Over the last few years, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA)
has made it clear that certain sectors pose a higher risk of non-compliance. In
December 2025, that focus sharpened further, with trucking corporations
and personal service corporations (PSCs) moving squarely into CRA’s audit
spotlight. The developments are not isolated actions—they are part of a
broader, structured compliance strategy that will likely extend into real
estate flipping and other cash-intensive or contractor-driven activities.
This article explains what triggered CRA’s renewed
attention, what recent guidance and enforcement trends indicate, and what
business owners should realistically expect in the months ahead.
Why
Trucking Corporations Are Under CRA Scrutiny
The trucking industry has long relied on owner-operators,
incorporated drivers, and subcontracting arrangements. While these structures
are legitimate when properly set up, CRA audits have repeatedly found common
issues:
In late 2025, CRA intensified reviews of trucking
corporations that pay drivers through corporations or treat long-term drivers
as “contractors” without meeting the legal tests of independence. These audits
are not limited to corporate income tax—they often expand into CPP, EI,
GST/HST, and penalties for gross negligence.
Mandatory
T4A Reporting: A Major Red Flag Area
One of the most significant developments impacting trucking
businesses is CRA’s aggressive enforcement of T4A reporting. Where a
trucking corporation pays another incorporated driver, dispatcher, or
owner-operator for services, CRA increasingly expects a T4A slip to be
filed—unless the relationship is clearly outside reporting requirements.
Failure to file T4As now routinely triggers:
For many trucking corporations, the T4A issue becomes the entry
point for a much wider audit.
Personal
Service Corporations: Still a High-Risk Target
Personal service corporations remain a long-standing CRA
concern. Where a corporation essentially provides the services of one
individual who would otherwise be an employee, CRA applies the Personal
Services Business (PSB) rules aggressively.
The consequences are severe:
Recent audits show CRA is applying PSB analysis not only to
IT and consulting, but also to dispatchers, logistics managers, safety
officers, and specialized trucking roles operating through corporations.
What’s
Next: CRA’s Focus on Property Flipping
The same compliance philosophy driving trucking audits is
now being applied to real estate flipping. CRA has already expanded
audit teams dedicated to short-term property dispositions, with key focus areas
including:
Just as with trucking, CRA is using data analytics, land
registry matching, and lifestyle reviews to identify patterns. Once
selected, audits can span multiple years and related parties.
How Bad
Can CRA Audits Get?
For businesses caught unprepared, the impact can be serious:
CRA audits are rarely isolated events. Once a compliance
issue is found, CRA often broadens the scope.
Audit Defense with Structure and Strategy
The key is not panic—it’s preparation. With the right documentation, legal positioning, and professional representation, many audits can be contained, negotiated, and resolved without long-term damage.
If you operate in trucking, professional services, or real estate, now is the time to assess your exposure—before CRA knocks on the door.
At Aaras Global, we work proactively and defensively
with clients facing CRA scrutiny. Our strength lies in early risk
identification, technical positioning, and structured audit responses. We
assist with:
This article is only for the purpose of education and awareness. Please consult a professional before adopting the right strategy.
Author
Raman Nagpal
B.Com, CA, CMA, DISA.