ScanForTax
T2125 Line 9060

Salaries & Wages on Your T2125

Employee wages, CPP, EI, and benefits are deductible — but you can never deduct your own salary as a sole proprietor.

Qualifying Expenses

What You Can (and Can't) Deduct

Know exactly what belongs on Line 9060 — and what the CRA says doesn't qualify.

What Qualifies

  • Gross salaries and wages paid to employees
  • Employer CPP and EI contributions
  • Workers' compensation premiums and employee benefits (health, dental)

Does NOT Qualify

  • Your own salary or drawings as a sole proprietor
  • Payments to independent contractors or subcontractors (may go on Line 8871 or be reported on T4A)
CRA Rules

Rules & Limits

Special CRA rules and percentage limits that apply to salaries, wages & benefits.

Special Rules

Sole Proprietors Cannot Deduct Own Pay

Heads up

As a sole proprietor, you cannot deduct your own salary, wages, or drawings. Your business income after expenses IS your income. Only amounts paid to employees are deductible.

Reasonableness Test for Family Members

Heads up

If you employ family members, the wages must be reasonable for the work performed. The CRA may disallow deductions for inflated wages paid to family members who do little or no actual work.

Section 67 of the Income Tax Act
Real Examples

Real-World Examples

See how different professionals use Line 9060 deductions in practice.

Construction Contractor Line 9060

Part-Time Labourer Wages

Hired a part-time labourer to assist with framing and drywall work on residential projects.

Amount

$18,000

Deductible

$18,000 (100%)

E-commerce Seller Line 9060

Part-Time Packer/Shipper

Employed a part-time worker to pack and ship online orders from the home warehouse.

Amount

$8,400

Deductible

$8,400 (100%)

Watch Out

Common Mistakes to Avoid

These errors on Line 9060 can trigger a CRA review — here's how to get it right.

01
high
Mistake

Trying to deduct own salary as a sole proprietor

Correction

Sole proprietors cannot deduct their own salary, wages, or draws. Your net business income after all other expenses is your taxable income.

02
medium
Mistake

Paying family members unreasonable amounts

Correction

Wages paid to family members must be reasonable for the work actually performed. The CRA can disallow deductions if the amount is excessive relative to the duties.

Don't Mix Up

Commonly Confused Categories

These categories are often mixed up with Salaries, Wages & Benefits. Here's the difference.

Sample Receipt Walkthrough

See how ScanForTax processes a typical salaries expense.

Receipt

Internal Payroll Record

2025-03-31

Employee Gross Pay - Q1 2025 $$9,000.00
Employer CPP $$450.00
Employer EI $$225.00
Subtotal $$9,675.00
TOTAL $$9,675.00

Ontario

How ScanForTax categorizes this

ScanForTax records this payroll entry and auto-categorizes it under Salaries, Wages & Benefits (Line 9060). The total includes gross pay plus employer-side CPP and EI contributions. No HST applies to payroll.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I deduct my own salary as a sole proprietor?
No. As a sole proprietor, your net business income after all other expenses is your taxable income. You cannot pay yourself a salary and deduct it.
Can I pay my spouse or child and deduct the wages?
Yes, but only if the wages are reasonable for the work actually performed. The CRA applies a reasonableness test and may disallow deductions for inflated wages paid to family members doing little or no work.

Related Professions

Profession-specific guides that frequently use Salaries deductions.

Tax Guides by Province

See how tax recovery works for salaries expenses in each province.

Related Expense Categories

Tax deadline is April 30th.

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