Federal vs Provincial Incorporation in Canada — Quick Answer
Federal incorporation ($200) protects your company name across all provinces and is governed by the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA). Provincial incorporation ($300–$450) is governed by your province’s act and protects the name in that province only. For businesses operating in one province — especially non-residents and Indian immigrants — a BC or Ontario Provincial Corporation is faster, cheaper, and has no Canadian resident director requirement. For national brands operating across multiple provinces, Federal incorporation is t
1. What Is Federal Incorporation in Canada?
Federal incorporation means registering your company under the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) — administered by Corporations Canada, a branch of Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED).
When you incorporate federally, your company is recognized as a legal entity across all ten provinces and three territories of Canada — from the moment of incorporation. You get a federal Certificate of Incorporation and a unique Corporation Number.
Key Features of Federal Incorporation:
- Governed by Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA)
- Name protected in ALL provinces and territories — nationwide
- Filing fee: $200 online via Corporations Canada
- NUANS name search required ($13.80) — valid for 90 days
- Processing time: 1–5 business days online
- Annual return required: $20–$40/year with Corporations Canada
- Director residency: Minimum 25% Canadian resident directors required under CBCA — verify current rules at time of filing
- Must register extra-provincially in each province where you carry on business
| IMPORTANT FOR NRIs: Federal CBCA still requires at least 25% of directors to be Canadian residents. If you are an Indian immigrant, newcomer, or non-resident without a Canadian co-director — Provincial Incorporation (BC or Ontario) is the better route. |
2. What Is Provincial Incorporation in Canada?
Provincial incorporation means registering your company under your province’s business corporations act — rather than the federal CBCA. Each province has its own governing legislation, registry, and filing process.
Provincial Legislation by Province:
- Ontario → Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA)
- British Columbia → BC Business Corporations Act (BCBCA)
- Alberta → Business Corporations Act (Alberta)
- Quebec → Business Corporations Act (Quebec)
- Manitoba → The Corporations Act (Manitoba)
Key Features of Provincial Incorporation:
- Governed by provincial act — not CBCA
- Name protected in that province only
- Filing fee: $300 (Ontario) | $350 (BC) | $275 (Alberta)
- Processing: Same day (BC) | 1–3 days (Ontario) | 3–5 days (Alberta)
- Annual return: $0 (BC) | $12/year (Ontario) | $50/year (Alberta)
- If operating in other provinces → must register as extra-provincial corporation in each
- Director residency: BC — NO requirement | Ontario — NO requirement since 2023 | Alberta — 25% required
| BEST FOR NON-RESIDENTS: BC Provincial Incorporation has ZERO Canadian resident director requirement, same-day online processing, and no annual return fee. DKP Global handles BC incorporations daily from our Surrey BC office. |
3. Federal vs Provincial Incorporation — Full Comparison
| Factor | Federal Incorporation | Provincial Incorporation |
| Governing Law | Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) | Provincial act (OBCA, BCBCA, Alberta BCA, etc.) |
| Name Protection | Across ALL provinces & territories | In that province only |
| Filing Fee | $200 (online — Corporations Canada) | $300 (Ontario) | $350 (BC) | $275 (Alberta) |
| NUANS Name Search | Required — $13.80 (federal NUANS) | Required: Ontario ($8) | BC: NOT required | Alberta: $30 |
| Processing Time | 1–5 business days (online) | Same day (BC) | 1–3 days (Ontario) | 3–5 days (Alberta) |
| Director Residency | Min 25% Canadian residents (CBCA) — verify current rules | BC: NONE ✔ | Ontario: NONE since 2023 ✔ | Alberta: 25% required |
| Annual Return | $20–$40/year — Corporations Canada | $0 (BC) | $12/year (Ontario) | $50/year (Alberta) |
| Multi-Province Ops | File once — operate everywhere (extra-provincial reg. still needed per province) | Must register as extra-provincial corp in each additional province |
| 100% Foreign Ownership | Yes — but 25% Canadian resident director still required | Yes — BC & Ontario allow 100% foreign ownership with no Canadian director |
| Best For | National brands, multi-province operations, businesses needing pan-Canada name protection | Single-province businesses, non-residents, Indian immigrants, newcomers — BC & Ontario ideal |
4. Cost Breakdown — Federal vs Provincial by Province
| Cost Item | Federal | Ontario | BC | Alberta |
| NUANS / Name Search | $13.80 | $8.00 | Not Required ✔ | $30 |
| Articles of Incorporation | $200 | $300 | $350 | $275 |
| CRA Business Number | Free | Free | Free | Free |
| HST/GST Registration | Free | Free | Free | Free |
| Corporate Minute Book | $150–$500 | $150–$500 | $150–$500 | $150–$500 |
| Annual Return (Year 2+) | $20–$40/yr | $12/yr | $0/yr ✔ | $50/yr |
| Total Year 1 (Govt Fees) | ~$214 | ~$308 | ~$350 | ~$305 |
| Total Year 1 (With Professional Setup) | $600–$900 | $650–$1,000 | $700–$1,000 | $650–$950 |
5. Timeline — How Fast Can You Incorporate?
| Stage | Federal | Ontario | BC | Alberta |
| Name Search / NUANS | 1 day | 1 day | Not needed ✔ | 1 day |
| Articles of Incorporation | 1–5 days | 1–3 days | Same day ✔ | 3–5 days |
| CRA Business Number | Instant | Instant | Instant | Instant |
| HST/GST Registration | 5–10 days | 5–10 days | 5–10 days | 5–10 days |
| Minute Book Setup | 2–3 days | 2–3 days | 2–3 days | 2–3 days |
| Total (Fully Operational) | 1–2 weeks | 1–2 weeks | 3–7 days ✔ | 1–2 weeks |
6. Who Should Choose Federal vs Provincial Incorporation?
Choose Federal Incorporation If:
- Your business will operate in multiple provinces from day one
- You are building a national brand and need name protection across Canada
- You plan to raise venture capital or work with institutional investors who prefer federal entities
- You have at least 25% Canadian resident directors on your board (CBCA requirement)
- Your industry is federally regulated — banking, telecom, transportation, broadcasting
Choose Provincial Incorporation If:
- You are starting with operations in one province only — BC, Ontario, or Alberta
- You are an Indian immigrant, newcomer, or non-resident with no Canadian co-director
- You want the fastest, most affordable path to a legally incorporated company in Canada
- You are in BC — same-day incorporation, no NUANS required, no annual return fee
- You are in Ontario — no Canadian resident director since 2023, strong legal infrastructure
- You will operate locally — trades, professional services, retail, consulting, tech
| DKP Global’s Recommendation: For 90% of Indian immigrants, newcomers, and international entrepreneurs — start with a BC or Ontario Provincial Corporation. If your business grows pan-Canada, you can always register extra-provincially or convert to federal later. |
7. Best Province for Indian Immigrants & Non-Residents
DKP Global specializes in business setup for Indian immigrants and non-residents across Canada. Here is a direct province-by-province guide based on what we see working for Indian-origin entrepreneurs every week:
| Province | Director Residency | Processing | Filing Fee | Best For |
| British Columbia | NONE ✔ | Same day ✔ | $350 | Indian immigrants, Surrey/Vancouver clients, non-residents, fastest setup |
| Ontario | NONE since 2023 ✔ | 1–3 days | $300 | Brampton/Mississauga/Toronto Indian community, slightly lower fee |
| Alberta | 25% Canadian ✗ | 3–5 days | $275 | Only if you have a Canadian co-director and are based in Calgary/Edmonton |
| Federal (CBCA) | 25% Canadian ✗ | 1–5 days | $200 | National businesses only. NOT recommended for non-residents without Canadian director |
Popular Cities for Indian Entrepreneurs:
- Surrey, BC — Largest South Asian community in Canada. DKP Global’s primary Canada base (+1-672). BC incorporation recommended.
- Brampton, Ontario — Largest Indian population in Ontario. Ontario Provincial incorporation.
- Mississauga, Ontario — Major South Asian business hub. Ontario Provincial or Federal.
- Vancouver, BC — Tech and international trade hub. BC incorporation.
- Calgary, Alberta — Growing Indian entrepreneur community. Alberta incorporation (if Canadian director available).
8. Step-by-Step — How to Choose and Incorporate in Canada
Follow these steps to go from decision to fully incorporated company in Canada:
Step 1: Decide Federal vs Provincial
Use the comparison table above. If you are a non-resident, Indian immigrant, or newcomer without a Canadian co-director — choose BC or Ontario Provincial. If your business is national and you have Canadian directors — federal may be the right call.
Step 2: Run NUANS Name Search (if required)
Federal and Ontario incorporations require a NUANS (Newly Upgraded Automated Name Search) report confirming your business name is available. BC does not require NUANS — your name is reviewed and approved during filing. NUANS reports are valid for 90 days.
Step 3: Prepare Articles of Incorporation
Articles of Incorporation set out your company name, registered office address in Canada, share structure, director information, and any restrictions on business activities. DKP Global prepares these to match your specific business structure — including appropriate share classes for Indian immigrant clients.
Step 4: File Online and Receive Certificate
File through Corporations Canada (federal), Ontario Business Registry (Ontario), or BC Registries (BC). Once approved, you receive your Certificate of Incorporation — your official proof of legal incorporation. BC is same-day. Ontario is 1–3 days. Federal is 1–5 days.
Step 5: Register for CRA Business Number
Every Canadian corporation needs a Business Number (BN) from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Register online immediately after receiving your Certificate of Incorporation — it is instant. The BN links to your corporate income tax (T2), GST/HST, and payroll accounts.
Step 6: Register for HST/GST
HST/GST registration is mandatory when your revenue crosses $30,000 in any four consecutive calendar quarters. DKP Global recommends registering voluntarily from day one — so you can claim Input Tax Credits (ITCs) on all business expenses from your first invoice.
Step 7: Set Up Corporate Minute Book
A corporate minute book is legally required for all Canadian corporations. It must contain Articles of Incorporation, bylaws, director and shareholder registers, share certificates, and minutes of board meetings. DKP Global sets up your minute book as part of every incorporation package — it is not optional.
| DKP Global manages the complete incorporation process — name search, articles, CRA registration, HST setup, and minute book — for BC, Ontario, Alberta, and Federal. One team. Zero handoffs. |
| Ready to Incorporate in Canada? DKP Global handles federal and provincial incorporation across Canada — CRA Business Number, HST/GST, corporate minute book, and ongoing compliance. ACCA-UK & CS certified team. 250+ businesses set up across India, Canada & USA. 📅 Book Free 30-Min Consultation → dkpglobal.org/company-registration-canada/📞 +1-672-833-4342 | 📧 info@dkpglobal.org | 💬 WhatsApp |
Frequently Asked Questions — Federal vs Provincial Incorporation Canada
A: Federal incorporation ($200) under the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) protects your company name across all provinces and is ideal for national businesses operating in multiple provinces. Provincial incorporation ($300–$450) is governed by your province’s business corporations act, protects the name in that province only, and is better for businesses operating in one province. The biggest practical difference for non-residents: federal CBCA requires 25% Canadian resident directors, while BC and Ontario provincial incorporations have no such requirement.
A: Federal incorporation has a lower filing fee ($200) compared to provincial — Ontario ($300), BC ($350), Alberta ($275). However, federal requires a NUANS name search ($13.80) and has higher annual return fees ($20–$40/year vs $0 in BC). For Year 1 government fees, federal is cheapest at ~$214. But BC provincial has $0 annual returns — so it’s often the best value over 3–5 years, especially for non-residents who avoid the NUANS cost entirely.
A: Technically yes — but the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) requires at least 25% of directors to be Canadian residents. If you are a non-resident, Indian immigrant, or newcomer without a Canadian co-director, you cannot meet this requirement. In that case, BC or Ontario Provincial Incorporation is the correct route — both have no Canadian resident director requirement, and DKP Global handles these daily.
A: For a business operating primarily in Ontario, provincial incorporation under the Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA) is sufficient and more cost-effective. Ontario removed its Canadian resident director requirement in 2023 — making it equally accessible to non-residents. Filing fee is $300 with 1–3 day processing. If you plan to expand to multiple provinces, federal incorporation gives you national name protection upfront — but you can also register extra-provincially later.
A: British Columbia (BC) is the best province for non-residents and Indian immigrants to incorporate in Canada. Reasons: no Canadian resident director requirement, same-day online processing, no NUANS name search required, and $0 annual return fee. DKP Global’s Canada office is based in Surrey, BC — we handle BC incorporations daily and provide the registered office address required for non-residents.
A: No. NUANS (Newly Upgraded Automated Name Search) is required for federal incorporation ($13.80) and Ontario incorporation ($8.00). British Columbia does NOT require a NUANS search — your proposed name is reviewed and approved during the online filing process. Alberta requires a NUANS-equivalent search ($30). NUANS reports are valid for 90 days from the date of search.
A: Yes. A provincially incorporated company can apply for a Certificate of Continuance to re-incorporate federally under the CBCA — essentially ‘converting’ from provincial to federal. This is a common path: start provincial for speed and cost, then go federal when the business operates nationally. DKP Global can advise on the right timing and manage the continuance process.
A: Extra-provincial registration is required when a company incorporated in one province wants to carry on business in another province. For example: if you have a BC corporation and open an office or hire employees in Ontario, you must register as an extra-provincial corporation in Ontario. Federal corporations also need extra-provincial registration in each province where they carry on business — despite being federally incorporated.
A: BC provincial is fastest — same day to 1 business day online. Ontario provincial takes 1–3 business days. Federal incorporation via Corporations Canada takes 1–5 business days online. Alberta takes 3–5 business days. All CRA Business Number registrations are instant online regardless of province. Total setup including CRA registration and minute book: BC 3–7 business days | all others 1–2 weeks.
A: Yes — DKP Global handles federal incorporation (Corporations Canada) and provincial incorporations across BC, Ontario, and Alberta. Our ACCA-UK and CS certified team manages the complete process: NUANS name search, Articles of Incorporation, CRA Business Number, HST/GST registration, and corporate minute book. 100% remote — no office visit required at any step. Book a free 30-minute consultation to determine the right structure for your business.
