments

  • Upcoming capital expenditures

Cash flow forecasting — even at a simple 6-month rolling level — can eliminate reactive borrowing and stress.

5. CRA Risk Mitigation

Tax planning can help mitigate risks associated with CRA scrutiny, making it an essential focus for all business owners.

Tax planning can help mitigate risks associated with CRA scrutiny, making it an essential focus for all business owners.

CRA scrutiny continues to increase around:

  • Shareholder loans

  • Automobile expenses

  • Home office claims

  • HST input tax credits

  • Payroll remittances

Preventative compliance is significantly less costly than responding to audits.

March is a practical time to:

  • Clean up bookkeeping

  • Reconcile accounts

  • Review payroll remittances

  • Ensure documentation supports deductions

6. Digital Finance Readiness

Digital tools can enhance your tax planning process, ensuring accuracy and timeliness in submissions.

Digital tools can enhance your tax planning process, ensuring accuracy and timeliness in submissions.

Modern finance functions leverage:

  • Cloud accounting (QuickBooks Online or Xero)

  • Dext for receipt capture

  • Automated payroll systems

  • Real-time reporting dashboards

Manual systems increase error rates and audit risk. Digital workflows improve decision speed and reduce compliance exposure.

For growing businesses, digital infrastructure is not optional — it is foundational.

7. Strategic Questions to Ask This Month

Strategically thinking about tax planning can lead to better financial results and peace of mind.

Strategically thinking about tax planning can lead to better financial results and peace of mind.

As a founder, ask yourself:

  • Do I know my 2026 projected tax exposure?

  • Am I taking compensation in the most efficient way?

  • Is my bookkeeping audit-ready?

  • Do I have visibility into my next 6 months of cash flow?

  • Am I planning — or reacting?

The businesses that scale sustainably are not the ones filing on time.
They are the ones planning in advance.

Final Thought

This month, reflect on your tax planning strategies to achieve your financial goals for the year.

This month, reflect on your tax planning strategies to achieve your financial goals for the year.

March is not about catching up.

It is about positioning.

If your goal is growth, stability, and tax efficiency, this is the month to step back and evaluate your financial structure strategically.

At Outsourced Finance Professional Corporation, we help founders move from compliance-focused accounting to structured financial leadership.

If you would like a strategic tax and cash flow review before filing season closes, book a discovery call.

For optimal outcomes, remember that tax planning should be an ongoing process, not just a last-minute rush.

For optimal outcomes, remember that tax planning should be an ongoing process, not just a last-minute rush.

Have questions? contact usto learn more