US assets inside your Canadian company can quietly kill your tax-free exit

Protect Your Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption on US Expansion

The LCGE can shelter up to $1.25 million (indexed to about $1.275 million for 2026) when you sell Qualified Small Business Corporation shares. But QSBC status demands your assets stay anchored to an active business in Canada. Expand south carelessly and US cash and assets can disqualify your shares - costing you the entire exemption on exit.

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Quick answer

How much is the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption, and how do I keep it on a US expansion?

The Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption shelters capital gains on a sale of Qualified Small Business Corporation (QSBC) shares. It rose to $1.25 million for dispositions after June 24, 2024, and with indexation resuming it is approximately $1.275 million for 2026. (The separately proposed increase to the capital gains inclusion rate was cancelled; the inclusion rate stays at 50%.) To claim it, your shares must meet the QSBC tests at the time of sale: a Canadian-controlled private corporation where at least 90% of assets are used in an active business carried on primarily in Canada at sale, and more than 50% throughout the prior 24 months. Expanding south carelessly — holding large US cash, equipment, or branch assets inside the Canadian parent — tilts that asset ratio and can quietly disqualify your shares, costing the entire exemption on exit. We quarantine US assets in separate entities so the parent stays on the right side of the tests.

The QSBC Asset Tests You Can't Ignore

To claim the exemption, your shares must be Qualified Small Business Corporation shares at the time of sale. The asset tests are where cross-border founders trip.

~$1.275M

2026 exemption

$1.25M for dispositions after June 24, 2024, indexed to roughly $1.275M for 2026. The inclusion rate stays at 50% (the proposed 66.67% increase was cancelled).

90%

At the time of sale

Generally 90% or more of the company's assets must be used in an active business carried on primarily in Canada when you sell.

50% / 24mo

The look-back trap

More than 50% of assets must meet the active-business test throughout the 24 months before the sale. You can't just clean it up at the last minute.

The contamination: a successful Canadian startup expands south and starts holding large US cash reserves, US equipment, or direct US branch assets inside the Canadian parent. The asset ratio tilts across the border, the company silently fails the 90% or 50% test, and at exit the shares no longer qualify - the LCGE is gone, and the bill can be six figures.

LCGE-Protected Subsidiary Architecture

  • Quarantine US assets and operations in separate entities, away from the Canadian parent
  • Keep the Canadian company's asset mix on the right side of the 90% and 50% tests
  • Monitor the 24-month look-back so a temporary cash build-up doesn't disqualify you
  • Purify excess cash and passive assets ahead of a planned sale
  • Coordinate the structure with your US C-Corp and cross-border tax plan

Plan years before you sell. Because the test looks back 24 months, the protection has to be in place long before the deal. Founders who structure the US expansion up front keep their full exemption; those who wait until a buyer appears often can't.

LCGE & QSBC FAQs

How much is the LCGE now?
The exemption on QSBC shares rose to $1.25M for dispositions after June 24, 2024, and with indexation resuming it is roughly $1.275M for 2026. The separately proposed capital-gains inclusion-rate increase was cancelled - the inclusion rate remains 50%.
What makes shares qualify as QSBC?
Broadly: a Canadian-controlled private corporation, at least 90% of assets used in an active business carried on primarily in Canada at sale, and more than 50% meeting that test throughout the prior 24 months. Excess cash, investments, or foreign assets can fail either test.
How does US expansion risk it?
Holding large US cash, equipment, or branch assets inside the Canadian parent tilts the asset ratio away from active business in Canada, quietly failing the 90% or 50% tests. At sale the shares no longer qualify and the LCGE is lost - often six figures.
Can it be protected after expanding?
Usually, with planning. We quarantine US assets in separate entities and keep the Canadian parent's mix onside. Because the 24-month test looks back, the earlier we structure it, the cleaner the exit.

Don't Lose Your Exemption to a US Bank Balance

A call reviews your structure and whether your QSBC status is at risk before you ever go to sell. No commitment.