Overview
Programs
How to Choose
How to Apply
FAQ
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Updated April 2026

British Columbia Social Enterprise Grants 2026

14 funding programs for BC nonprofits, cooperatives, social purpose organizations, and community developers. Includes the $1.7B Social Finance Fund, Enabling Accessibility Fund ($125K), and Desjardins GoodSpark ($20K). Federal programs available to all BC-based social enterprises alongside PacifiCan regional support.

14
Programs
$1.7B
Social Finance Fund
$125K
Largest Grant (EAF)
BC
Province

BC Social Enterprise Funding: What You Need to Know

British Columbia's social enterprise sector can access 14 active funding programs in 2026 — a mix of federal grants, social finance capital, and private awards. The landscape is defined by Canada's $1.7 billion Social Finance Fund (rolling out through three national wholesalers), the Enabling Accessibility Fund ($125K for capital projects), and the New Horizons for Seniors Program ($25K per community project, historically ~71% approval rate).

BC-based social purpose organizations benefit from the PacifiCan regional development agency, which periodically launches targeted intake streams for community economic development, Indigenous-led projects, and nonprofit capacity building. For smaller social enterprises seeking non-repayable grants, the Desjardins GoodSpark program ($20K, open to BC) and Purolator True North contest ($25K) provide accessible entry points with short applications (2–3 hours). For organizations ready for investment capital, the Community Forward Fund ($50K–$1.25M) offers mission-aligned bridge loans with a 50–70% approval rate.

Key distinction for BC applicants: most of these programs are repayable investments (Social Finance Fund, Community Forward Fund, Coralus), not grants. The purely non-repayable grants — Enabling Accessibility Fund, New Horizons for Seniors, Desjardins GoodSpark, FCC AgriSpirit, Canada Summer Jobs — are fewer but have defined project requirements.

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Available Programs (14)

Organization: Employment and Social Development Canada (via Boann, Realize, CAP Finance)

Level: federal

Amount: $25,000–$5,000,000 (repayable below-market investment)

Canada's $1.7B dedicated social finance ecosystem. Social purpose organizations (SPOs) — nonprofits, co-ops, social enterprises, affordable housing developers — access investment capital through three national wholesalers. Not a grant: capital is repayable. Over 83 SPOs funded to date with $322M+ in co-investment leveraged.

Social FinanceSocial EnterpriseCommunity DevelopmentAffordable Housing
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Organization: Employment and Social Development Canada

Level: federal

Amount: Up to $125,000 (small projects) / up to $1,000,000 (large projects)

Non-repayable capital grants for renovations, retrofits, and accessible technologies in workplaces and community spaces. One of the most accessible federal grants for registered nonprofits and municipalities — flat-rate system simplifies the application. Approval rate approximately 20–40%.

AccessibilityInclusionDisability SupportCapital
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Organization: Employment and Social Development Canada

Level: federal

Amount: Up to $25,000 (community stream)

Community grants for projects that engage and support seniors. Historically ~71% approval rate nationally — one of the highest success rates among federal social grants. The key eligibility signal is a letter from an EXTERNAL organization that is not the applicant. Between intakes as of April 2026 — watch for next call.

Seniors SupportSocial ParticipationCommunity
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Organization: Community Forward Fund

Level: private

Amount: $50,000–$1,250,000 (repayable bridge loans)

A mission-aligned lender for Canadian nonprofits and social enterprises. Bridge financing, term loans, and operating lines for organizations with existing revenue that need capital their bank won't provide. Approval rate ~50–70% — well above commercial lending. Application fee: $250 (Part 1) + $750 (Part 2) — call ahead before committing.

Social EnterpriseNon-ProfitCommunityBridge Financing
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Organization: Desjardins

Level: private

Amount: $20,000 per business (150 winners nationally per year)

Non-repayable $20K grant from Desjardins's $250M GoodSpark Fund. Open to BC businesses. Short application (~3 hours). Best suited for established small businesses or social enterprises with a compelling community story — storytelling quality drives selection. Available to BC, ON, AB, MB, NB, NL, NS, PE, SK.

Small BusinessCommunity ImpactPrivate Grant
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Organization: Employment and Social Development Canada

Level: federal

Amount: Varies by intermediary (typically $50,000–$2,000,000)

Broader federal initiative supporting the social innovation ecosystem through Social Finance Intermediaries. Not a direct application program — intermediaries apply for capacity-building support, which they then deploy to social purpose organizations. Active ecosystem as of 2026.

Social InnovationSocial ImpactCommunity Development
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Organization: Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Level: federal

Amount: Up to $120,000/year for 1–3 years

Research partnerships between colleges and community organizations to address local social challenges. BC businesses cannot apply directly — you must partner with a BC college (e.g., BCIT, Langara, Capilano University). The college applies; your organization is the community partner. ~30–40% approval rate.

Social InnovationCollegeCommunityResearch
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Organization: Global Affairs Canada

Level: federal

Amount: $3,000–$500,000

Supports Canadian economic development organizations (EDOs), chambers of commerce, and trade associations to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) to their community. BC communities — particularly smaller cities outside Metro Vancouver — face less competition and have historically strong uptake. This is for FDI attraction work, not for general community development.

FDICommunity DevelopmentEconomic Development
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Organization: National Aboriginal Capital Corporations Association (NACCA)

Level: federal

Amount: Varies — via local Indigenous Financial Institutions

Provides larger loan capital ($250K–$750K+) to Indigenous entrepreneurs and social enterprises through BC's Indigenous Financial Institutions (IFIs). Developmental lending model — designed to approve loans mainstream banks would not. Estimated 50–70% approval for applicants who complete the process with IFI advisory support.

IndigenousFirst NationsMétisSocial Impact
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Organization: Farm Credit Canada

Level: federal

Amount: $10,000–$25,000

Community infrastructure grants for rural BC organizations — food banks, community halls, recreation facilities. ~30–50% approval rate. The 5-year lockout (organizations cannot reapply within 5 years of a previous award) is a firm disqualifier — check history first. Food security and climate-adaptation projects score highest. Currently between intakes; watch FCC.ca for next opening.

Community InfrastructureRural CanadaFood Security
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Organization: Canadian Heritage

Level: federal

Amount: Varies by stream

Umbrella of programs supporting arts, culture, heritage, and official languages. For BC social enterprises, the most relevant streams are Canada Cultural Spaces Fund (capital for community arts facilities), Creative Export Canada (cultural exports), and FACTOR music funding. For-profit businesses: only three sub-programs apply. Most streams require nonprofit or arts-organization status.

Cultural HeritageArts SupportCommunity Culture
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Organization: BDC Capital

Level: federal

Amount: $100,000–$2,000,000 (venture investment)

Venture capital for women-led businesses with social impact mandates or SDG-aligned missions. Cannot apply directly — must go through one of 25 co-investment partner funds. Best suited for revenue-generating social enterprises structured as for-profit or hybrid entities seeking equity investment. Estimated 5–10% approval rate via partner networks.

Women EntrepreneursSocial ImpactVenture Capital
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Organization: Coralus

Level: private

Amount: $50,000–$100,000 (0% interest, 5-year repayment)

Zero-interest loans for women-led ventures with a social or environmental purpose. Selection is community-driven — "Activators" (women investors who fund the loan pool) vote on applicants. BC applications are competitive and selections lean toward ventures with clear SDG alignment or community impact narratives. Applications open annually.

Women EntrepreneursSocial ImpactZero-Interest Loan
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Organization: Purolator

Level: private

Amount: $25,000 (5 winners nationally)

Annual grant contest open to all Canadian small businesses — social enterprises with compelling community stories are strong candidates given the nomination-based format. Short application (~2 hours). Purolator customers have better odds via a dedicated stream. Currently between intakes; watch Purolator's site for next annual cycle.

Small BusinessCommunity ImpactContest
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How to Choose the Right Social Enterprise Funding in BC

BC social enterprises face a more complex funding landscape than most sectors — the line between grants, loans, and investments is blurry, and applying to the wrong program wastes months. Use this framework to find your fit:

If you need a non-repayable grant (true free money): Your options are narrower but well-defined. Start with the Enabling Accessibility Fund ($125K, 20–40% approval) if you have a capital project. For seniors-focused programs, track New Horizons for Seniors ($25K, ~71% approval — the highest federal approval rate on this list). For community storytelling, Desjardins GoodSpark ($20K) is accessible with a 3-hour application.

If you're a registered nonprofit or co-op ready for investment capital: The Social Finance Fund ($25K–$5M through national wholesalers Boann, Realize, and CAP Finance) is the largest dedicated social finance vehicle in Canada. Contact the three SFF wholesalers directly to identify which one serves BC organizations in your sector. The Community Forward Fund ($50K–$1.25M at below-market rates) is faster to access for organizations with existing revenue.

If you're a women-led social enterprise: Two paths — Coralus ($50K–$100K, 0% interest, community-voted) for early-stage missions, and BDC Thrive Lab ($100K–$2M equity) for growth-stage ventures aligned with SDGs.

If you're a BC college or are partnering with one: The NSERC College and Community Social Innovation Fund ($120K/year for 1–3 years) is BC's best community research grant. You cannot apply directly — you must be the community organization partner in a college-led application. Reach out to research offices at BCIT, Langara, Capilano, or Douglas College.

Program Amount Type Best For Approval Rate
Enabling Accessibility FundUp to $125KGrantCapital projects, renovations20–40%
New Horizons for SeniorsUp to $25KGrantSeniors programs~71%
Desjardins GoodSpark$20KGrantCommunity story, small biz2–5%
Community Forward Fund$50K–$1.25MLoanNonprofits with revenue50–70%
Social Finance Fund$25K–$5MInvestmentSPOs, co-ops, affordable housingVaries by SFI
Coralus$50K–$100K0% LoanWomen-led, social missionCommunity voted
NSERC CCSIFUp to $120K/yrGrant (via college)College research partnerships30–40%

How to Apply for BC Social Enterprise Grants

BC social enterprises operate across different legal structures — nonprofits, co-operatives, social enterprises, and hybrid entities. Each structure opens or closes different programs. Here is a structured approach:

  1. Clarify your legal structure and confirm eligibility — Nonprofits can access the Enabling Accessibility Fund, New Horizons for Seniors, and Community Forward Fund. For-profit social enterprises can access GoodSpark and Coralus. Co-operatives qualify for the Social Finance Fund. Hybrid entities should review each program's eligibility language carefully before investing application time.
  2. Separate grants from repayable capital — BC social enterprises often mistake SFF and Community Forward Fund for grants. These are loans and investments. Build a repayment plan into your business model before applying. The Social Finance Fund in particular requires a credible revenue model — it is investment due diligence, not a grant competition.
  3. For Social Finance Fund access, identify your wholesaler — Contact Realize (national, pan-sector), Boann (Quebec and national), and CAP Finance (Québec + western Canada) directly to determine which serves your sector and region. Some intermediaries have BC-focused streams. The wholesalers then connect you with appropriate Social Finance Intermediaries.
  4. For college partnerships, approach research offices early — NSERC CCSIF deadlines require 2–3 months of internal college review before submission. BC colleges (BCIT, Langara, Capilano, Douglas, Camosun, Okanagan College) each have a maximum of 5 applications per intake. Identify your college partner at least 4 months before the deadline.
  5. Submit GoodSpark and Purolator during their intake windows — Both are annual contests with specific intake periods (typically fall for GoodSpark, spring for Purolator). Set a calendar reminder and prepare your community story narrative in advance — the application itself is short but the narrative is what wins.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a grant and social finance in BC?

A grant is non-repayable — you receive the money without obligation to repay it if you meet reporting requirements. Examples: Enabling Accessibility Fund, Desjardins GoodSpark, New Horizons for Seniors. Social finance is repayable investment capital — loans, equity, or revenue-based repayment at below-market rates. Examples: Social Finance Fund, Community Forward Fund, Coralus. Most of the "social enterprise" programs listed on this page are social finance, not grants. This matters significantly for how you incorporate the funding into your financial model.

Can a for-profit business with a social mission access these programs?

Yes, but eligibility varies sharply by program. For-profit social enterprises can access: Desjardins GoodSpark ($20K grant), Coralus ($50K–$100K 0% loan for women-led), BDC Thrive Lab (equity for women-led), Social Finance Fund through certain SFIs that serve "social purpose" entities including for-profits. Programs like New Horizons for Seniors and Enabling Accessibility Fund are restricted to nonprofits, co-ops, municipalities, and Indigenous governments. Check each program's eligibility clause for "for-profit" or "social enterprise" language.

Are there BC-specific provincial social enterprise programs?

BC does not have a dedicated provincial social enterprise grant program equivalent to Ontario's. However, PacifiCan (Pacific Economic Development Canada) periodically launches BC-specific intake streams for community economic development, nonprofit capacity building, and Indigenous-led economic development. Check PacifiCan's active programs at pacifican.gc.ca. Additionally, BC's InBC Investment Fund ($3M–$10M) invests in mission-aligned businesses addressing social and environmental challenges — equity only, high bar, but BC-specific.

How does the Social Finance Fund work in practice for a BC organization?

The SFF operates through three national "wholesalers" (Realize, Boann, CAP Finance) who each received ~$150M+ in federal capital. They deploy this to Social Finance Intermediaries (SFIs) — impact lenders and investment funds — who then invest in Social Purpose Organizations (SPOs). As a BC organization, you typically apply to an SFI in your sector rather than to the government directly. As of December 2024, 83+ SPOs have been funded nationally. Contact Realize Canada or CAP Finance first for BC-based organizations.

What approval rate should I expect for social enterprise grants in BC?

It depends heavily on the program. New Horizons for Seniors has the highest approval rate at ~71% historically — if your project fits, this is your best chance of success. Enabling Accessibility Fund runs at 20–40%. Community Forward Fund is 50–70% (mission-aligned lender). GoodSpark and Purolator are national contests at 2–5% — low odds but short applications worth submitting. Social Finance Fund does not have a single approval rate since selection happens at the intermediary level. The rule of thumb: programs that assess social mission alignment (not just financial ROI) have higher social enterprise approval rates than generic business grants.

Can I stack multiple social enterprise grants?

Yes, but with important constraints. Non-repayable grants from federal programs can typically be stacked with social finance (loans/investments), since the latter is not "grant" funding. The Enabling Accessibility Fund allows stacking with other government sources up to 100% of eligible project costs for nonprofits. GoodSpark explicitly allows recipients to hold other grants. The Social Finance Fund investments do not count toward grant-stacking limits. However, you cannot stack two federal grants from the same department for the same project — confirm with each program officer before applying.

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