Introduction
Cloud accounting platforms — QuickBooks Online, Xero, FreshBooks, and similar tools — have made real-time financial record-keeping accessible to small and medium-sized corporations in a way that was not practical a decade ago. Bank feeds import transactions automatically, invoices are generated and tracked digitally, and HST calculations are automated.
These tools are genuinely useful. They are also frequently misunderstood as substitutes for accounting knowledge and professional oversight. For an incorporated business, having a cloud accounting subscription does not mean the corporation is CRA-compliant — or even that the records are accurate.
What Cloud Accounting Platforms Do Well
Transaction recording: Bank and credit card feeds import transactions daily, reducing the manual effort of data entry and ensuring the books are current. For a business where all income and expenses flow through a small number of accounts, the automated feed can capture the large majority of transactions without manual input.
Invoicing and receivables: Cloud platforms make it straightforward to issue professional invoices, track outstanding receivables, and apply payments when received. HST is automatically calculated on invoices where the platform is configured correctly.
HST remittance reports: A properly configured platform produces GST/HST working schedules showing total taxable sales, total HST collected, total ITCs on purchases, and the net remittance owing. This report can be used directly to prepare the HST return.
Year-end readiness: When the books are current and the categorisation is accurate, the platform produces financial statements — income statement and balance sheet — that form the basis for the T2 corporate return.
What Cloud Accounting Platforms Do Not Do
Categorise correctly without oversight: A bank feed imports transactions, but the platform assigns categories based on pattern recognition and past categorisation history. Miscategorised transactions — personal expenses in business categories, or capital purchases expensed rather than capitalised — are not flagged. The platform processes what it receives.
Ensure CRA compliance: The platform does not know whether the home office claim is properly structured, whether the vehicle logbook requirement is being met, whether the shareholder loan balance is within the one-year repayment rule, or whether the dividends paid are properly supported by board resolutions. These are compliance decisions that require human judgment.
Replace a chart of accounts designed for the specific business: Default chart of accounts templates in most platforms are generic. They may not separate revenue by type in a way that supports HST reporting, allocate expenses in a manner that reflects the business's actual cost structure, or distinguish shareholder-related transactions in a way that makes the year-end review straightforward.
Prepare the T2: Cloud accounting platforms do not prepare corporate income tax returns. The financial statements produced by the platform are an input to the T2, not the return itself. A CPA must review the statements, make adjustments, and prepare the T2 using tax accounting software.
Identify planning opportunities: The platform records what happened. It does not observe that the corporation is approaching the passive income threshold, that the fiscal year end compensation decision is approaching, or that the shareholder loan balance has grown to a level that requires action before year end.
The Right Role for Cloud Accounting in an Incorporated Business
Cloud accounting is most effective when it is set up correctly at the outset — with a chart of accounts designed for the specific business — and maintained with CPA oversight throughout the year. The platform handles the record-keeping efficiently; the CPA handles the interpretation, compliance decisions, and planning.
The businesses that derive the most value from cloud accounting are those where the CPA has access to the platform year-round, reviews the books regularly rather than only at year end, and intervenes when categorisation errors, unusual transactions, or approaching deadlines require attention.
When to Speak With a CPA
If your cloud accounting setup was configured by default at subscription and has not been reviewed by a CPA, the chart of accounts and categorisation settings may not be accurate for your business. A CPA review of the platform configuration — separate from the annual T2 preparation — is a worthwhile investment.