British Columbia
Service BC offers interpretation on request.
Help: Service BC 1-800-663-7867
Find the right provincial and federal pages to choose a name, register or incorporate, get permits/licences, and talk to real humans — many lines offer help in multiple languages. When you’re ready to take card payments, we’ll set you up fast.
Look for the “Financing & Loans” link in each tile. It points to your province/territory’s official funding and loan programs. For bank loans, the federal Canada Small Business Financing Program can help secure financing with a government guarantee.
Service BC offers interpretation on request.
Help: Service BC 1-800-663-7867
Guides and registry agents.
Help: Business Link 1-800-272-9675
Online corporate registry via ISC.
Help: ISC 1-866-275-4721 · ask@isc.ca
Companies Office for names & incorporation.
Help: 204-945-2500 · 1-888-246-8353
Guides + Ontario Business Registry (OBR).
Help: Business Info Line 1-888-745-8888
Services Québec portal & REQ registry.
Help: Services Québec 1-877-644-4545
Register & search via Service NB.
Help: Service NB 1-888-762-8600
RJSC for names & registration.
Help: 902-424-7770 · 1-800-225-8227
PEI business portal & registry.
Help: Innovation PEI 1-800-563-3734
Registry of Companies & Business Navigator.
Help: Business Navigator 1-833-404-2283
Start a business & YCOR online registry.
Help: Corporate Affairs 867-667-5314 · 1-800-661-0408 x5314
Corporate Registries & startup guide.
See pages for contact details.
NNI business registry & legal registries.
Help: Legal Registries 867-975-6590
New businesses welcome. We offer fast approvals, competitive entry rates, month-to-month options, and terminals/POS that scale as you grow — even if you have no processing history.
Short answers for common “how do I start/ register/ name/ permit” questions. Always verify details via the official links above.
Use BC Registries to reserve a name and register/incorporate online. See provincial links ↑
No—BC uses its own name request/approval system through BC Registries. Check rules before submitting. Back to BC ↑
Start at Starting a business and file through authorized registry agents. Back to AB ↑
Usually yes for named corporations. Numbered corporations don’t need NUANS. Your registry agent can confirm. See AB links ↑
Use the ISC Corporate Registry to search names and file online. Back to SK ↑
Saskatchewan uses the ISC name search/approval. Follow ISC guidance for name availability and rules. See SK links ↑
Go to the Companies Office for name reservation and filings. Back to MB ↑
Manitoba’s Companies Office provides its own name search/approval. Follow their instructions per entity type. See MB links ↑
Use the Ontario Business Registry to file most entities online. Back to ON ↑
Named corporations generally need a NUANS report. Numbered corporations do not. See OBR guidance. See ON links ↑
Through the REQ (Registraire des entreprises). You’ll receive a NEQ (business number). Back to QC ↑
No—Québec uses its own naming rules and verification via REQ. See QC links ↑
File via Service NB Corporate Registry; start with their “Start a business” guide. Back to NB ↑
NB supports NUANS for named corporations; confirm latest requirements in the Corporate Registry. See NB links ↑
Use the Registry of Joint Stock Companies for name approval and filings. Back to NS ↑
RJSC has its own name approval process. NUANS may be accepted in some cases; follow RJSC instructions. See NS links ↑
Use the PEI Business/Corporate Registry. Back to PEI ↑
Often required for named corporations. Check the Registry’s guidance for your entity type. See PEI links ↑
Through the provincial Registry of Companies; the Business Navigator can help. Back to NL ↑
Common for named corporations. Confirm current requirements with the Registry. See NL links ↑
Use YCOR (Corporate Online Registry) for filings. Back to YT ↑
Often accepted/required for named corporations. Check YCOR instructions before ordering. See YT links ↑
Through Corporate Registries (Dept. of Justice); see Prosper NWT for startup guidance. Back to NWT ↑
NUANS is commonly used for named corporations. Confirm with Corporate Registries. See NWT links ↑
Check the NNI Business Registry and Nunavut Legal Registries for filings and name rules. Back to NU ↑
NUANS is often used for named corporations. Verify the latest rules in Legal Registries. See NU links ↑
Yes. A federal corporation typically must also register “extra-provincially” in each province/territory where it carries on business. See provinces ↑
Often yes if using a name other than your exact legal name. Check your province/territory’s rules. Back to list ↑
Use your province’s small-business portal and BizPaL (where available) to list municipal/provincial permits based on activity and location. See provinces ↑
Many small suppliers register once they exceed the federal small-supplier threshold or choose to register earlier—ask your accountant/tax advisor. Back to list ↑