To register a company in Canada, choose a business structure (sole proprietorship, partnership, or corporation), run a NUANS name search, file Articles of Incorporation with Corporations Canada (federal) or your provincial registry, register for a CRA Business Number, and register for HST/GST if your revenue exceeds $30,000. The process takes 3–7 business days and costs $300–$700 in government filing fees. Non-residents and Indian immigrants can incorporate in Canada without a Canadian resident director — particularly in BC and Ontario.
In This Guide:
1. Why Incorporate in Ontario? Key Facts
2. Ontario Business Structures — Which Is Right for You?
3. Ontario vs Federal Incorporation — Quick Comparison
4. Step-by-Step — How to Register a Company in Ontario
5. Cost of Company Registration in Ontario
6. Post-Incorporation Compliance in Ontario
7. Business Setup for Indian Immigrants in Ontario
8. Popular Cities — Brampton, Mississauga, Toronto
9. Frequently Asked Questions (10 Q&As)
1. Why Incorporate in Ontario? Key Facts
Ontario is Canada’s largest province by GDP and population — and home to the country’s largest Indian immigrant community, concentrated in Brampton, Mississauga, and Toronto. For Indian immigrants, newcomers, and international entrepreneurs, Ontario offers one of the most accessible and business-friendly incorporation environments in Canada.
Why Ontario Is a Strong Choice for Business Registration:
| Factor | Ontario Advantage |
| Director Residency | NO Canadian resident director required since 2023 — 100% foreign ownership permitted ✔ |
| Governing Law | Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA) — robust, well-established corporate law |
| Filing Fee | $300 — lower than BC ($350) |
| Processing Time | 1–3 business days online via Ontario Business Registry (ONBIS) |
| Tax Rate | Ontario HST: 13% (harmonized — single registration handles both federal + provincial) |
| Indian Community | Largest Indian population in Canada — Brampton, Mississauga, Toronto — strong support ecosystem |
| Banking Access | RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC — all major Canadian banks well-represented in GTA |
| Market Access | Largest consumer market in Canada — ideal for retail, services, trade, professional services |
2. Ontario Business Structures — Which Is Right for You?
Before filing for company registration in Ontario, choose the right legal structure. The right choice depends on your business goals, number of owners, liability concerns, and tax strategy.
| Structure | Liability | Tax Treatment | Setup Cost | Best For |
| Sole Proprietorship | Unlimited — personal assets at risk | Personal income tax rate | $60–$80 (name reg) | Freelancers, single-owner service biz |
| General Partnership | Unlimited — all partners liable | Pass-through (T5013) | $100–$300 | 2+ owners, professionals |
| Ontario Corporation (OBCA) | Limited — shareholders protected ✔ | Corporate tax + personal on dividends | $300 + NUANS | Most businesses — RECOMMENDED ✔ |
| Federal Corporation (CBCA) | Limited — shareholders protected ✔ | Corporate tax + personal on dividends | $200 + NUANS | Multi-province businesses, national brands |
| Professional Corporation | Limited (with conditions) | Corporate + personal | $500–$1,500 | Doctors, lawyers, accountants, engineers |
| DKP Global’s Recommendation for Ontario: For Indian immigrants, newcomers, and international entrepreneurs — an Ontario Provincial Corporation (OBCA) is the right starting structure. Limited liability, no Canadian resident director needed, and fast 1–3 day processing. Note: Canada has NO LLCs — the Corporation is the Canadian equivalent. |
3. Ontario Corporation vs Federal Corporation — Quick Comparison
| Factor | Ontario Corporation (OBCA) | Federal Corporation (CBCA) |
| Filing Fee | $300 | $200 |
| NUANS Name Search | Required — $8 (Ontario NUANS via ONBIS) | Required — $13.80 (federal NUANS) |
| Processing Time | 1–3 business days | 1–5 business days |
| Name Protection | Ontario only | All provinces & territories ✔ |
| Director Residency | NONE since 2023 ✔ | 25% Canadian residents required |
| Annual Return | $12/year — Ontario Business Registry | $20–$40/year — Corporations Canada |
| Multi-Province Ops | Extra-provincial registration needed in each additional province | File once — operate across Canada (extra-provincial registration still needed) |
| Best For | Single-province Ontario businesses, non-residents, Indian immigrants, newcomers | National brands, multi-province businesses, companies needing pan-Canada name protection |
4. Step-by-Step — How to Register a Company in Ontario
Here is the complete process for company registration in Ontario — applicable for residents, non-residents, Indian immigrants, and international entrepreneurs:
Step 1: Choose Your Business Structure
Use Section 2 above to confirm the right structure. For most entrepreneurs, an Ontario Corporation under the OBCA is the recommended route. Sole proprietorships and partnerships offer no liability protection. Corporations are the only structure that separates your personal assets from business liabilities.
Step 2: Run an Ontario NUANS Name Search
Before filing Articles of Incorporation in Ontario, you must run a NUANS (Newly Upgraded Automated Name Search) to confirm your proposed business name is available and does not conflict with existing Ontario corporations or registered trademarks. Run through the Ontario Business Registry (ONBIS) — cost: $8.00. NUANS reports are valid for 90 days. Have 2–3 name alternatives ready in case your first choice is unavailable.
Step 3: Prepare and File Articles of Incorporation
Articles of Incorporation under the OBCA must include: your proposed company name, the registered office address in Ontario (must be a physical address — not a P.O. Box), the authorized share structure (number and class of shares), director information (full legal name and residential address for all directors), and any restrictions on business activities or share transfers. File online through the Ontario Business Registry at onbis.ontario.ca. Filing fee: $300. Processing time: 1–3 business days.
Step 4: Receive Your Certificate of Incorporation
Once the Ontario Business Registry approves your Articles, you receive a Certificate of Incorporation with your Ontario Corporation Number — your official proof of legal incorporation. This is your company’s birth certificate. Keep multiple certified copies — you will need them for bank account opening, CRA registration, and future legal matters.
Step 5: Register for a CRA Business Number (BN)
Every Ontario corporation must register for a Business Number (BN) with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) — the 9-digit master account number that links your corporate income tax (T2), HST, payroll, and import/export accounts. Register online at canada.ca — it is instant and free. Do this immediately after receiving your Certificate of Incorporation.
Step 6: Register for HST (Harmonized Sales Tax)
Ontario’s HST rate is 13% (5% federal GST + 8% provincial PST, harmonized). HST registration is mandatory when your revenue exceeds $30,000 in any four consecutive calendar quarters. DKP Global recommends voluntary early registration from day one — so you can claim Input Tax Credits (ITCs) on all business expenses, including incorporation costs, professional fees, equipment, and office expenses.
Step 7: Register for WSIB (Workplace Safety and Insurance Board)
If your Ontario business will have employees, WSIB registration is mandatory before your first employee starts work. WSIB provides workplace injury and illness insurance — it is Ontario’s equivalent of British Columbia’s WorkSafeBC. Some industries require WSIB even for sole proprietors. Premium rates vary by industry classification.
Step 8: Set Up Your Corporate Minute Book
A corporate minute book is legally required for all Ontario corporations under the OBCA. It must contain: Articles of Incorporation, corporate bylaws, director and officer registers, shareholder registers, share certificates, and minutes of all board and shareholder meetings. Ontario’s OBCA requires that minute books be kept at the registered office or another location in Ontario approved by directors. DKP Global sets up your minute book as part of every Ontario incorporation package — it is not optional.
Step 9: Open a Canadian Business Bank Account
Open your Ontario business bank account after receiving your Certificate of Incorporation and CRA Business Number. Major Canadian banks — RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC — have strong presences in Brampton, Mississauga, and Toronto. For newcomers and non-residents, DKP Global provides guidance on bank account opening, including documentation requirements and which banks are most accessible for non-residents.
| DKP Global manages the complete Ontario incorporation process — NUANS name search, Articles of Incorporation, CRA Business Number, HST registration, WSIB guidance, and corporate minute book. One team, zero handoffs, 100% remote. |
5. Cost of Company Registration in Ontario
| Cost Item | Amount |
| Ontario NUANS Name Search | $8.00 (via Ontario Business Registry) |
| Articles of Incorporation (OBCA) | $300.00 (online via ONBIS) |
| CRA Business Number (BN) | Free |
| HST Registration | Free |
| WSIB Registration | Free (premiums based on payroll — industry dependent) |
| Corporate Minute Book (Professional Setup) | $150–$500 |
| Business Bank Account | No fee to open (varies by bank and account type) |
| Annual Return (Year 2+) | $12/year (Ontario Business Registry) |
| TOTAL — Government Fees Only (Year 1) | ~$308 |
| TOTAL — With Professional Setup (Year 1) | $650–$1,000 |
| Employer Health Tax (EHT): Ontario businesses with annual payroll exceeding $1,000,000 must register for EHT. Smaller businesses are exempt. DKP Global advises on EHT applicability as part of every Ontario setup. |
6. Post-Incorporation Compliance in Ontario
Incorporation is step one. Here is what every Ontario corporation must do after receiving the Certificate of Incorporation:
| Compliance Item | Timeline | Who Needs It | Penalty if Missed | DKP Handles? |
| CRA Business Number (BN) | Day 1 after Certificate | ALL corporations | Delays in tax filings | ✔ Yes |
| HST Registration (Ontario — 13%) | Before $30K revenue | All earning $30K+/year | Interest + penalties from threshold date | ✔ Yes |
| Corporate Minute Book | Within 30 days | ALL corporations — OBCA mandatory | Fines + director personal liability | ✔ Yes |
| WSIB Registration | Before the first employee | Businesses with employees in Ontario | Back premiums + fines | ✔ Guidance |
| Payroll Deductions Account (RP) | Before first payroll | Businesses with employees | Penalties on unremitted payroll | ✔ Yes |
| Employer Health Tax (EHT) | When payroll exceeds $1M | Ontario employers — payroll $1M+ | Interest + late filing penalties | ✔ Advisory |
| Annual Ontario Corporation Return | Within 60 days of anniversary | ALL Ontario corporations | $25–$150 late fee | ✔ Yes |
| T2 Corporate Tax Return (CRA) | Within 6 months of fiscal year end | ALL corporations | $25/day late penalty — min $100, max $2,500 | ✔ Yes |
7. Business Setup for Indian Immigrants in Ontario
Ontario is the preferred province for Indian immigrants building a business in Canada. Brampton, Mississauga, and Toronto together form the largest South Asian business hub outside of India. DKP Global specializes in company registration for Indian immigrants across the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) — all services available remotely.
Can Indian Immigrants Register a Company in Ontario Without Being in Canada?
Yes — 100% remotely. Ontario removed its Canadian resident director requirement in 2023. Indian immigrants, non-residents, and international entrepreneurs can incorporate a company in Ontario without visiting Canada and without a Canadian co-director. DKP Global provides the registered office address in Ontario required for incorporation — no local address needed.
Business Registration by Immigration Status — Ontario:
| Immigration Status | Can Register? | Recommended Structure | Notes |
| Canadian Citizen | ✔ Yes | Ontario or Federal Corp | Full rights — any structure available |
| Permanent Resident (PR) | ✔ Yes | Ontario Corp | Same as citizen for all business purposes |
| Work Permit Holder | ✔ Yes | Ontario Corp | Can own shares and be a director. May need self-employment authorization for active management role |
| Study Permit Holder | ✔ Yes (shares) | Ontario Corp | Can own shares and be a director — cannot actively work beyond permitted hours under study permit |
| Visitor Visa | ✔ Yes (own) | Ontario Corp | Can own and direct — cannot actively work in Canada. Suitable for remote-managed businesses |
| Indian Resident (not in Canada) | ✔ Yes | Ontario Corp | 100% remote. No Canadian director needed. FEMA ODI compliance required for Indian residents investing abroad. DKP Global handles both. |
| FEMA Note for Indian Residents: If you are an Indian resident owning an Ontario company, the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) requires Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) compliance — file Form ODI with your Indian bank, submit Annual Performance Reports (APR) to RBI, and declare the Ontario company’s income in your Indian tax returns. DKP Global handles both Canadian incorporation AND Indian FEMA compliance. |
8. Popular Cities — Brampton, Mississauga, Toronto
Brampton, Ontario
Brampton has the largest Indian-origin population in Ontario and one of the fastest-growing small business communities in Canada. Key industries: transportation & logistics, retail, construction, food services, and professional services. Ontario Corporation (OBCA) is the recommended structure for Brampton-based entrepreneurs. DKP Global serves Brampton clients remotely — no office visit required.
Mississauga, Ontario
Mississauga is Ontario’s third-largest city and a major commercial hub directly adjacent to Toronto. Home to the largest South Asian business district outside India in Mississauga. Strong in financial services, tech, manufacturing, and trade. Both Ontario Corporation and Federal Corporation are popular here — depending on whether clients plan national expansion.
Toronto, Ontario
Toronto is Canada’s financial capital — home to the TSX (Toronto Stock Exchange), major Canadian banks, and a thriving startup ecosystem. Ontario Corporation is the starting structure for most Toronto-based SMEs. For startups seeking venture capital or planning national expansion quickly — Federal Corporation may be considered upfront.+1-672-833-4342 | We handle BC incorporations daily. Surrey, Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond — served remotely.
| DKP Global serves clients across Brampton, Mississauga, Toronto, Scarborough, Vaughan, and all of the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) — and across Ontario remotely. You do not need to visit our office at any step of the incorporation process. |
| Ready to Register Your Company in Ontario? DKP Global handles the complete Ontario company registration — NUANS name search, Articles of Incorporation, CRA Business Number, HST registration, WSIB guidance, and corporate minute book. ACCA-UK & CS certified team. 250+ businesses set up across India, Canada & USA. 📅 Book Free 30-Min Consultation 📞 +1-672-833-4342 | 📧 info@dkpglobal.org | 💬 WhatsApp |
Frequently Asked Questions — Company Registration Ontario
A: Ontario company registration via the Ontario Business Registry (ONBIS) takes 1–3 business days online. The Ontario NUANS name search takes 1 day. CRA Business Number registration is instant online. HST registration takes 5–10 business days. Total setup including minute book: approximately 1–2 weeks for a fully operational company.
A: Government filing fees: NUANS name search ($8) + Articles of Incorporation ($300) = ~$308 in government fees. CRA Business Number and HST registration are free. With professional service fees (NUANS, articles, CRA, HST, minute book): approximately $650–$1,000 for a fully set up Ontario corporation in Year 1. Annual return in Year 2+: $12/year.
A: Yes — absolutely. Ontario removed its Canadian resident director requirement in 2023. Non-residents, Indian immigrants, and international entrepreneurs can incorporate a company in Ontario 100% remotely — no Canadian address needed (DKP Global provides registered office), no visit to Canada required, and no Canadian co-director needed. All you need is a valid passport.
A: The Ontario Business Registry (ONBIS) — accessible at onbis.ontario.ca — is the Ontario government’s online portal for business registrations and filings. It replaced the older ServiceOntario filing system. Through ONBIS you can: run Ontario NUANS name searches, file Articles of Incorporation, file annual returns, make director and officer changes, and dissolve a corporation. Processing through ONBIS is 1–3 business days.
A: The Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA) is the provincial legislation that governs Ontario corporations — covering incorporation, share structure, director and officer duties, shareholder rights, corporate maintenance, and dissolution. All Ontario corporations operate under the OBCA unless they are federally incorporated under the CBCA. The OBCA was significantly updated in 2023, including the removal of the Canadian resident director requirement.
A: No — you do not legally need a lawyer to incorporate in Ontario. However, professional assistance from a CA, CS, or ACCA-certified firm is strongly recommended — especially for non-residents, complex share structures, or cross-border businesses. DKP Global provides complete Ontario incorporation services at professional CA/CS rates, including Articles of Incorporation preparation, CRA registration, and minute book setup.
A: WSIB (Workplace Safety and Insurance Board) is Ontario’s workers’ compensation program — providing insurance for workplace injuries and illnesses. WSIB registration is mandatory for most Ontario businesses before hiring their first employee. Premium rates vary by industry (construction has higher rates than office-based businesses). Some industries require WSIB even for working business owners. Failure to register results in back premiums and fines.
A: Ontario’s HST rate is 13% — a combined 5% federal GST and 8% Ontario provincial portion, harmonized into a single tax. HST registration is mandatory when your revenue exceeds $30,000 in any four consecutive calendar quarters. One registration with CRA covers both the federal and Ontario portions — no separate provincial registration needed. Ontario is one of the simplest provinces for HST administration because of harmonization.
A: Yes — legally required under the Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA). A minute book must contain: Articles of Incorporation, bylaws, director and officer registers, shareholder registers, share certificates, and minutes of all board and shareholder meetings. It must be kept at the registered office or another location in Ontario approved by the board. Failure to maintain an up-to-date minute book can result in fines and personal liability for directors.
A: Yes. You can own and operate an Ontario corporation while living in India. Ontario has no Canadian resident director requirement. You need a registered office address in Ontario (DKP Global provides this). You must file CRA T2 corporate tax returns annually and, as an Indian resident, comply with FEMA’s Overseas Direct Investment (ODI) regulations. DKP Global handles both the Ontario incorporation AND Indian FEMA compliance — making us uniquely positioned for Indian residents expanding to Ontario.
