Accounting firms and CPAs have access to clients' most sensitive financial data — tax returns, bank statements, payroll records, and business financials. This data is subject to strict professional confidentiality obligations and tax authority regulations. Clients entrust accountants with information they share with virtually no one else. Canada's federal private sector privacy law, PIPEDA (Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act), applies to commercial activities across Canada.
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Introduction
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Information We Collect
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How We Use Your Information
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How We Share Your Information
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Cookies and Tracking Technologies
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Data Retention
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Your Rights Under the GDPR
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Your California Privacy Rights (CCPA)
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Your Rights Under the DPDPA (India)
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Children's Privacy
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Data Security
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Third-Party Links
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Changes to This Privacy Policy
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Contact Us
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Canada's federal private sector privacy law, PIPEDA (Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act), applies to commercial activities across Canada. Quebec's Law 25 (Bill 64) has introduced GDPR-like requirements for Quebec residents. Canada's Privacy Commissioner can investigate complaints, and courts can award damages for serious privacy breaches.
Accounting firms and CPAs have access to clients' most sensitive financial data — tax returns, bank statements, payroll records, and business financials. This data is subject to strict professional confidentiality obligations and tax authority regulations. Clients entrust accountants with information they share with virtually no one else.
Data typically collected by Accounting Firm businesses: client financial statements, tax returns, payroll data, bank account information, investment records, business financial data, government ID for tax purposes
Yes. If you collect any personal data from users — including email addresses, analytics cookies, or payment information — you are legally required to have a Privacy Policy under PIPEDA (Federal), Quebec Law 25 / Bill 64, Provincial laws (PIPA Alberta/BC). Non-compliance can result in significant fines.
A PIPEDA-compliant Privacy Policy for Accounting Firm businesses must disclose: what data you collect (client financial statements, tax returns, payroll data, bank account information, investment records, business financial data, government ID for tax purposes), the legal basis for processing, data retention periods, and users' rights. Obtain meaningful consent before collecting, using, or disclosing personal information.
A Accounting Firm typically collects: client financial statements, tax returns, payroll data, bank account information, investment records, business financial data, government ID for tax purposes. Under PIPEDA, each category of data must be explicitly disclosed in your Privacy Policy along with the purpose for collecting it and the legal basis used. Failing to disclose any collected data category is a violation.
Non-compliance with PIPEDA requirements can result in regulatory investigations, enforcement actions, and reputational damage. Quebec Law 25: privacy impact assessments, data minimization, and new consent rules.