FTE vs Contract

There are mainly 3 common types of employment in IT sector  in Canada

  1. Full Time Employment
  2. T4 Contracting
  3. Incorporated Contracting

This guide provides comparison b/w Full Time Employment & Incorporated Contracting.

*This post is for informative purpose. Please do your due diligence before you make any decision. The points mentioned below may vary from person to person.

Interview Process/Offer Letter

FTE

Contracting

Interview process remains the same. Probability of an extra HR round. 

You join the company as a Full Time Employee. 

You have to submit documents to company & they process your offer letter.

Interview process remains the same. Usually no HR Round

You get into a legal contracting agreement with Employer / Third party Vendor/Consultant.

No offer letter, instead a legal contract signed by both

Remuneration/Salary

FTE

Contracting

Usually negotiated as per year salary.

Employer runs your salary & deducts tax on your behalf. 

You get salary after the taxes are deducted. 

Eligible for EI (Employment Insurance) in case of a job loss.

Usually negotiated as per hour rate. 

You may have to generate Invoice and Employer/Consulting firm pays that invoice. 

No tax will be deducted. You need to pay tax from the amount. 

*Not eligible for EI during a job loss.

Taxes

FTE

Contracting

Tax deducted by Employer. You get salary after the tax is deducted. 

You have to file tax once in a year. 

Tax exemptions such as RRSP, CPP etc. can be availed.

Filing taxes is easy. You can do it on your own.

You are liable to pay taxes to the government. 

3 types of taxes (monthly, quarterly, yearly depending on your case)

Tax exemptions such as RRSP, CPP etc. can be availed.

You should be very good with knowledge related to taxes & you definitely need an accountant to file your taxes.

Benefits

FTE

Contracting

Health Benefits, Insurance & Stock options from your employer.

Employer may match RRSP contribution. 

Little options to get tax exemptions.

No employer benefits can be availed. You need to procure your own Insurance & health benefits.

No Employer contribution for RRSP.

Better tax exemption options.

Mortgages

FTE

Easy to get mortgage from the bank.

Contracting

Banks usually ask for 2 years of continuous employment proof. Not easy to avail mortgage like Full timers.

Disclaimer: *You need to consult with a professional mortgage consultant before you make a decision. This slide is just for informational purpose. 

Work

FTE

Contracting

Manager helps you build a career path in the company. 

Improve your career path in the same organization, grow up the ladder. 

Need to understand more about the company, its customers

Better job security

No support from Employer on the career building. You have to build your own career. 

Little appreciations, rewards & recognition for your work.  

Need to understand the market as a whole because you will be switching employers, domains and technology.

Lesser job security.

Pros and Cons of FTE

Pros

Cons

Better job security. Looking for people who wants a stable job.

Career growth. 

Appreciations, rewards & recognitions.

Benefits – Paid leave, health benefits, Insurance etc.

Pays more tax compared to contracting. Very limited options to save taxes. 

Remuneration will be less compared to the contracting job. 

Sometime, you may get stuck up in a poor team or with a bad manager. 

Pros and Cons of Contracting

Pros

Cons

Salary/Remuneration is better than Full time employment.

Better tax management. Pay lesser tax if you plan well. 

No more worry about appraisals.

Renegotiate your remuneration every 6 months, based on your skills, value in the market.

Less job security. Contract can end without notice

Always needs to be updated with the market trend & technologies. 

Always keep the professional network active.

Expensive & complicated tax filing. Need to have a professional accountant to manage the account. You need to be well versed in tax related matters

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