04/21/2026
đĽWhy Filing Taxes as a Sole Proprietor in Canada Feels Like a CRA Scavenger Hunt...
If youâre a sole proprietor in Canada, you probably went into business for freedom, flexibility, and control. You did not do it because you love logging into government websites and asking yourself, âWait⌠why am I not where I thought I was?â And yetâhere we are.
Every year, countless sole proprietors find themselves wondering:
⢠Why are there two CRA accounts?
⢠Why is my income tax over here but my sales tax over there?
⢠Why does it feel like I need a map, a compass, and a password manager just to file my taxes?
Youâre not missing anything. This confusion is baked right into the system.
đĽOne Human, Two CRA Personalities
Hereâs the plot twist no one explains upfront:
Even though you and your business are technically the same person, CRA has decided you need two separate online identities.
Letâs meet them.
đĽCRA My Account: The âYou as a Humanâ Portal
This is where your income tax lives. Inside My Account, youâll find:
⢠Your personal income tax return (T1)
⢠Your T2125 where your business income and expenses get reported
⢠Credits, deductions, and the inevitable âbalance owingâ surprises
This is where CRA looks at you and says, âTell us how much money you personally made.â Even though the income comes from your business⌠weâre pretending itâs all personal now.
Totally normal. Totally fine.
đĽCRA My Business Account: The âYou as a Tax Collectorâ Portal
Then thereâs My Business Account, which exists because CRA sees your sales tax as a different personality entirely. This is where you deal with:
⢠GST/HST
⢠Filing returns
⢠Making payments
⢠Staring at balances that are not actually your money (yet still stressful)
Here, CRA says, âThanks for collecting tax on our behalf. Please donât spend it.â
Same person. New login. New vibes.
đĽWhere Things Go Sideways
Most sole proprietors assumeâvery reasonablyâthat:
⢠One business = one account
⢠One person = one login
⢠One browser window = enough
Instead, what usually happens is:
⢠You log into My Account looking for your GST⌠itâs not there.
⢠You try My Business Account to report income⌠also not there.
⢠You assume you broke something.
⢠You question your life choices.
Nothing is wrong. You just werenât given the instruction manual.
đĽTwo Taxes. Two Rules. Two Deadlines. Because Why Not?
Part of the chaos is that income tax and sales tax behave completely differently:
Income tax:
⢠Is based on profit
⢠Is filed once a year
⢠Gets bundled with your personal return
Sales tax:
⢠Isnât your money (even though it sits in your bank account)
⢠Has its own filing frequency
⢠Lives forever in My Business Account, judging you quietly
Despite both being âbusiness taxes,â they do not speak to each other, coordinate, or share a screen.
âBut Iâm Just⌠Me?â
Exactly.
And thatâs why this system feels so unintuitive.
CRAâs structure is administrative, not human-friendly. No one sits you down and says, âHey, by the way, your taxes now live in two different digital universes.â
You usually figure it out after:
⢠Filing in the wrong place
⢠Missing something important
⢠Or receiving a letter that starts with âOur records indicateâŚâ (never good)
đĽThe Moment It Clicks
The good news? Once you understand the split, things get less painful.
Just remember:
⢠Income tax â My Account
⢠Sales tax â My Business Account
Itâs not obviousâbut once it clicks, you stop feeling like youâre failing at taxes and start realizing the system is just⌠awkward.
đĽThis Is Where a Bookkeeper Saves Your Sanity
A bookkeeper doesnât just crunch numbersâthey act as a translator between:
⢠CRA language
⢠Online portals
⢠And real-life sole proprietors who just want to do the right thing
They help you know:
⢠What gets filed where
⢠Whatâs due when
⢠And what you can safely ignore until later
No judgement. No lectures. Just clarity.
đĽFinal Thought
If managing CRA accounts as a sole proprietor has ever made you feel confused, frustrated, or mildly rage clickyâcongratulations.
Youâre doing it right.
The system is confusing.
Youâre not.
đ