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Tax Guide for Healthcare Professionals in Canada: Doctors, Dentists, Allied Health & Private Practice for 2025

February 28, 2026 11 min read 2025 tax year (filed spring 2026)

Healthcare professionals in private practice face some of the most complex tax situations in Canada: exempt vs. taxable HST services, professional corporation rules, CME deduction limits, high marginal tax rates, and unique income-splitting opportunities. Whether you are a physician, dentist, physiotherapist, chiropractor, psychologist, pharmacist, or nurse practitioner in private practice, this guide covers every major tax issue for the 2025 tax year.

TL;DR — Key Points for Healthcare Professionals
  • Exempt HST services: Most core medical and dental services are HST-exempt — no HST charged, but no ITCs claimed either. Some services are taxable (cosmetics, reports, expert fees).
  • Incorporation: At income over ~$100K, a professional corporation provides significant tax deferral at the small business rate (~12.2%).
  • CME fully deductible: Courses, conferences, journals, licensing fees, and related travel are all deductible.
  • RRSP crucial: High earners should maximize RRSP room (18% of prior-year earned income, up to $32,490 for 2025).
  • Overhead expenses: Clinic rent, staff wages, supplies, equipment, and malpractice insurance are all deductible against professional income.
  • CPP: Self-employed practitioners pay both employee and employer CPP; the employer half is deductible.

Employment vs. Self-Employment in Healthcare

Healthcare professionals fall into several tax categories depending on their work arrangement:

Work ArrangementTax TreatmentForms Used
Hospital or clinic employeeEmployment income; employer withholds CPP/EI/taxT4; T1 Line 10100
Solo private practice (unincorporated)Self-employment incomeT2125; T1 Line 13700
Professional corporation (incorporated)Corporate income at CCPC rates; salary/dividends to ownerT2 corporate return; T4/T5 to owner
Locum / fee-for-service (unincorporated)Self-employment incomeT2125; T1 Line 13700
Hospital-based specialist billing OHIPUsually self-employment (billing agent); varies by hospital agreementT2125 or T4 depending on arrangement

HST: Exempt, Zero-Rated, and Taxable Healthcare Services

This is the most critical and most frequently misunderstood area for healthcare professionals.

Service CategoryHST TreatmentCan Claim ITCs?
OHIP-covered physician servicesExempt (Schedule V, Part II)No
General dental services (treatment)ExemptNo
Physiotherapy and chiropractic (treating injury/illness)ExemptNo
Psychological services (diagnosing/treating mental disorder)ExemptNo
Dispensing prescription drugs (pharmacy)Zero-ratedYes
Cosmetic medical procedures (Botox, fillers, rhinoplasty)Taxable (13% HST in Ontario)Yes (on related expenses)
Teeth whitening, veneers, cosmetic dentistryTaxableYes
Medical-legal reports, expert witness feesTaxableYes
Insurance medical examination feesTaxableYes
Administrative fees (missed appointments)TaxableYes
Naturopathy, acupuncture, massage therapyTaxable (unless by specified practitioners)Yes
Mixed supply — the ITC allocation problem

If you provide both exempt and taxable services, you must allocate your Input Tax Credits between them. You can only claim ITCs for expenses related to taxable (or zero-rated) services — not for exempt services. For example, a dental practice with 80% exempt general dentistry and 20% taxable cosmetic services can only claim 20% of general overhead expenses as ITCs. This allocation must be calculated and documented annually.

Professional Corporation: Tax Deferral at the Small Business Rate

At the 2025 small business rates, a CCPC in Ontario pays approximately 12.2% combined tax on active business income up to the $500,000 small business limit. Compare this to a physician earning $400,000 personally at a combined marginal rate of ~53.5%.

Scenario$400,000 Net Professional IncomeTax PaidAfter-Tax Available
Unincorporated (personal)Top marginal rate ~53.5% on income above $246,752~$175,000~$225,000
Incorporated (corporate)~12.2% corporate tax on retained income~$48,800~$351,200 retained in corp
Tax deferral benefit~$126,200 stays invested inside the corporationTax paid when dividends withdrawn
Integration: the long-run picture

Canadian tax integration theory means that in the long run, the total tax on corporate income (corporate tax + personal tax on dividends) should approximately equal the personal tax that would have been paid if earned directly. The real benefit is deferral — money that would have been taxed at 53.5% personally is instead taxed at 12.2% inside the corporation, allowing it to compound for years before personal taxes are paid.

Deductible Business Expenses for Healthcare Professionals

Practice overhead

ExpenseDeductible?
Clinic or office rentYes — fully deductible
Staff salaries and benefitsYes — fully deductible
Medical/dental supplies and disposablesYes — fully deductible
Laboratory fees (dental labs, pathology)Yes — fully deductible
Malpractice (CMPA / CDSPI) premiumsYes — fully deductible
Professional liability insuranceYes — fully deductible
Professional association dues (CMA, OMA, ODA)Yes — fully deductible
Provincial licensing feesYes — fully deductible
Medical equipment (chairs, X-ray, ultrasound)Yes via CCA (Class 8 or 10, depending on type)
Computer and clinic software (EMR, billing software)Yes via CCA / current expense depending on type
Accounting and bookkeeping feesYes — fully deductible
Legal fees (practice-related)Yes — fully deductible

Continuing Medical/Professional Education (CME/CPD)

CME ExpenseDeductible?
Conference registration feesYes — 100%
Travel to conferences (flights, hotel)Yes — 100% of travel costs when primary purpose is CME
Meals during conferencesYes — 50% (meals are subject to 50% limitation)
Medical journals and subscriptionsYes — 100%
Professional textbooks and reference materialsYes — 100%
Online CME courses and creditsYes — 100%
Skills maintenance coursesYes — 100%

RRSP and Retirement Planning

Healthcare professionals who are not incorporated should maximize RRSP contributions. The 2025 contribution limit is the lesser of: $32,490 or 18% of 2024 earned income. Earned income for RRSP purposes includes self-employment income.

Net Professional IncomeOntario Marginal RateTax Saved per $1,000 RRSP
$100,00043.41%~$434
$150,00046.41%~$464
$220,001+53.53%~$535
Individual Pension Plans (IPPs) for incorporated physicians

Once incorporated and earning a salary, physicians can set up an Individual Pension Plan (IPP) — a defined benefit pension plan for owner-managers. IPPs allow contributions significantly larger than RRSP limits, with contributions deductible by the corporation. For physicians over 40 earning a corporate salary of $150,000+, an IPP can provide substantial additional tax-sheltered savings beyond the RRSP limit. Get actuarial advice to determine the optimal contribution level.

Locum Physicians: Special Considerations

Locum physicians who move between clinics or hospitals on a fee-for-service basis are generally self-employed. Key considerations:

  • Report all OHIP or clinic billings as business income on T2125
  • Deduct travel expenses to work at different clinic locations (not commuting from home)
  • Track mileage between patient care locations — not home-to-first-clinic commutes
  • Professional fees, CMPA premiums, and CME remain fully deductible
  • If the clinic provides all equipment and supplies, your deductions may be more limited than if you provide your own

Common Tax Mistakes Healthcare Professionals Make

  • Claiming ITCs on exempt services. If your practice is primarily exempt (general medicine, general dentistry), you cannot claim ITCs on overhead expenses. Attempting to do so is a common audit trigger.
  • Not separating taxable from exempt revenue. Mixed practices must track taxable services (cosmetics, reports) separately and allocate expenses accordingly.
  • Missing the employer CPP deduction. Self-employed practitioners often forget to deduct the employer half of CPP (Line 22200) — reducing taxable income by up to $4,034.
  • Delaying incorporation too long. At $150,000+ of net income, every year of delay costs tens of thousands in excess tax.
  • Not maximizing RRSP before incorporation. Once incorporated and paying dividends, you may lose RRSP room if you do not pay yourself sufficient salary.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Canadian doctors and dentists need to charge HST on their services?
Most physician and dental services performed by licensed practitioners are exempt from HST. Doctors do not charge HST on OHIP-insured services, and dentists do not charge HST on basic dental treatment. However, cosmetic procedures, medical-legal reports, expert witness fees, and some administrative charges are taxable. Exempt status means no ITCs can be claimed on related expenses.
Should a doctor or dentist incorporate in Canada?
Incorporation is generally beneficial once net professional income consistently exceeds approximately $100,000–$150,000. A professional corporation pays only ~12.2% on retained income (vs. up to 53.5% personally), providing powerful tax deferral. Ontario permits professional corporations for regulated health professions. Income splitting through the corporation is limited by TOSI rules post-2018.
Are continuing medical education (CME) expenses tax deductible for doctors?
Yes. CME courses, conference fees, medical journals, professional textbooks, and licensing/certification fees are fully deductible. Travel to CME conferences (flights, hotels) is deductible when the primary purpose is professional education. Meals during conferences are 50% deductible.
What are the HST rules for psychologists and therapists in private practice?
Psychological services are exempt when provided by a licensed psychologist for health care purposes (diagnosing/treating a mental disorder). Services for general wellness coaching, EAP sessions billed to employers, and expert assessments may be taxable. The rules are complex — get professional advice on your specific service mix.
How should a self-employed physician pay themselves to minimize tax?
For incorporated physicians, a mix of salary and dividends is optimal. Salary creates RRSP contribution room and builds CPP benefits; dividends are taxed at lower rates but do not create RRSP room. Most planners recommend a salary component large enough to maximize RRSP contributions, with additional income as dividends. Ontario's marginal rate on non-eligible dividends is 47.74% at top rates.
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