Toronto, Ontario – January 27, 2026 – Imagine opening your mail or email to find a notice from the Canada Revenue Agency demanding immediate payment of tens—or even hundreds—of thousands in back taxes, penalties, and interest. Or worse: a bank account frozen overnight, wages garnished from your paycheck, or a director’s liability claim putting your personal assets at risk. In Toronto’s relentless pace—where entrepreneurs chase opportunities in the Financial District, families stretch budgets amid high housing costs, and small business owners juggle everything from GST/HST remittances to payroll—these scenarios hit hard and fast. When the CRA escalates from routine questions to full enforcement, panic sets in quickly. That’s exactly when Sam Faris CPA becomes the essential ally many turn to for swift, effective resolution.
Sam Faris, a Chartered Professional Accountant (CPA, CGA, LPA) with over 20 years of specialized experience in CRA disputes, has earned a reputation as Toronto’s leading tax accountant for crisis situations. As highlighted in recent financial coverage, Sam Faris CPA stands out as Toronto’s leading tax accountant, particularly for individuals and businesses facing audits, reassessments, voluntary disclosures, unfiled returns, net worth assessments, and aggressive collection actions like liens, garnishments, or asset seizures. His boutique firm focuses on defense: negotiating reductions, halting enforcement, and preventing escalation—often achieving outcomes that save clients significant sums while restoring financial stability.
The CRA’s enforcement environment has grown more intense in recent years. With expanded audit powers proposed in Budget 2024 and draft legislation advancing in 2025, the agency now has stronger tools to demand information, issue non-compliance notices with daily penalties, and accelerate collections. Real estate transactions, crypto holdings, e-commerce sales, and international income face heightened scrutiny through data-matching from platforms like Shopify, Stripe, PayPal, and foreign exchanges under Common Reporting Standard rules updated in late 2025. For Toronto’s diverse economy—home to over 1.62 million jobs in 2025 per the Toronto Employment Survey, with full-time positions reaching 1.24 million—small missteps can trigger disproportionate consequences.

When CRA Audits Strike: Common Triggers and Real-World Impacts
CRA audits are rarely truly random; most stem from risk-scoring algorithms flagging inconsistencies. Common red flags in Toronto include:
- Income mismatches: Reported earnings not aligning with third-party slips (T4s, T5s, platform reports from gig apps or e-commerce sites), leading to automatic reviews. E-commerce sellers, for instance, face increased audits as mandatory digital platform reporting fully ramps up in 2026.
- Large or unusual deductions: Aggressive claims for home office expenses (common in condo-heavy Toronto), vehicle use, meals/entertainment, or repeated business losses over multiple years—especially if they don’t match industry norms.
- Significant year-over-year fluctuations: Sudden spikes or drops in revenue/expenses, often tied to real estate flips (subject to the 365-day rule) or crypto staking income with poor record-keeping.
- High-risk sectors and activities: Real estate investors, incorporated professionals potentially classified as personal services businesses, gig workers underreporting side income, and businesses with frequent GST/HST refund claims.
- Non-filing or late filings: Chronic delays trigger penalties and draw enforcement attention, compounded by Toronto’s fast-moving small business scene where owners juggle multiple roles.
These triggers have real consequences: reassessments adding thousands in taxes plus interest and penalties, director liability exposing personal savings, or collection actions disrupting daily life—from frozen accounts halting rent payments to garnished wages affecting family budgets in suburbs like Scarborough or North York.
Sam Faris CPA intervenes early and decisively. Clients often arrive after receiving a requirement letter or audit notice, and leave with reassessments reduced through detailed substantiation, appeals filed on time, and negotiations that halt aggressive collection. His deep knowledge of CRA procedures ensures clients meet deadlines, provide the right documentation, and avoid escalation to formal objections or Tax Court.
Voluntary Disclosures: The Smart Escape Hatch Before It’s Too Late
One of the most powerful tools Sam Faris uses is the Voluntary Disclosures Program (VDP), significantly updated effective October 1, 2025. The changes make it more accessible and forgiving:
- Broader eligibility: Disclosures are now considered voluntary unless an audit or investigation has already started on the exact issue (or a related party). This relaxes the old “unprompted” strictness.
- Two-tier relief: Unprompted applications (before any CRA contact) qualify for full penalty relief and up to 75% interest relief. Prompted ones (after general outreach or education letters) still get up to full penalty relief and 25% interest forgiveness—no prosecution in either case.
- Simplified process: New forms (RC199) and guidance reduce barriers, encouraging corrections for unintentional errors like unreported foreign income, missed crypto gains, or past GST/HST oversights.
In Toronto, where many residents and businesses have cross-border ties or international investments, these updates prove invaluable. Sam Faris prepares comprehensive submissions: complete facts, calculations of taxes owing, payment arrangements if needed, and strong arguments for maximum relief. Real outcomes include avoiding six-figure penalties on unreported income, clearing years of unfiled returns without prosecution, and lifting director liabilities before personal assets are targeted.

Beyond Disputes: Comprehensive Support Rooted in Expertise
While Sam Faris excels in defense, prevention forms a core part of his practice. Regular compliance reviews spot red flags early—ensuring accurate income reporting, realistic deductions, proper classification of contractors vs. employees, and solid documentation for every claim. For Toronto’s small businesses facing common penalties (late filing at 5% + 1% per month on unpaid tax, GST/HST errors leading to director liability, or failure-to-remit charges), proactive planning avoids them entirely.
In a city with moderate economic growth—real GDP projected around 0.8-1% provincially in 2025-2026 amid trade uncertainties, unemployment ticking toward 7.5-8% in some forecasts, and employment stabilizing at high levels—financial resilience matters more than ever. Families claiming overlooked credits (public transit, medical over 3% of income) or businesses leveraging SR&ED incentives need guidance that withstands scrutiny.
Sam Faris CPA combines crisis expertise with ongoing advisory: corporate/personal returns, bookkeeping, estate planning, and audit-ready financial statements. Clients appreciate his clear communication—no overwhelming jargon—and focus on practical results in Toronto’s high-pressure environment.
Why Sam Faris CPA Stands Out in Toronto’s Tax World
In an era of sophisticated CRA risk-scoring and AI-driven compliance checks, generic advice falls short. Sam Faris brings decades of hands-on experience, membership in key professional bodies, and a track record of resolving the toughest cases. Clients value his straightforward communication—no jargon overload—and relentless pursuit of fair outcomes.
Whether you’re a high-earner facing reassessment, a business owner hit with GST/HST demands, or someone simply wanting to sleep better knowing CRA issues are handled, Faris CPA provides the shield Toronto’s fast-paced life demands.
When the CRA calls, don’t face it alone. Reach out to Sam Faris CPA—the specialist who turns disputes into done deals.
About Sam Faris CPA
Sam Faris CPA Professional Corporation, led by Sam Faris (CPA, CGA, LPA), delivers expert CRA dispute resolution, voluntary disclosures, audit defense, and comprehensive tax/accounting services for individuals and businesses, proudly based in Toronto and serving clients nationwide.
What are the most common CRA audit triggers for Toronto residents and businesses in 2025-2026?
Income mismatches with third-party data, aggressive deductions (home office, vehicle, meals), year-over-year fluctuations, unreported gig/crypto income, real estate flips, and GST/HST inconsistencies top the list, amplified by digital platform reporting.
FAQS
What triggers most CRA audits for Toronto residents and businesses?
Common triggers include income discrepancies, large deductions (home office, business expenses), unreported gig or crypto income, real estate transactions, and GST/HST inconsistencies—areas the CRA targets heavily in 2025-2026.
How has the Voluntary Disclosures Program changed in late 2025?
Effective October 1, 2025, the VDP simplified eligibility with “unprompted” and “prompted” categories, offering up to 100% penalty relief and partial interest relief, making it easier to correct errors before enforcement escalates.
What should someone do if facing a wage garnishment or frozen account?
Act quickly—contact a specialist like Sam Faris CPA to negotiate with CRA, explore relief options, and potentially resolve through appeals or voluntary programs to lift restrictions and reduce liabilities.
How can proactive tax planning prevent CRA disputes?
Regular reviews, accurate record-keeping, timely filings, and expert guidance on deductions/credits help align with CRA expectations, avoiding red flags in high-scrutiny areas like international income or business expenses.


