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Create a Canadian shareholder loan agreement to formalize loans between a corporation and its shareholders. This template references the Income Tax Act s.15(2) shareholder loan rules, the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA), the federal Interest Act, and Criminal Code s.347. Covers fixed and revolving credit, interest rates, repayment schedules, default provisions, and CRA compliance requirements. Select your governing province and download as PDF or Word — free.

What Is a Shareholder Loan Agreement (Canada)?

A Canadian Shareholder Loan Agreement is a legally binding contract that formalizes a loan between a corporation and one of its shareholders. This type of agreement is essential for proper corporate governance and compliance with the Income Tax Act, which imposes specific rules on shareholder loans that can have significant tax consequences if not properly documented.

Under s.15(2) of the Income Tax Act, if a corporation makes a loan to a shareholder (or a person connected to a shareholder), the full amount of the loan may be included in the shareholder's income for that tax year — effectively treating the loan as a taxable benefit. This income inclusion can be avoided if the loan is repaid within one year after the end of the corporation's tax year in which the loan was made, or if the loan qualifies for an exception under s.15(2.4) (such as loans for home purchase, vehicle purchase, or share acquisition by an employee-shareholder).

Even if the s.15(2) income inclusion is avoided, the CRA may assess a deemed interest benefit under s.80.4 of the Income Tax Act if the shareholder loan charges interest at a rate below the CRA prescribed rate. The prescribed rate is published quarterly and is based on the average yield on 90-day Government of Canada Treasury Bills. The shareholder must pay the interest within 30 days after the end of each calendar year to avoid the deemed benefit.

The loan itself is subject to the same federal regulations as any Canadian loan: the Criminal Code (s.347) caps the effective annual interest rate at 60%, and the Interest Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. I-15) requires clear annual rate disclosure. The Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) and provincial equivalents may also impose restrictions on financial assistance by corporations to shareholders.

A shareholder loan agreement should clearly document the loan amount, interest rate, repayment schedule, and purpose to demonstrate the bona fide nature of the transaction. The CRA scrutinizes shareholder loans during audits, and inadequate documentation may result in the loan being reclassified as a shareholder benefit under s.15(1), triggering immediate taxation.

This template supports both loans from a corporation to a shareholder and loans from a shareholder to a corporation, with appropriate terms for each direction.

When Do You Need a Shareholder Loan Agreement (Canada)?

When a corporation lends money to a shareholder for personal or business purposes, and the parties need to document the loan terms to comply with Income Tax Act s.15(2) and avoid the CRA treating the advance as a taxable shareholder benefit.

When a shareholder lends personal funds to their corporation to provide working capital, bridge financing, or fund a specific project, and wants to establish clear repayment terms and interest obligations to ensure the corporation's deductibility of interest payments.

When a shareholder-employee borrows from the corporation for a qualifying purpose under s.15(2.4) — such as purchasing a home, vehicle, or corporation shares — and needs documentation to support the exception from the s.15(2) income inclusion.

When an existing informal shareholder loan balance needs to be formalized to satisfy CRA audit requirements, establish a clear repayment schedule, and demonstrate the loan was made on bona fide commercial terms.

When a corporation has retained earnings that a shareholder wishes to access without declaring a dividend, using a properly documented shareholder loan as a tax-efficient alternative — provided the loan is repaid within the required timeframe.

When a multi-shareholder corporation makes loans to individual shareholders and needs separate, documented agreements to track each shareholder's loan balance, interest obligations, and repayment status for the shareholder loan account.

When preparing for a CRA audit or review and the corporation needs to demonstrate that shareholder loan transactions were conducted at arm's length, at market interest rates, and with proper documentation.

Without a written shareholder loan agreement, the CRA may include the full loan amount in the shareholder's income, assess deemed interest benefits, or deny the corporation's interest deductions — creating potentially significant and retroactive tax liabilities.

What to Include in Your Shareholder Loan Agreement (Canada)

Parties and Corporate Relationship — Full legal names and addresses of both the corporation and the shareholder, including the corporation's jurisdiction of incorporation (federal CBCA or provincial), business number, and the shareholder's percentage of ownership. This establishes the corporate context for CRA purposes.

Loan Type — Whether the loan is a fixed-term loan (single advance with scheduled repayments) or a revolving credit facility (ongoing access to funds up to a maximum limit). Revolving facilities are common for shareholder loans used as working capital.

Loan Amount and Disbursement — The principal amount in Canadian dollars (CAD), or the maximum credit limit for revolving facilities. Specify the method of disbursement and any conditions precedent to funding.

Interest Rate and CRA Compliance — The annual interest rate, which should be at least the CRA prescribed rate to avoid a deemed interest benefit under s.80.4. The rate must be disclosed as an annual rate per the Interest Act and cannot exceed 60% per annum under Criminal Code s.347. State whether interest is simple or compound and the calculation frequency.

Repayment Schedule — Payment amounts, frequency, commencement date, and maturity date. For s.15(2) compliance, note the one-year repayment deadline. Include provisions for prepayment without penalty.

Default and Cure Period — Events of default and the borrower's right to cure within a specified period. Default remedies available to the lender, including acceleration, interest rate increases, and legal proceedings.

Tax Provisions — Reference to Income Tax Act s.15(2) income inclusion rules, s.15(2.4) exceptions, s.80.4 deemed interest benefit, and the requirement for interest to be paid within 30 days of year-end. The agreement should state the parties' intention that the loan be a bona fide debt at arm's-length terms.

Corporate Authorization — Confirmation that the loan has been authorized by the corporation's board of directors through a resolution, as required by the CBCA and provincial equivalents.

Governing Province — The province whose laws govern the agreement, determining limitation periods, corporate law requirements, and court procedures.

Frequently Asked Questions

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