No document pays tax. Only liquidity does. A will can say who receives the assets. It cannot answer how the tax bill gets paid — or where the cash comes from when the estate holds no liquid assets.
Losing a parent is devastating. What many Ontario families are completely unprepared for is the financial shock that arrives shortly after — a six-figure or seven-figure tax bill from the Canada Revenue Agency, payable within months, on an estate that may hold no liquid assets at all.
This happens to families who did everything right. Responsible business owners. Successful professionals. Incorporated owners who had accountants, lawyers, and wills in place and believed they had planned adequately. The problem was not that they failed to plan. The problem was that the plan they had did not include the one thing that mattered most: the cash to pay the tax their success created.
The Misconception: "Canada Has No Estate Tax"
Canada does not levy a traditional inheritance tax. That much is accurate. But it does not mean Ontario estates transfer tax-free. Canada applies a series of tax triggers at death that, when combined for an incorporated owner, can create substantial liabilities — often payable within months of the date of death.
For Ontario families with incorporated business owners, the exposure is particularly concentrated. The business, the retained earnings, the real estate held corporately — all of it triggers a deemed disposition at once. The CRA calculates the gain. The estate pays the bill. And if the estate does not have cash, the family must find it somewhere.
What the Tax Bill Actually Looks Like: A Real Ontario Scenario
An Ontario incorporated owner dies holding shares in a professional corporation worth $2.8M in fair market value, with an adjusted cost base of $100,000. The corporation holds $1.4M in retained earnings and investments. Personal RRSP is $650,000. There is also a rental property with an accrued gain of $400,000.
At death, the tax consequences stack:
Capital gains on corporate shares at 50% inclusion × 53.53% marginal rate
Deemed disposition on rental property at 50% inclusion × 53.53%
RRSP fully included as income on final return at top marginal rate
Total: approximately $1.17M in tax obligations, payable on the final return and within estate administration timelines. The estate holds a business worth $2.8M — but it is a private corporation. The shares cannot be quickly sold. The retained earnings cannot be extracted without their own tax consequences. The family has over $1M in tax obligations and very limited access to liquid assets.
This is not a hypothetical edge case. This is the default outcome for a well-organised, successful Ontario incorporated family that did not engineer the liquidity to pay the tax their success created.
Why "Doing Everything Right" Still Was Not Enough
Most Ontario families in this situation did not fail to prepare. They had a valid will with updated beneficiary designations, an accountant who filed the corporate and personal returns properly every year, a lawyer who drafted a shareholder agreement, and life insurance — term coverage bought years ago that had since expired or been sized for a much lower level of wealth.
What was missing was coordination. Estate planning, tax planning, and liquidity planning were handled by different professionals in different conversations, with nobody responsible for integrating them into a single picture. Gaps form quietly and invisibly in that kind of siloed planning. Nobody sees the full problem because nobody was looking at the full picture.
The Five Tax Triggers That Create the Largest Bills for Ontario Families
Deemed Disposition of Private Corporation Shares
Typically the largest single tax event at death for Ontario incorporated owners. Shares are deemed disposed of at fair market value. The full accrued capital gain — built up over years of retained earnings accumulation and business growth — becomes taxable on the final return.
Retained Earnings Inside the Corporation
Retained earnings are not taxed when they accumulate — they are taxed when they leave the corporation or when shares are deemed disposed of at death. Years of tax-deferred accumulation become a concentrated, unavoidable obligation at the worst possible moment.
RRSPs and RRIFs Fully Included as Income
Without a qualifying spousal rollover, the full value of RRSPs and RRIFs is included as income on the deceased's final return. A $600,000 RRSP is not a $600,000 inheritance — it generates approximately $320,000 in tax at the highest marginal rate. Many Ontario families do not understand this until the estate is being administered.
Real Estate Outside the Principal Residence Exemption
Rental properties, recreational properties, and real estate held inside corporations do not qualify for the principal residence exemption. Every dollar of appreciation since purchase is subject to capital gains tax at death — often catching Ontario families with long-held investment properties completely off guard.
What Actually Prevents This Outcome
The goal is not to eliminate the tax — Canadian tax law does not permit that. The goal is to ensure that when the tax arrives, the cash is there to pay it without destroying what the family spent decades building.
That requires five things working together: quantifying the actual exposure in dollars before death, mapping the liquidity gap between the tax obligation and the cash available to pay it, designing corporate-owned insurance to close that gap in the right entity, coordinating the accountant and lawyer around the same plan, and reviewing it annually as business values and tax rules evolve.
Large CRA tax bills do not mean an Ontario family failed to plan. They almost always mean the plan was incomplete — the structure was there, the documents were there, but the liquidity to execute it was never engineered. That gap is always fixable before death. It is never fixable after.
Final Thought
If you or your parents own a private corporation, significant RRSPs, investment real estate, or appreciated portfolios — the time to quantify the exposure and design the liquidity is now, while there is still time to act on what you find. Wealth does not transfer automatically. It must be engineered. And the engineering must happen before the tax event, not in response to it.
Ready to See Your Number?
If this article raised questions about your own situation, a complimentary 30-minute discovery call is the right starting point. We will look at your corporate structure, map your estate tax exposure, and give you a clear sense of whether a deeper engagement makes sense.
No obligation. No sales pitch. Whether we work together or not, you leave with clarity.