Canada Start-Up Visa: Complete Guide for Entrepreneurs (2026)
What is the Start-Up Visa?
Launched in 2013, the Start-Up Visa is Canada’s business immigration pathway designed for founders of scalable, innovative companies. Unlike passive investor visas, this route requires you to actually build and run a Canadian business — which is why backing from a designated organization is the critical gate.
As of 2024, the program has an annual cap of ~3,500 PR applications to prevent backlog growth. Priority is given to ventures backed by venture capital firms (vs. angel groups or incubators) and ventures where founders have language proficiency at CLB 7+.
Who qualifies
Three tests: qualifying business, designated organization backing, and you as a founder.
✅ Eligibility checklist
- Qualifying business: Incorporated in Canada with at least 50% voting rights held by applicants and the designated organization combined. Applicants actively manage the business.
- Commitment from designated organization: Letter of Support or Commitment Certificate from an IRCC-approved VC fund, angel group, or business incubator.
- Ownership and role: Each applicant holds at least 10% of voting rights. You are actively involved in day-to-day management.
- Language: Minimum CLB 5 in English or French (some tasks work at CLB 4).
- Education: At least 1 year of post-secondary education (does not need to be completed).
- Settlement funds: ~CAD 14,690 for a single person, scaled for family size.
- Admissibility: No criminal/medical bars, valid passport.
Required documents
Standard PR documents plus extensive business and designated organization paperwork.
📄 Document checklist
- Valid passport
- Letter of Support or Commitment Certificate from designated organization
- Business incorporation documents
- Business plan
- Proof of ownership percentages
- Language test results
- ECA for foreign education
- Proof of settlement funds
- Biometrics
- Medical examination
- Police certificates
- Personal net worth statement
Step-by-step application process
- Develop an innovative business concept. Focus on scalable ventures — tech, biotech, cleantech, fintech common.
- Pitch to designated organizations. IRCC maintains a list of VC funds, angel groups, and incubators that can back applicants.
- Secure Letter of Support or Commitment Certificate. VC funds: minimum CAD 200,000 investment commitment. Angel groups: CAD 75,000+. Incubators: acceptance into their program.
- Incorporate your Canadian business. Register with a province. Allocate shareholding including designated organization.
- Take language test. CLB 5+ in each band.
- Get ECA. WES or another designated organization.
- Submit PR application. All co-founders submit jointly.
- IRCC review. Includes peer review of your business plan by independent panel.
- Provide biometrics and medical. Standard PR steps.
- Receive PR. Up to 5 co-founders approved per business.
Cost breakdown
| Item | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Application fee (per applicant) | CAD 2,140 | Plus right of PR fee |
| Right of Permanent Residence Fee | CAD 575 | Per adult |
| Dependent fees | CAD 260–1,140 | Spouse/children |
| Biometrics | CAD 85/person | Max $170/family |
| Language test | CAD 320 | IELTS General |
| ECA | CAD 220–300 | WES typical |
| Medical exam | CAD 200–450 | Panel physician |
| Police certificates | CAD 25–200 each | Per country |
| Business incorporation fees | CAD 200–500 | Varies by province |
| Legal/accounting fees | CAD 5,000–20,000 | Strongly recommended |
| Total government fees (single) | CAD 3,500–5,000 | Plus professional fees |
Timeline from start to arrival
- Month 1–6: Refine business concept; approach designated organizations
- Month 6–9: Secure Letter of Support; incorporate business
- Month 9–12: Language test, ECA, documentation gathering
- Month 12: Submit PR application
- Month 12–24: IRCC processing and peer review
- Month 24–30: Biometrics, medical, decision
Total: 18–30 months from concept to PR. Most of that is securing designated organization backing — the IRCC processing is 12–18 months.
Do I need a lawyer?
Highly recommended. Business immigration cases benefit from structured legal review — the paperwork is complex and the stakes are high.
You might want a licensed immigration professional in these cases:
- Always recommended for this pathway
- Your business concept is unusual or crosses multiple industries
- You have prior refusals or inadmissibility concerns
- You have a complex corporate structure
- You are applying with multiple co-founders requiring coordination
Business immigration lawyers with Start-Up Visa experience typically charge CAD 10,000–20,000. Worth the investment for this route.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to invest my own money?
Not directly. The required investment comes from the designated organization (VC fund minimum CAD 200k). But practically, incubators expect you to have enough savings for 6–12 months before the business generates income.
Can 5 co-founders really all get PR?
Yes. Up to 5 co-founders per qualifying business. Each must hold 10%+ voting rights and actively manage the business.
What if my business fails after I get PR?
You keep your PR. The Start-Up Visa grants PR on arrival — it is not tied to ongoing business success.
What industries get approved most?
Tech (SaaS, fintech, AI), biotech, cleantech, and advanced manufacturing dominate approvals. Traditional retail or services struggle to show “innovation.”
Which provinces are best?
Toronto (Ontario), Vancouver (BC), and Montreal (Quebec) have the densest VC and incubator ecosystems. Toronto has the highest concentration of designated organizations.
Can I work on other jobs while building my startup?
Yes. You have full PR work rights from day one. Many founders take consulting or other work for income during the ramp phase.
How is my business plan evaluated?
By IRCC’s peer review panel — independent business experts. They check that the business is genuinely innovative, viable, scalable, and that founders have the skills to execute.
What is the cap and how does it affect processing?
Cap is ~3,500 applications per year (~1,750 primary applicants + dependents). Backlog grows when demand exceeds cap. IRCC prioritizes VC-backed applications.
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