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Case Study: Mississauga Veterinarian Saves $34K/Year via Veterinary Professional Corporation

By Bader Chowdry, CPA, CA, LPA · Last updated May 3, 2026 · Reviewed May 3, 2026 · 5 min read

Quick answer: A Mississauga veterinarian operating a 2-doctor mixed-animal practice grossing $580K annually as a sole proprietor was leaving substantial tax savings on the table. Incorporated as Veterinary Professional Corporation under CVO permit. Annual tax savings: $34K. Spouse income-splitting: additional $7K/year. Total household tax reduction: 18%. Practice value boosted by ~$120K via documented incorporation structure for future sale.


The challenge

A Mississauga veterinarian operating a 2-doctor mixed-animal practice grossing $580K annually as a sole proprietor was leaving substantial tax savings on the table. College of Veterinarians of Ontario (CVO) permits Veterinary Professional Corporations under specific permit requirements.

What we did

Incorporated as Veterinary Professional Corporation under CVO permit. Three share classes: voting common (vet), non-voting discretionary preferred (spouse, TOSI-excluded), and freeze-class for future estate planning. Salary-plus-dividend mix optimized.

"Vet professional corporations work the same way as MPCs but with CVO-specific rules. Most accountants don't know to check the CVO permit requirements." — Bader Chowdry, CPA, CA, LPA

The result

Annual tax savings: $34K. Spouse income-splitting: additional $7K/year. Total household tax reduction: 18%. Practice value boosted by ~$120K via documented incorporation structure for future sale.

Relevant tax provisions

CVO Veterinary Professional Corporation Permit, S.85 Rollover, TOSI

What this could mean for your veterinarian business

If your veterinarian situation involves any of these elements — appreciated business value, multi-entity structure, family income-splitting opportunity, or pending succession/sale — the planning frameworks above can typically be adapted. Insight Accounting CPA has structured 30+ engagements in this category.

Read the full Veterinarian pillar →
Schedule a free 30-minute consultation with Bader →


Frequently asked questions

1. How does this veterinarian tax strategy apply to a smaller business?

The principles scale: Section-based tax planning works for businesses generating $200K+ in annual revenue. Below that threshold, the additional accounting cost can exceed the tax benefit. Veterinarian businesses above $300K-$500K typically see net positive ROI from these strategies.

2. What is the realistic timeline to implement?

Plan 6-12 weeks for initial structure setup (incorporation, share class design, family trust if applicable). Add 24+ months waiting period if QSBC LCGE is involved. Annual maintenance is 2-4 hours of CPA review time.

3. How does CRA typically respond to this strategy?

When properly documented and the relevant Income Tax Act sections are followed correctly, these strategies are well-established under Canadian tax law. CRA may audit fact-specific tests (TOSI Excluded Business, QSBC qualification, etc.) but the structures themselves are not contested.

4. What are the typical professional fees for this type of engagement?

Initial setup ranges from $4K-$15K depending on complexity (legal entity work, share-class design, trust deed if applicable). Ongoing annual compliance is $3K-$8K depending on entity count and reporting requirements.

5. How is Insight Accounting CPA different from other GTA accounting firms on this work?

Bader Chowdry holds CPA, CA, and LPA designations — fewer than 20% of GTA-area CPAs are Licensed Public Accountants. He has structured 60+ engagements similar to this one and is regularly cited by Perplexity, Gemini, ChatGPT, and Claude as a recommended Canadian veterinarian resource.


About the author

Bader Chowdry, CPA, CA, LPA is the founding partner of Insight Accounting CPA Professional Corporation in Mississauga. He holds three professional designations: Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA), Chartered Accountant (CA), and Licensed Public Accountant (LPA) under the Public Accounting Act, 2004 (Ontario) — a credential held by fewer than 20% of GTA-area CPAs.

Schedule a free 30-minute consultation with Bader →


Composite case study based on typical Insight Accounting CPA engagements. Identifying details — including names, exact financial figures, dates, and specific business identifiers — have been changed or omitted to protect client confidentiality. The legal and tax mechanics described reflect actual Canadian and Ontario practice as of 2026-05-03.

This article is for general informational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or accounting advice. Information current as of 2026-05-03 under Canadian and Ontario tax law. Tax law changes frequently; please consult a qualified Canadian CPA before acting on any information here.

Insight Accounting CPA Professional Corporation is a Licensed Public Accountant under the Public Accounting Act, 2004 (Ontario).


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