Client Portal

The Client Portal is a secure way to transfer data between our firm and you.  You can upload files into the folder that corresponds with the year.

 

ANR can also provide information to you via the Portal. Such items include copies of tax returns, financial statements or documents for signature.

Please follow the link below to access the Client Portal Login Page:

ANR Client Portal Access

If you are having issues with the Client Portal, please contact us at [email protected] or call the office at 506-466-4040.

If you have not yet set up your Client Portal Access, please contact us and we will create your Portal Account.

Small business owners analyzing financial reports, cash flow charts, and tax documents in a professional office setting, representing small business accounting and corporate tax planning in New Brunswick.

The Business Owner Toolkit: Tax and Accounting Systems for Small Businesses in New Brunswick

February 28, 20264 min read

The Business Owner Toolkit: Tax and Accounting Systems That Protect and Scale Your Company

Most small business owners focus on revenue.

Fewer focus on financial architecture.

In New Brunswick and across Atlantic Canada, business conditions are tightening: rising costs, hiring pressures, interest rate shifts, and increased CRA scrutiny. In this environment, strong tax planning and accounting systems are not optional. They are foundational.

If you want control, stability, and long-term growth, your tax and accounting structure must be intentional. If you want to refresh yourself with the ANR Operating System, visit our website:

https://anraccountants.com/#section-fDziBNGKjW

This is the essential business owner toolkit.


Monthly Financial Reporting: The Foundation of Control

If your financial statements are only reviewed at year-end, you are operating reactively.

Every small business should review:

  • Monthly income statement

  • Monthly balance sheet

  • Cash flow position

  • Gross margin trends

  • Year-over-year comparisons

Clean, timely reporting allows business owners to:

  • Detect margin compression early

  • Control overhead growth

  • Plan compensation strategically

  • Anticipate tax exposure

Accounting systems are not about compliance; they are about management.

For small business owners in New Brunswick, disciplined monthly reporting is the first step toward financial control.


Corporate Tax Strategy for Owner-Managed Businesses in Canada

Filing a corporate tax return (T2) is compliance.

Corporate tax strategy is planning.

A proper corporate tax plan should include:

  • Pre–year-end corporate tax projections

  • Salary vs dividend planning

  • Small Business Deduction optimization

  • Passive investment income monitoring

  • Instalment planning

  • HST/GST cash flow coordination

Many owner-managed corporations drift into higher tax exposure simply because no one is monitoring thresholds.

Strategic tax planning for small businesses in Canada should be proactive, not reactive.

When corporate tax is engineered in advance, surprises disappear.

https://anraccountants.com/services/tax-advisory


Cash Flow Management for Small Business Stability

Profit does not equal cash.

Strong accounting systems include structured cash flow planning:

  • 90-day rolling cash forecasts

  • Accounts receivable management

  • Accounts payable scheduling

  • Defined owner compensation timing

  • Capital expenditure planning

Cash flow problems are rarely revenue problems. They are visibility problems.

For New Brunswick small businesses operating in seasonal or volatile industries, cash forecasting is critical to stability.


Compensation Planning: Integrating Corporate and Personal Tax

Many business owners treat corporate and personal finances separately.

This creates inefficiency.

A complete business owner toolkit integrates:

  • Corporate profit strategy

  • Personal tax planning

  • Retirement planning (RRSP vs corporate investing)

  • Holding company structure

  • Capital Dividend Account awareness

  • Estate liquidity considerations

Without integration, wealth may accumulate but become difficult to access when needed.

Effective tax planning for owner-managed businesses in Canada requires coordination between corporate and personal structures.

Check out Stacy's blog at ANR Wealth that discusses the different insurance options available to business owners:

https://anr-wealth.com/post/business-owner-toolkit-insurance-follows-accounting


Internal Controls and Governance for Growing Businesses

As revenue increases, risk increases.

Strong accounting systems include:

  • Segregation of duties

  • Banking access controls

  • Expense approval policies

  • Updated corporate minute books

  • Shareholder agreement clarity

Weak governance exposes business owners to unnecessary financial and legal risk.

Internal controls are not just for large corporations. They are essential for growing small businesses across Atlantic Canada.


Exit Planning and LCGE Readiness

Even if you are not planning to sell, your business should be structured to be transferable.

This includes:

  • Qualified Small Business Corporation (QSBC) eligibility review

  • Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE) planning

  • Asset purification strategies

  • Clean share structure

  • Buy-sell agreement alignment

The LCGE can shelter up to $1.25 million in capital gains (as of 2024). However, eligibility requires advance planning and you can learn more about the LCGE from our blog post:

https://anraccountants.com/post/lifetime-capital-gains-exemption-new-brunswick

If your structure does not qualify, that is a present issue, not a future one.


Control → Stability → Focus

Tax and accounting systems must be built in order:

Control: Clean numbers, clear tax exposure, cash visibility.
Stability: Reserves, structure, integration, resilience.
Focus: Strategic growth, expansion, acquisition, or succession.

Revenue creates momentum.

Structure creates control.

Control creates stability.

Stability creates long-term freedom.


FAQ Section

What tax planning should a small business owner in New Brunswick consider?

Corporate tax projections, salary vs dividend planning, Small Business Deduction monitoring, passive income thresholds, and LCGE readiness.

How often should small business financial statements be reviewed?

Monthly. Waiting until year-end eliminates proactive decision-making.

What is the most common accounting mistake small businesses make?

Operating without timely financial reporting and without proactive tax planning.

Why is cash flow more important than profit?

Because payroll, taxes, and loan payments require liquidity — not accounting profit.

business owner toolkittax planning for small businessaccounting systems for small businesscorporate tax strategy Canadasmall business accounting New Brunswickowner-managed business tax planning
blog author image

Jason Rideout

I help business owners make sense of how tax, structure, and succession actually impact their day-to-day lives. That means clearer pay decisions, fewer surprises, and a plan that works not just on paper, but in practice.

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