Introduction
Architecture and design practices tend to grow in a specific pattern. A principal works independently or in a small firm, builds a client base, begins to take on larger projects, and eventually faces a decision: continue operating as-is, or build the business deliberately. By the time the second option becomes obvious, the structural decisions that should have been made at the start are often already overdue.
This article is for architects and designers who are thinking about structure — or who should be — before the complexity of growth makes the conversation more urgent and more expensive.
The Incorporation Question
Ontario allows architects and landscape architects to incorporate as professional corporations under the Architects Act. This gives licensed professionals access to the tax advantages of incorporation — including the deferral of personal tax on income retained in the corporation and, for income within the small business deduction limit, a significantly lower corporate tax rate.
The right time to incorporate is generally when the practice is generating consistent income beyond the personal tax thresholds — typically once personal income is in the range where the deferral benefit outweighs the cost and complexity of operating a corporation. This threshold is discussed in more detail in Rotaru CPA's incorporation article, linked below.
What matters for architects specifically is understanding that professional corporation rules may require that licensed members hold a minimum number of shares and that the corporation satisfy the professional body's requirements. These are in addition to the general corporate and tax requirements.
Project-Based Revenue and the Timing of Income
Architecture and design practices often receive income in stages: a retainer at the start of a project, payments at design milestones, and a final payment on completion or delivery. How this income is recognised — and when — has tax implications.
For corporations, income is generally recognised when it is earned, not necessarily when it is invoiced or received. Work in progress at fiscal year end may need to be included in income. This is an area where the CRA's rules and GAAP accounting treatment can differ, and where getting the classification wrong can create problems at filing time.
HST on Design Services
Architectural and design services are generally taxable for HST purposes — meaning the firm must charge and collect HST on its services and remit net amounts to the CRA. Once annual taxable supplies exceed $30,000, registration is mandatory.
For larger projects with complex fee structures — particularly projects with construction components or international clients — HST treatment can become nuanced. Services provided to non-residents for use outside Canada may be zero-rated in certain circumstances. Documenting the nature of each engagement and the location of the client is part of clean HST compliance.
The HST quick method is available to smaller practices and can simplify remittance obligations — but it is not always the most favourable option. This deserves a specific review, not a default choice.
Software, Equipment, and Input Tax Credits
Practices that invest in design software (licensed annually or purchased outright), workstations, plotters, and similar equipment can claim input tax credits (ITCs) on these purchases to recover HST paid. The condition is that these items are used in commercial activities — which they are, for a practising firm.
Capital cost allowance (CCA) rules govern how equipment and significant software purchases are deducted for corporate income tax purposes. The rates vary by asset class, and understanding how purchases are classified affects both the current year deduction and the long-term depreciation profile.
The Employee vs. Contractor Decision
As design practices grow, they often engage additional designers or draftspeople — sometimes as employees, sometimes as contractors. This distinction has significant tax and payroll implications.
The CRA applies a multi-factor test to determine whether a working relationship is employment or independent contracting. The test considers control, tools, financial risk, and integration. Misclassifying employees as contractors is a compliance risk that can result in retroactive payroll obligations, penalties, and interest.
Any practice engaging individuals on a recurring basis should have this classification reviewed — not assumed based on how the engagement is described or what the contract says.
Planning Before You Add a Partner
Many architecture practices eventually consider adding a partner or bringing in another licensed professional. This is a structural decision that has significant implications for the corporate structure, share classes, buyout provisions, and income allocation. These conversations are much easier to navigate before the partnership is in place than after.
When to Speak With a CPA
The best time to review the structure of an architecture or design practice is not when a problem has arisen — it is when the practice is beginning to grow in a direction that makes structure matter. A CPA familiar with professional services can model the tax implications of incorporation, identify the right time to take that step, and set up the systems that support clean ongoing compliance.