Accountant in Chinook, Alberta | Tax, Bookkeeping & Payroll

BOMCAS Canada provides virtual Canadian accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping, and payroll services to clients in Chinook and across Alberta. Alberta has no provincial sales tax, the lowest general corporate rate in Canada at 8%, and a 2% small business rate.

Chinook — accounting, tax and bookkeeping for a Alberta village

Chinook is a village in Alberta. Residents, farmers, tradespeople, and small businesses in Chinook can access full-service Canadian accounting and tax expertise virtually through BOMCAS Canada, including all CRA filings and provincial compliance.

BOMCAS Canada is headquartered in Edmonton, Alberta and delivers professional Canadian accounting, tax, bookkeeping, and payroll services virtually to clients across every Canadian province and territory — including Chinook. Through our encrypted client portal, video meetings, and direct CRA representation under your written authorization, we serve Chinook clients with the same complete service we deliver to clients in Toronto, Calgary, or Vancouver. There is no need to drive to a major centre to access specialized Canadian tax expertise.

Alberta tax framework that applies to Chinook clients

Chinook is in Alberta, and Alberta businesses and residents operate under a specific Canadian tax framework:

  • Sales tax: 5% GST only (no provincial sales tax)
  • Small business corporate rate: 11% (9% federal + 2% Alberta) on the first $500,000 of active business income for Canadian-controlled private corporations
  • General corporate rate: 23%
  • Tax administration: the Canada Revenue Agency for federal taxes and Alberta Treasury Board and Finance for the separate AT1 corporate return
  • Workers' compensation: WCB Alberta

Alberta has no provincial sales tax, the lowest general corporate rate in Canada at 8%, and a 2% small business rate. We handle the complete federal and Alberta-specific compliance for our Chinook clients.

Services we provide to clients in Chinook

How Chinook clients work with BOMCAS Canada

The virtual service model is straightforward:

  1. Initial conversation. Call 780-667-5250 or submit the contact form. We respond within one business day to schedule a 15–30 minute discovery call by phone or video.
  2. Engagement letter. A written, fixed-fee engagement letter outlines exactly what is in scope and what you will pay. No hourly surprises.
  3. CRA authorization. You e-sign RC59 (business) or AUT-01 (individual) to authorize BOMCAS Canada to communicate with CRA on your behalf. From that point we handle all routine CRA contact.
  4. Secure document portal. You upload your documents to an encrypted client portal with multi-factor authentication. No emailing of sensitive financial documents.
  5. Ongoing delivery. Monthly bookkeeping, sales tax filings, payroll, and year-end financial statements plus T2 corporate tax are delivered on a predictable schedule. We respond to questions and CRA correspondence year-round.

Frequently asked questions from Chinook clients

Does BOMCAS Canada actually serve clients in Chinook?
Yes. BOMCAS Canada serves clients in Chinook and across Alberta virtually through our secure document portal, video meetings, and direct CRA representation under written authorization. The virtual model is the same complete service we provide to clients anywhere in Canada.
What sales tax applies to my business in Chinook?
Alberta uses 5% GST only (no provincial sales tax). We handle registration, periodic returns, and CRA (and provincial authority where separate) compliance for Chinook businesses.
What is the corporate tax rate for a CCPC in Chinook?
For active business income up to $500,000, the combined federal-provincial rate is 11% (9% federal + 2% Alberta). Above $500,000, the general rate is 23%.
How do I get started with BOMCAS Canada from Chinook?
Call 780-667-5250 or submit the contact form. We respond within one business day and schedule a discovery conversation by phone or video. There is no obligation.

How Alberta's tax structure affects Chinook businesses and residents

Alberta operates the most business-friendly tax environment among Canadian provinces, and Chinook businesses benefit directly. The province levies no provincial sales tax — only the 5% federal Goods and Services Tax (GST) applies. This means a Chinook retailer or service business charging an Alberta customer collects only 5% GST, compared to 13% HST in Ontario or 15% HST in the Atlantic provinces. The administrative simplicity is meaningful: no separate provincial registration, no PST returns, no provincial sales tax audits.

For incorporated businesses in Chinook, the Alberta corporate income tax rate is 8% on general business income and 2% on the first $500,000 of active business income earned by a Canadian-controlled private corporation. Combined with the federal small business deduction (9% federal rate), a Chinook CCPC pays just 11% combined on the first $500,000 of qualifying income. This is the same rate as Manitoba and Yukon, and the lowest combined small business rate in Canada. The general combined rate (above the small business threshold or for non-CCPC corporations) is 23%, compared to 26.5% in Ontario and Quebec.

Alberta did not enter the Tax Collection Agreement with the federal government for corporate income tax. This means Chinook corporations must file two corporate returns each year: the federal T2 with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) and the separate AT1 with Alberta Treasury Board and Finance. The AT1 has the same fiscal year as the T2 but is its own filing with its own deadlines. We prepare both as part of a single integrated corporate tax engagement.

Workers' Compensation Board (WCB Alberta) for Chinook employers

Most Chinook employers must register with WCB Alberta and pay quarterly or annual premiums based on industry classification and total assessable earnings. Industry classification has a major impact on premium rates — construction trades, trucking, and oilfield services carry premium rates several times higher than office-based industries. We handle WCB Alberta registration and remittance for our Chinook employer clients and review classification annually to ensure premiums reflect actual operations.

Alberta-specific tax filings Chinook clients should know about

  • Alberta Tourism Levy. Chinook hotels, motels, bed-and-breakfast operators, and short-term accommodation providers collect a 4% Tourism Levy on most accommodation.
  • Alberta Insurance Premium Tax. Applies to insurance brokers and insurers operating in Alberta.
  • Alberta carbon levy considerations. Major emitters in Alberta interact with the federal carbon backstop framework.
  • Alberta property tax assessment review. Available for Chinook property owners disputing municipal property assessments.

Year-end tax planning for Chinook clients

Year-end planning is one of the highest-leverage exercises in Canadian tax. For Chinook businesses, we focus on: (1) accelerating capital purchases into the current year to use the Accelerated Investment Incentive enhanced first-year CCA; (2) timing year-end bonuses and discretionary expenses to manage taxable income against the small business deduction threshold; (3) reviewing the passive investment income grind on the small business deduction (each $1 of passive income above $50,000 reduces the small business limit by $5 until eliminated at $150,000); (4) optimizing owner-manager remuneration mix between salary and dividends based on actual current-year corporate and personal tax positions; (5) topping up RRSP, TFSA, and FHSA contributions before the relevant deadlines; (6) reviewing prior-year capital losses for use against current-year gains; and (7) coordinating any major life events (incorporation, sale, retirement) with the calendar year-end.

Canadian tax compliance calendar that applies to Chinook clients

The Canadian tax compliance calendar is the same regardless of where you live in Canada, but several deadlines are commonly missed or misunderstood by Chinook businesses and individuals:

  • January 31. T4, T4A, and T5018 information returns due for the prior calendar year. Late filing penalties start at $100 and escalate quickly for larger employers.
  • February 28. T5 investment income slips due for the prior calendar year.
  • March 1 or March 2. RRSP, FHSA, and similar registered plan contribution deadline for the prior tax year (60 days into the new calendar year).
  • March 31. T3 trust return deadline (90 days after the trust's calendar year end).
  • April 30. T1 personal tax return deadline for most Canadians. Balance owing is due by this date regardless of whether the filing deadline is extended.
  • June 15. T1 deadline for self-employed individuals and their spouses (although any balance owing is still due April 30).
  • Six months after corporate year-end. T2 corporate income tax return filing deadline.
  • Two or three months after corporate year-end. T2 balance owing payment deadline (three months for CCPCs claiming the small business deduction throughout the year and meeting the taxable income threshold; two months otherwise).
  • Quarterly: March 15, June 15, September 15, December 15. Personal tax instalment due dates for taxpayers required to pay instalments.
  • Monthly or quarterly. CRA source deduction remittances and GST/HST remittances based on the assigned filing frequency.

What happens when CRA contacts Chinook clients

Canadian taxpayers commonly receive several types of CRA contact each year. Knowing what each one means helps Chinook businesses and individuals respond appropriately:

  • Notice of Assessment (NOA). Issued after CRA processes a return. The NOA states the assessed tax, refund or balance owing, and any adjustments CRA made. Review your NOA carefully against your filed return.
  • Notice of Reassessment. Issued when CRA changes a previously assessed return. You have 90 days from the date of a Notice of Reassessment to file a Notice of Objection if you disagree.
  • Pre-assessment review letter. A request for documentation about specific items on a return before CRA finalizes the assessment. Strict response deadlines.
  • Post-assessment review letter. Same documentation request, but after the NOA has been issued. Strict response deadlines.
  • Demand to file. A formal demand that you file a return that CRA believes is overdue. Failure to comply can lead to a Notional Assessment (CRA estimates your tax, almost always at a higher amount than actual).
  • Audit notice. The most serious form of CRA contact. Audits can be desk audits (by mail) or field audits (CRA officer reviews books in person or virtually).
  • Collections letter. Issued when there is an unpaid balance. CRA collections has significant powers including garnishment and asset seizure.

If you receive any form of CRA contact, contact us immediately. Do not call CRA back yourself and do not send documents without professional review.

How BOMCAS Canada handles CRA representation for Chinook clients

With your signed authorization on file (RC59 for businesses or AUT-01 for individuals), BOMCAS Canada can communicate with CRA on your behalf. This means: CRA calls about your file route to us; we can access your CRA My Account or My Business Account information; we respond to review letters, audit requests, and collections matters; we file Notices of Objection within the 90-day deadline if needed; we represent you in CRA audits virtually; and we coordinate with tax counsel for Tax Court of Canada appeals where required.

Common Canadian tax questions Chinook clients ask

Can I deduct my home office expenses?
Yes, if part of your home is used regularly and exclusively as a place of business OR is used on a regular and continuous basis for meeting clients, customers, or patients. The deductible portion is based on the square footage used for business divided by total square footage of the home. Expenses include heat, electricity, internet, home insurance, property tax (owners), rent (tenants), and maintenance. We optimize this calculation annually.
Can I deduct vehicle expenses?
Yes, based on business-use percentage supported by a contemporaneous kilometre log. Allowable expenses include fuel, insurance, registration, maintenance, repairs, lease payments (subject to CRA limits), interest on a vehicle loan (subject to CRA limits), and CCA on owned vehicles. The CRA limits for passenger vehicles cap the deductibility of luxury vehicles.
Do I have to pay tax instalments?
If you owed more than $3,000 of federal and provincial tax in either of the two preceding years ($1,800 for Quebec residents), CRA requires quarterly tax instalments due March 15, June 15, September 15, and December 15. We calculate the optimal instalment amount using the no-calculation, prior-year, or current-year method.
What is the difference between Canada Pension Plan (CPP) for self-employed vs employees?
Self-employed Canadians pay both the employee and employer portions of CPP — double the rate paid by employees. The combined cost can exceed $7,000 per year at the maximum pensionable earnings level. The contributions build retirement and disability benefit entitlement. We model the cost-benefit during incorporation decisions.
Should I incorporate my business?
Incorporation generally makes financial sense for businesses earning more than approximately $80,000 net annual income where the owner can retain meaningful earnings inside the corporation. The combined federal-provincial small business rate of 9%–12.2% (depending on province) creates substantial tax deferral compared to top personal marginal rates of 47%–53%. Personal Services Business (PSB) risk must be analyzed carefully before incorporation.
What records do I have to keep, and for how long?
CRA requires that you keep all books, records, and supporting documents for six years from the end of the last tax year they relate to. For corporations, the same rule applies. Records can be kept electronically. For certain items (acquisition of capital property, real estate, share transactions), longer retention is required.
What is the difference between current and capital expenses?
Current expenses are fully deductible in the year incurred — they restore the property to its existing state or relate to ordinary operations. Capital expenses are added to the asset's adjusted cost base and depreciated over multiple years through capital cost allowance (CCA). The distinction matters significantly for rental property, equipment, and renovations. We classify expenses correctly to avoid CRA reassessment.

Why working with BOMCAS Canada makes sense for Chinook

Chinook businesses and residents work with BOMCAS Canada for several reasons that may matter to you:

  • Fixed-fee transparency. Most engagements are quoted as a fixed monthly fee or fixed per-project fee, signed in writing before any work begins. No surprise hourly invoices for routine work.
  • One-business-day response standard. We staff to a one-business-day response standard for client emails and calls during normal business hours. No multi-day voicemail backlogs.
  • Year-round support. Most clients have unlimited email and phone support included in the engagement, not just during tax season.
  • Same accountant year over year. You are not transferred to a new junior every year. The same person who knows your file this year will still know it next year.
  • Secure virtual delivery. Encrypted client portal, e-signature, multi-factor authentication, and direct CRA representation under your written authorization. PIPEDA-compliant. No driving to a CPA office.
  • Canadian-only tax expertise. We do not do US-only tax, UK tax, or other foreign jurisdictions in isolation. Our cross-border work is always anchored by deep Canadian compliance. Every member of the team works exclusively on Canadian files.
  • Industry depth. We have specialized experience across trucking, real estate, medical professionals, contractors, restaurants, e-commerce, farms, nonprofits, and other Canadian industries.

Getting started — what Chinook clients can expect

A typical engagement with BOMCAS Canada begins with a phone call or contact form submission. We respond within one business day to schedule a 15–30 minute discovery conversation by phone or video. The discovery call covers your current tax situation, accounting history, prior accountant relationship (if any), pain points, and goals. There is no sales pitch and no obligation. If we are a fit, we provide a written engagement letter with a fixed fee and clear scope. If we are not a fit, we are happy to suggest other Canadian professionals who might be.

Once the engagement letter is signed, you e-sign the CRA authorization (RC59 for businesses or AUT-01 for individuals), and we onboard you to the encrypted client portal. From that point forward, the relationship is structured around predictable monthly deliverables: bookkeeping, sales tax filings, payroll, and year-end financial statements plus T2 corporate tax (for incorporated businesses) — with proactive tax planning conversations throughout the year.

Related locations in Alberta

Talk to a Canadian accountant for Chinook

Call 780-667-5250 or submit the contact form. We respond within one business day.

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