Introduction
For Canadian tech founders who have built a company over years, a US acquisition offer is simultaneously the goal and a complex tax problem. The mechanics of how the transaction is structured, how consideration is paid, and how the tax is reported in both Canada and the US for different stakeholders need to be understood before the letter of intent is signed — not after.
Scenario: A Canadian SaaS Company Receives a US Strategic Offer
Foundry Analytics Inc. is a Toronto-based SaaS company with $4.5 million in ARR. The corporation is a CCPC, owned 60% by two Canadian co-founders and 40% by a US venture capital fund. A US strategic acquirer has offered $22 million to acquire all of the shares of Foundry Analytics.
The deal involves: $16 million in cash at closing, $3 million in retention bonuses for the founding team (contingent on staying for 18 months), and $3 million in earnout payments contingent on 24-month revenue targets.
The CCPC Status Question
The first question is whether Foundry Analytics is still a CCPC at the time of sale. The 40% US VC ownership has not stripped CCPC status if the two Canadian co-founders retain collective voting control and no single non-resident controls the corporation. If that condition is met, the shares may still qualify as QSBC shares — and the LCGE is potentially available to the Canadian founders on their capital gains.
If CCPC status has been lost — perhaps through a combination of the US VC's board representation and governance rights — the LCGE is not available, and the capital gain on the founders' shares is taxed at the capital gains inclusion rate without shelter.
This determination must be made before the transaction closes, not after.
The Capital Gain on the Share Sale
The two Canadian co-founders hold shares acquired at nominal cost. Their combined proceeds from the $16 million closing payment (proportionate to their 60% ownership) are approximately $9.6 million. The ACB of their shares is, say, $50,000 combined. The capital gain is approximately $9.55 million.
If the LCGE applies, each founder can shelter approximately $1.25 million — combined, $2.5 million of the $9.55 million gain. The remaining $7.05 million is taxed at the capital gains inclusion rate. At 50% inclusion and the Ontario top marginal rate of 53.53%, the personal tax on the remaining taxable capital gain is approximately $1.88 million.
The combined after-tax proceeds for the two founders on the $9.6 million cash: approximately $7.5 million–$7.7 million.
The US VC's Tax Position (Different Rules)
The US VC fund's share proceeds are taxed under US rules for the fund and its investors — not under Canadian rules, except to the extent withholding tax applies. Under the Canada-US tax treaty, capital gains on shares of a Canadian company held by a US resident are generally exempt from Canadian withholding tax (as the gain is not "immovable property" subject to specific treaty provisions). The US VC is taxed on the gain in the US.
The Canadian corporation has a withholding tax obligation only on certain types of payments to non-residents — dividends, interest, royalties. A capital gain received by a non-resident on a share sale of a Canadian corporation is generally not subject to Canadian withholding under the treaty.
The Retention Bonuses: Employment Income, Not Capital Gains
The $3 million in retention bonuses, payable to the founders contingent on 18 months of continued employment, are not capital gains — they are employment income. This is a critical distinction.
Employment income is taxed at full personal marginal rates (up to 53.53% in Ontario) without the capital gains inclusion rate reduction or the LCGE. For founders who expected all of their consideration to be treated as capital gains, retention bonuses represent a significantly less tax-efficient form of deal consideration.
Founders who can structure the retention component as a vesting of equity (options, RSAs) — rather than cash retention bonuses — may achieve better tax treatment, though this depends on the deal structure and the acquirer's flexibility.
The Earnout: Taxed in the Year Received or Determinable
Earnout payments — the $3 million contingent on 24-month revenue targets — are taxed when they become determinable or are received, depending on how the earnout is structured. Under the Income Tax Act's "capital gains reserve" provisions, a taxpayer who receives proceeds over multiple years may be able to spread the capital gain over those years — but only if the consideration is genuinely contingent, not if it is a deferred certain payment.
Earnout characterisation for tax purposes requires careful legal drafting. Where the earnout is for continued services (the founders are running the business post-acquisition), it may be characterised as employment or consulting income rather than capital gains — again, a significantly less efficient tax treatment.
When to Speak With a CPA
The tax consequences of a US acquisition of a Canadian tech company are multi-party, multi-jurisdiction, and in some respects irreversible once the deal closes. The CPA engagement should begin at the letter of intent stage — when deal structure can still be negotiated — not at the closing dinner.
Rotaru CPA works with Canadian tech founders on pre-transaction tax planning and M&A structuring. Book a consultation to discuss an upcoming transaction.