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Frequently Asked Questions

Clear answers to common questions about capital gains at death, estate freezes, buy-sell funding, and corporate succession planning.

On death, you’re generally deemed to have disposed of your assets at fair market value. For incorporated owners, that often means:

  • A deemed disposition of corporate shares
  • Capital gains on non-principal residence real estate and non-registered investments

 

This can create a significant tax bill at exactly the moment your family or successors need liquidity most. The key questions are: how large is it, when does it hit, and how will it be funded?

An Estate Tax Exposure Assessment is a focused engagement to:

  • Quantify your current and future estate tax / capital gains exposure
  • Identify your liquidity gap (how much cash is missing to pay that bill)
  • Map exposure across personal assets and corporations

You receive:

  • A clear exposure summary in numbers, not jargon
  • A prioritized roadmap of planning options (structure + funding)
  • Recommendations on whether you need HoldCo/OpCo changes, trusts, an estate freeze, and/or insurance funding

Retained earnings inside a corporation:

  • Increase the value of your shares, which increases capital gains exposure at death or sale
  • Can be a powerful tool for funding insurance or building corporate wealth, if structured properly
  • Need to be considered in dividend vs. reinvestment vs. extraction decisions

 

In planning, we look at how much value is being trapped in the corporation and what that means for future tax and liquidity when shares transfer.

A HoldCo/OpCo structure typically separates:

  • OpCo (Operating Company): the active business
  • HoldCo (Holding Company): where shares and surplus assets are held

It matters for:

  • Asset protection (keeping operating risk away from core assets)
  • Tax deferral and planning (moving surplus to HoldCo)
  • Estate and succession planning, including:
    • Who owns which company
    • Where corporate-owned insurance should sit
    • How to use tools like estate freezes and trusts

 

The right structure can defer tax and make succession far easier to implement.

If a shareholder dies and there is no funded buy-sell agreement:

  • The deceased’s shares usually pass to their estate/beneficiaries
  • Surviving shareholders may be obligated to buy, but:
    • The company may not have the cash
    • The survivors may be forced to borrow, sell assets, or accept unwanted partners
  • It can trigger:
    • Conflict between family and business partners
    • Forced or distressed sales of the business or assets

 

A properly drafted and funded buy-sell plan is critical to avoid this scenario.

With corporate-owned life insurance:

  • The corporation owns and pays for the policy
  • On death, the tax-free death benefit is paid to the corporation
  • Proceeds can be used to:
    • Pay estate tax / capital gains related to the shares
    • Fund buy-sell obligations (buying out a deceased partner’s shares)
    • Provide liquidity so the business and family avoid fire-sales and emergency borrowing

 

Structured correctly, it can also create favourable capital dividend account (CDA) treatment, improving after-tax outcomes.

An estate freeze may make sense when:

  • Your corporation or asset base has already grown significantly
  • You expect continued growth in value
  • You intend to pass the business or assets to children or the next generation

Freezing can:

  • Cap your personal future growth and tax exposure at a point in time
  • Shift future growth to the next generation (often through a HoldCo or trust)
  • Help avoid a massive single-estate tax bill by splitting exposure over time

 

It’s most valuable when implemented before a major value jump or transaction.

Often, yes—or at least review it.

Changes such as:

  • Creating a HoldCo
  • Implementing an estate freeze
  • Introducing trusts
  • Changing share classes or ownership

can all affect:

  • Who actually controls what
  • How assets flow through your estate
  • How your executor administers the plan

 

Your corporate structure and your will must align. That’s why coordination with your estate lawyer is essential.

At minimum, annually, and also when there are significant changes:

  • Business valuation or revenue jumps
  • New corporations, HoldCos, or restructurings
  • Major real estate or investment acquisitions/divestitures
  • Family changes: birth, death, marriage, divorce, aging parents
  • Tax rule changes that affect private corporations and estates

 

The goal is to ensure your structure, coverage, and liquidity plan still match the reality of your business and family.

Realistically, no.

  • Accountants bring tax compliance and technical calculations
  • Lawyers handle legal structures, shareholder agreements, wills, and trusts
  • An advisor like me focuses on exposure mapping, strategy, and funding (often via insurance)

 

The best outcomes come when all three are aligned and communicating. Planning in a silo usually leads to gaps, duplication, or unintended tax consequences.

Still have questions about your specific exposure?

Every situation is unique. Book a complimentary discovery call to get clarity on your estate tax exposure and liquidity planning.

Information on this website is for general educational purposes and is not legal or tax advice. Planning recommendations are implemented in coordination with qualified legal and tax professionals.