Over 60% of family wealth fails to survive the second generation. Over 90% fails by the third. In Ontario, where incorporated business owners have built concentrated value through professional corporations, operating companies, and HoldCo structures, the stakes are particularly high — and the decisions particularly complex.
The failure is almost never caused by bad investments or poor business management. It is caused by three decisions that were never made explicitly before the founder died: who controls the Ontario business, how fairness is structured between active and passive children, and how the estate tax bill is funded when it arrives.
When the founder of an Ontario incorporated business dies, control and ownership separate instantly. If this has not been resolved in the share structure, it becomes a contest between active children, passive beneficiaries, and surviving spouses — each with legitimate but conflicting interests. This is a structural decision, not a will provision.
Treating children equally and treating them fairly are different things. Splitting a $5M Ontario business equally between three children — one of whom built it over ten years — is a recipe for deadlock, forced sale, and family fracture. Fairness requires corporate-owned insurance and explicit structure, not equal division.
Death triggers a deemed disposition. For an Ontario business worth $4M with $1.5M in retained earnings, the estate tax bill can exceed $1.5M — payable within months, in cash. Without pre-engineered liquidity, the options are brutal: sell the business, drain the company, or borrow at distressed terms.
HoldCo separation, estate freeze mechanics, family trust design, voting share allocation, and buy-sell funding must all work together in the Ontario context. Individually, each tool is useful. Together, coordinated around a clear succession plan, they make a clean transition possible.
A conversation about the founder's succession intentions, the Ontario family situation, and the corporate structure. No forms, no products. This is about understanding the picture before mapping the plan.
We map the Ontario estate tax exposure, review the corporate structure, and identify the specific decisions that must be made before the succession plan can be built.
We design the succession structure — share classes, trust mechanics, freeze timing, insurance sizing, and buy-sell funding — coordinated with your Ontario CPA and corporate lawyer.
We work alongside your legal and tax advisors to implement the structural changes, execute the Ontario estate freeze if appropriate, and put the funded insurance in the right entity.
We help communicate the plan to the family members it affects. We maintain an annual review cadence, so the plan stays aligned with the Ontario business value, family circumstances, and tax rules as they evolve.
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Estate planning answers who get what after death. Succession planning answers the harder questions: how does the Ontario business continue, who controls it, how is the tax funded, and how are family relationships preserved? Most Ontario incorporated owners have an estate plan. Very few have a succession plan. The will executes instructions. The succession plan is what makes it actually work.
Read full answer →An estate freeze may make sense when your Ontario corporation has grown significantly, you expect continued growth, and you intend to pass the business or its value to the next generation. Freezing caps your capital gains exposure to today's value and shifts future growth to the next generation — but only works when the frozen liability is funded with corporate-owned insurance.
Read full answer →We work alongside them — not replace them. Your accountant handles tax compliance and technical calculations. Your lawyer handles legal structures, shareholder agreements, wills, and trusts. Eagle Wealth Partners focuses on exposure mapping, strategy, and funding. The best Ontario succession outcomes happen when all three are aligned and communicating around the same plan.
Read full answer →Book a complimentary 30-minute discovery call. You will leave with a clear picture of your exposure and whether a deeper engagement makes sense. No obligation. No sales pitch. Whether we work together or not, you leave with clarity.
Disclaimer: Succession planning involves legal, tax, and insurance considerations specific to each Ontario family. All planning is implemented in coordination with qualified legal and tax professionals.
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