The $5,000 Government Grant for Small Business: Every Real Micro-Grant in Canada (2026)

There is no single "$5,000 government grant" for small business in Canada — no federal or provincial ministry runs one universal program by that name. The number spread online because it happens to match several real, unrelated programs. What's actually true: of the 650+ programs GrantCompass tracks, 50 active, upcoming, or between-intake programs currently pay $10,000 or less, and 15 of them are open to businesses anywhere in the country. Nine provinces and territories have at least one program-specific option in that range. Every one is listed below by name, with its real dollar amount, current status, and a direct link to apply.

Updated July 2, 2026 · Reviewed by Khalid Hamadeh, Founder

Who this list is for

Alberta business owner who saw "$5,000 government grant" on social media

You searched the exact phrase and landed on a generic Alberta grants page with no direct answer. Alberta has three real micro-grant options — the Alberta Innovates Micro Voucher Program (up to $10,000), the AWE Bridge Program ($5,000 for women entrepreneurs), and Edmonton's Storefront Refresh Grant (up to $1,000) — plus a $25,000 Calgary non-profit option. See the Alberta table.

Manitoba shop or service business googling the exact $5,000 figure

Manitoba has five programs at $10,000 or less, from a $2,500 security rebate to $5,000 co-op hiring incentives and export-visit reimbursements. None of them is called "the $5,000 grant," but several pay exactly that. See the Manitoba table.

First-time employer hiring a student or apprentice, anywhere in Canada

The $5,000 figure shows up constantly here because it's the standard rate for federal Student Work Placement Program wage subsidies — five sector-council variants each pay $5,000 to $7,000 per placement. Plus the Apprenticeship Job Creation Tax Credit and the Apprenticeship Service Employer Grant. See national programs.

Early-stage founder who has outgrown micro-grants

If $10,000 is too small for what you're building, 45 more programs in the GrantCompass catalog pay between $10,000 and $25,000 — export top-ups, innovation vouchers, apprenticeship hiring grants, and retail storefront funds. See the $10K–$25K section.

Anyone who just got a text, DM, or email promising a "guaranteed $5,000 government grant"

That's very likely not a real government program. Real micro-grants are free to apply for, publicly listed, and administered by a named agency — not a stranger who messaged you first. See how to spot the fake version.

Is there really a "$5,000 government grant" for small business?

Short answer: no single program. Longer answer: the $5,000 figure isn't a myth so much as a coincidence of scale. It's the standard per-placement rate for federal student wage subsidies (Student Work Placement Program and its four sector-council partners), the maximum for the Electric Vehicle Affordability Program's point-of-sale rebate, and the flat award size for several provincial and private grants — from PEI's wage subsidy to the Young Entrepreneur Bursary in Saskatchewan. None of them shares an application form, a ministry, or an eligibility list with the others. Searching "$5,000 government grant for small business" and expecting one portal to apply through is the mistake; searching for the specific program that matches your business is what actually works.

Verdict: If an offer names a specific agency, a specific eligibility list, and a specific application deadline or intake window, it's probably real — that's how every program on this page works. If it just says "the government is giving away $5,000" with no named agency, treat it as unverified until you find the program yourself.

Micro-grants open to any Canadian business

Sixteen programs on this list have no province restriction — any Canadian business that meets the eligibility criteria can apply, regardless of where it's registered. Five of them are the same underlying mechanism delivered by different sector councils; the rest are one-off federal programs or corporate grant contests.

Student Work Placement Program and its sector-council partners

The federal government funds student wage subsidies through five parallel delivery channels, each run by a different sector council with its own intake and application portal. The base rate is $2,500–$7,000 per placement (higher for underrepresented groups); unlike a single federal portal, you apply through whichever sector council matches your industry, not directly to Ottawa.

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Student Work Placement Program (SWPP)$5,000 per placement (standard); $7,000 per placement (underrepresented groups)Canadian employers hiring post-secondary co-op students in STEM or business fields, through an approved SWPP delivery partner.Open
BioTalent Canada — Student Work Placement Program (SWPP)Up to $5,000 per placement (50% of gross pay); up to $7,000 (70%) for underrepresented groupsBiotechnology and bio-economy employers hiring enrolled Canadian post-secondary co-op students.Open
EHRC — Empowering Futures (Electricity Sector Student Work Placement)Up to $5,000 standard (50% of gross pay); up to $7,000 for underrepresented groups (70% of gross pay)Electricity-sector employers (generation, transmission, distribution, renewables) hiring post-secondary students in co-op or internship placements.Open
ICTC — WIL Digital Program (Tech Sector Student Work Placement)Up to $5,000 standard (50% of gross pay); up to $7,000 for underrepresented groups (70% of gross pay)Digital-economy and technology-sector employers hiring post-secondary students in co-op or internship placements.Open
MiHR — Gearing Up (Mining Sector Student Work Placement)Up to $5,000 per placement (50% of student gross pay); up to $7,000 (70%) for underrepresented student groupsMining and mineral-exploration employers creating co-op, internship, or field placements for post-secondary students.Open
Source: Employment and Social Development Canada — Student Work Placement Program

National cash grants and business contests

Six corporate-funded grant programs pay $10,000 (occasionally less) to Canadian small businesses nationwide, unlike government programs, entry is typically an online form plus a short pitch or story rather than a formal application package — but several run only one or two cycles a year, so check the status column before assuming it's open today.

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Mastercard Small Business Fund (Canada)$10,000 per winner (10 winners = $100,000 total annually) + Priceless mentorship experience in TorontoWomen-owned Canadian small businesses with 1–99 employees and revenue below the program's threshold.Between intakes
Amex Backing Canadian Small Businesses Grant$10,000 per business; 100 businesses funded per annual intakeIndependently owned Canadian small businesses (non-franchise), operating since at least the start of the prior year, under the program's revenue threshold.Between intakes
RBC Rock My Business Start-Up Awards$10,000 per award (8 awards annually = $80,000 total pool)Canadian entrepreneurs aged 18–39 with a pre-launch or part-time side-hustle business and minimal current sales.Open
Pizza Hut Canada — Equal Slice Grant Program$10,000 per winner (5 winners per cycle); $100,000 awarded annually across two cyclesCanadian entrepreneurs in any sector, with priority given to equity-deserving and underrepresented founders.Between intakes
Zensurance Small Business Grant$10,000 (two grand prize winners); $1,000 (eight finalists); $28,000 total prize poolCanadian businesses in BC, AB, SK, MB, ON, NB, NS, PE, or NL with revenue below the program's small-business threshold — requires a Zensurance insurance quote or existing customer status.Between intakes
Black Opportunity Fund — Black Entrepreneur Program (Licence & Certification Reimbursement)Up to $2,000 per calendar yearBlack-owned or Black-led Canadian businesses needing to reimburse a legally required licence, permit, or certification fee — rolling applications, no fixed deadline.Open

Other federal micro-programs

These five don't fit the wage-subsidy or contest pattern above — a fixed grant for Indigenous women founders, an MBA-intern subsidy, a Red Seal apprenticeship tax credit, an EV point-of-sale rebate, and a farm savings match.

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Indigenous Women Entrepreneurship Fund (IWEF)$2,500 per recipient (fixed amount — lottery-based selection, not merit-based)Indigenous women entrepreneurs starting or growing a business in Canada; selection is lottery-based, not merit-based.Between intakes
Mitacs Business Strategy Internship (BSI)$10,000 Mitacs contribution per internship (standard; company contributes $5,000); or $15,000 model (company contributes $7,500; up to $5,000 for project costs)Canadian businesses, non-profits, or public-sector organizations hosting a 4–6 month MBA intern project on market analysis, business development, or scale-up strategy.Open
Apprenticeship Job Creation Tax Credit (AJCTC)10% of eligible salaries, max $2,000 per apprentice per yearAny Canadian employer hiring an apprentice in a Red Seal trade during the apprentice's first two years.Open
Electric Vehicle Affordability Program (EVAP)Up to $5,000 per BEV/FCEV; up to $2,500 per PHEVIndividuals and businesses buying or leasing a new eligible zero-emission vehicle from a participating dealer — no application needed.Open
AgriInvest ProgramMatching government contribution of up to $10,000/year (1% of Allowable Net Sales, capped at $1M ANS)Canadian farms — corporations, co-operatives, partnerships, or individuals — that file farming income with the CRA and report sales and purchases of allowable commodities.Open

Micro-grants by province and territory

Nine provinces and territories — Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, the Northwest Territories, Ontario, PEI, Quebec, and Saskatchewan — have at least one province- or city-run program that pays $10,000 or less. Unlike the national programs above, most of these stack with a national program on the same project, since they come from different funders with different eligible costs; always confirm with the specific program before assuming two grants can be combined.

Alberta

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Alberta Innovates Micro Voucher ProgramUp to $10,000Alberta-based early-stage tech, clean-tech, or innovation-sector SMEs engaging professional services for development work.Between intakes
AWE Bridge ProgramUp to $5,000 in financial support (embedded in program delivery)Women entrepreneurs in Alberta with an early- or growth-stage business (roughly 1–5 years old) scaling marketing and operations.Between intakes
Storefront Refresh GrantUp to $1,000 (50% of costs)Retail and service businesses making minor exterior improvements in an Edmonton Business Improvement Area.Open

Verdict: The closest thing Alberta has to "the $5,000 grant" is the AWE Bridge Program, which pays exactly $5,000 to women entrepreneurs with no matching funds required. Everyone else should start with the Alberta Innovates Micro Voucher Program (up to $10,000) if it's currently open, or check the $10K–$25K section for Calgary's Circular Economy Grant Program.

British Columbia

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
B.C. Employer Training GrantUp to $10,000 per employee, capped at $300,000 per employer per yearBritish Columbia employers training employees or new hires through a third-party accredited training provider.Open
Creative BC Book Publishers Market FundUp to $10,000 per fiscal year; domestic events up to $1,500 (75% cost-share); international events up to $2,250 (75% cost-share)BC-based book publishers attending Creative BC's approved trade events, such as Frankfurt or the London Book Fair.Open

Manitoba

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Co-operative Graduate Hiring Incentive (COG-HI) — ManitobaUp to $5,000 per graduate (15% of wages, max $2,500/year × 2 years)Manitoba employers hiring a full-time co-op program graduate into a role related to their field of study.Open
Co-operative Students Hiring Incentive (COS-HI) — ManitobaUp to $5,000 per student lifetime (15% of wages per placement, multiple terms allowed)Manitoba employers hiring a student enrolled in a registered co-operative post-secondary education program.Open
Incoming Buyer Program (IBP) — ManitobaUp to $5,000 per project (50% of eligible expenses)Export-ready Manitoba SMEs hosting a first-time visit from an international buyer.Open
Manitoba Business Security Rebate ProgramUp to $2,500 per business locationManitoba small businesses with a customer-accessible public entrance, reimbursing security upgrades such as cameras, alarms, or lighting — first-come, first-served until the fund is exhausted.Open
West End BIZ Business Development GrantUp to 50% of costs, to a max of $1,000 (or $3,000 for large projects)Winnipeg retail, hospitality, and service businesses that are current West End BIZ members, covering marketing, training, renovations, or IT improvements.Open

Verdict: Manitoba has five live micro-grants right now, more than any other province on this list. The newest, the Manitoba Business Security Rebate Program (up to $2,500 per location), launched December 2025 and is running first-come, first-served until its $10M fund runs out — apply before it's exhausted rather than after.

Nova Scotia

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Nova Scotia Loyal Producer Labelling ProgramUp to $3,000 lifetime maximum (70% rebate on eligible expenditures)Registered Nova Scotia Loyal producers reimbursing eligible packaging costs for products made in Nova Scotia with Nova Scotia ingredients.Open
Nova Scotia Co-op Education Incentive$8/hour (up to 640 hours per placement, max ~$5,120); $9.50/hour for diversity group students (max ~$6,080)Nova Scotia employers hiring a co-op student for a 12–16 week work term through an accredited Nova Scotia institution.Open
Tourism Nova Scotia — RADIATE Tourism ProgramUp to $5,000 in digital marketing support plus package development coachingNova Scotia tourism operators building and selling late-fall or winter travel packages.Between intakes
Tourism Nova Scotia — Tourism Digital Assistance Program (TDAP)Up to $5,000 in digital consultant servicesNova Scotia tourism operators (listed or willing to list on NovaScotia.com) needing website, SEO, booking-system, or digital-marketing support.Between intakes

Northwest Territories

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Support for Entrepreneurs and Economic Development (SEED) - Micro-businessUp to $6,000 drawn over three years (not a lump sum)NWT micro-businesses (fewer than 5 employees) in arts and culture, agriculture, or services, at startup or early-growth stage.Open
SEED NWT — Business Intelligence and NetworkingUp to $4,000 per trip; $8,000 per business per yearNWT residents and NWT-registered businesses traveling to trade shows, conferences, or seminars relevant to their business.Open
NWT Arts Business Support FundUp to $10,000 per project; 20% applicant equity contribution requiredProfessional artists and small arts businesses that have resided in the Northwest Territories for at least six months.Open

Ontario

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
ventureLAB Accelerator ProgramsHardware Catalyst Initiative (HCI): in-kind only (access to $12M lab). EIF Stream 2: $10,000 cash (agri-tech/clean-tech, York Region only).Hardware, deep-tech, or engineering-intensive startups; the cash-award stream is limited to agri-tech or clean-tech startups in York Region.Between intakes
Summer Company (Ontario)Up to $3,000Ontario students aged 15–29 launching a new summer business and returning to school in the fall.Between intakes
Northern Ontario Exports Program — Trade Mission Support ProgramUp to $10,000 per projectNorthern Ontario municipalities, trade associations, or non-profits organizing inbound buyer visits or export missions for mining, forestry, or manufacturing exporters.Open
Ontario Co-operative Education Tax Credit (OCELC)25–30% refundable tax credit on co-op student wages; maximum $3,000 per qualifying work placementOntario businesses with a permanent establishment in the province, hiring post-secondary co-op students from an approved Ontario institution.Open
Invest Ottawa — Summer Company ProgramUp to $3,000 ($1,500 upfront + $1,500 on completion)Ottawa-area students aged 15–29 launching a new summer business (not an existing family business).Between intakes
Hamilton Commercial Vacancy Assistance ProgramUp to $10,000New permanent or pop-up commercial tenants moving into a previously vacant ground-floor space in a Hamilton BIA or commercial district.Open
London Core Area Safety Audit GrantUp to $10,000 (50% of eligible costs)Commercial property owners or tenants in London's Core Area installing exterior security upgrades such as cameras, lighting, gates, or landscaping.Open

Prince Edward Island

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
PEI Small Business Investment GrantUp to $3,750For-profit PEI small businesses upgrading equipment, technology, or leasehold improvements (excludes non-profits, fishers, farmers, real estate, and financial institutions).Open
Employ PEI (Wage Subsidy)Up to 50% of wages (max $12.50/hr) for up to 20 weeksPEI private-sector businesses hiring a previously unemployed worker who has been out of high school for two or more years.Open
PEI Export Trade AssistanceUp to 60% of eligible trade mission/show costs; up to 75% (max $3,000) for incoming buyer visitsActive exporters or export-ready businesses operating in Prince Edward Island. Apply before booking any travel.Open

Quebec

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
PME MTL — Commerce X Design$10,000 non-repayable (up to 20% of project cost; minimum $50,000 project)Montreal street-level retailers in the Centre-Est or Centre-Ville territory hiring a professional designer for a larger storefront project.Open

Quebec's under-$10,000 options in our catalog are narrow — this Montreal-only design grant requires a $50,000 project minimum. Most Quebec small businesses are better served by the province's larger tax-credit and innovation programs; see the Quebec grants hub.

Saskatchewan

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Young Entrepreneur Bursary Program$5,000Saskatchewan business owners aged 18–35 with a for-profit business under 10 years old, one recipient per Chamber of Commerce region.Open
SaskEnergy Commercial Space & Water Heating Rebate Program$325–$10,000 per building (varies by equipment type; maximums apply)SaskEnergy commercial natural gas customers upgrading heating or hot water equipment — furnaces, boilers, condensing systems, HRV/ERV.Open
STEP — Business Advisory Services Funding ProgramUp to $5,000 reimbursement per fiscal year (50% of eligible third-party consulting costs)Saskatchewan exporters (operating 2+ years) seeking independent consulting advice on non-U.S. international market entry.Open
STEP — Market Diversification Program (MDP)$2,500-$10,000 per year depending on STEP membership tier (Non-member: $6,000 max; Premium member: $10,000 max); 50% reimbursement for initial visits, 30% for return visitsSaskatchewan exporters (operating 2+ years, with at least half Saskatchewan content in their product) attending trade shows or market visits in non-U.S. markets.Open

Atlantic Canada (New Brunswick, Newfoundland & Labrador, Nova Scotia, PEI)

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
BBI Business Consultancy Advisory Services GrantUp to $7,500 (incl. HST)Black-owned Atlantic Canadian businesses (at least one-third Black ownership, operating six months or more) needing an external consultant's services.Between intakes
Source: Black Business Initiative — Business Consultancy Advisory Services Grant

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$10,000–$25,000: one step up

Forty-five programs in the GrantCompass catalog pay between $10,000 and $25,000 — nearly double the count under $10,000. Below are 10 of the strongest, picked for national reach or provincial diversity; the rest are searchable across the site's province and industry hub pages.

ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Innovation PEI — Ignition FundUp to $25,000PEI founders validating ideas, building prototypes, or launching new tech/R&D ventures.Open
Patent Collective Program — Innovation Asset Collective (IAC)Up to $20,000 per round for Full Members; up to $10,000 per round for Associate Members (free tier); multiple rounds per yearCanadian cleantech SMEs — Full Members with fewer than 500 employees, Associate Members with fewer than 25 employees and early-stage revenue — building a patent strategy.Open
Alberta Export Expansion Program (AEEP)Up to $15,000 per organization per fiscal yearAlberta SMEs (mid-size, incorporated in Alberta for at least a year) attending an international trade show to enter a new market.Open
Manitoba Export Development Program (EDP)Up to 75% reimbursement for trade show exhibitors; 50% for attendees; Incoming Buyer: up to $5,000Manitoba-based companies with a majority Manitoba workforce, attending or exhibiting at an international trade show.Open
NL JobsNL Wage Subsidy60-80% subsidy up to $12/hr for 10-28 weeks, plus $2,000 employer completion bonusNL private-sector or non-profit employers creating a newly funded position.Open
ProgramAmountWho it’s forStatus
Apprenticeship Service Employer Grant$5,000–$10,000 per apprentice (base + equity bonus); up to $20,000 for employers hiring multiple apprenticesEmployers in any sector hiring a first-year apprentice in one of 39 designated Red Seal trades, with an added bonus for equity-deserving apprentices.Between intakes
Circular Economy Grant Program$5,000 - $25,000Calgary non-profits, societies, and BIAs only (not typical for-profit small businesses) reducing or reusing waste.Between intakes
PME MTL Fonds Entrepreneuriat Commercial (Retail Fund)Up to $25,000 per 12-month period (maximum 80% of project costs)Montreal street-facing retail businesses launching, adapting, or strengthening a commercial storefront.Open
Nova Scotia Productivity and Innovation Voucher Program (PIVP)Tier 1: up to $15,000 (up to $25,000 for advanced data/AI); Tier 2: up to $25,000Nova Scotia SMEs co-developing a product or process with one of nine NS post-secondary institutions.Between intakes
Export Funding NB — New Brunswick Export Development ProgramUp to $15,000 (65% reimbursement of eligible costs; minimum $5,000 total project size)New Brunswick SMEs (with a two-year track record of revenue, profit, or workforce growth) exporting or planning to export outside Canada.Open

Verdict: If your business is past the earliest stage — you have real revenue, employees, or an export plan — the $10K–$25K tier is usually a better fit than chasing the smallest possible award. Export reimbursement programs (Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick) in particular pay out a percentage of costs you're already planning to spend, not a flat prize.

How to spot a fake "$5,000 government grant" offer

The real programs on this page share a few things in common that scam offers almost never do. Before you click, apply, or hand over any information, check for these signs:

Verdict: Every program listed on this page is free to apply for, publicly documented, and administered by a named organization with its own website. If an offer you received doesn't match that pattern, search for the specific program name yourself before responding — don't rely on a link or number someone sent you directly.

Fastest path by province

Start here if you just want the single fastest thing to check for your own province or territory.

Alberta: Check the Alberta Innovates Micro Voucher Program (up to $10,000, tech services) first; if you're a woman entrepreneur, the AWE Bridge Program pays a flat $5,000 with no matching required. See all Alberta grants →
British Columbia: The B.C. Employer Training Grant (up to $10,000 per employee) covers most training-related costs. See all BC grants →
Manitoba: If you need security upgrades, the Manitoba Business Security Rebate (up to $2,500) is open and first-come, first-served; for hiring a co-op student or graduate, check COG-HI or COS-HI. See all Manitoba grants →
New Brunswick: No NB-specific program under $10,000 in our catalog. Black-owned businesses can use the Atlantic-wide BBI grant (up to $7,500); exporters should look at Export Funding NB (up to $15,000) in the step-up section. See all New Brunswick grants →
Newfoundland & Labrador: No NL-specific program under $10,000 in our catalog. The JobsNL Wage Subsidy (up to roughly $20,000 depending on hours and rate) in the step-up section is the closest fit for hiring. See all Newfoundland & Labrador grants →
Nova Scotia: Tourism operators should start with RADIATE or the Tourism Digital Assistance Program (both up to $5,000); everyone hiring a co-op student should check the NS Co-op Education Incentive. See all Nova Scotia grants →
Northwest Territories: The SEED Micro-business stream (up to $6,000, drawn over three years) is the standard starting point for a new NT micro-business. See all territories grants →
Nunavut: No program in our catalog pays $10,000 or less, but three territorial programs pay up to $25,000 — Baffin BDC Small Business Support, Kivalliq Partners in Development, and Kivalliq Inuit Association Business Development Fund. See all territories grants →
Ontario: Retailers filling a vacant storefront should check Hamilton's or London's programs if local; everyone hiring a co-op student should check the Ontario Co-operative Education Tax Credit (up to $3,000 refundable). See all Ontario grants →
Prince Edward Island: Start with the PEI Small Business Investment Grant (equipment/tech, up to $3,750) or Employ PEI if you're hiring. See all PEI grants →
Quebec: Micro-grant coverage in our catalog is thin outside Montreal retail (PME MTL Commerce X Design, min. $50,000 project). Most Quebec founders should start with the province's larger tax-credit programs instead. See all Quebec grants →
Saskatchewan: Young business owners should check the Young Entrepreneur Bursary ($5,000 flat); exporters should check the STEP programs (up to $10,000, reimbursement-based). See all Saskatchewan grants →
Yukon: No program in our catalog pays $10,000 or less. The Yukon Foundation — Douglas B. Craig Grant (typically $5,000–$25,000, project-dependent) is the closest option. See all Yukon grants →

How to use this list

This roster only includes programs verified in the GrantCompass catalog as active, upcoming, or between intakes, with a published maximum funding amount of $10,000 or less. It will not include every hyper-local chamber-of-commerce or business-improvement-area micro-grant in Canada — hundreds of small associations and local foundations run one-off grants that never make it into a searchable database. Treat this as the most complete documented list, not a literal every-micro-grant-that-exists inventory.

Most of these programs can be combined. A Manitoba retailer can generally claim the Manitoba Business Security Rebate for cameras and the West End BIZ Business Development Grant for a website refresh in the same year, because they're funded by different levels of government and cover different costs. Always confirm with the specific program before assuming two grants can stack — some cap total government assistance on the same project.

The single biggest reason applicants get rejected from small programs like these is applying for costs already incurred. Nearly every program on this page — from the B.C. Employer Training Grant to Nova Scotia's tourism programs — requires the expense to happen after approval, not before. Read the eligible-expenses list on the program page before you spend a dollar.

If a program shows "Between intakes" in the tables above, it isn't dead — it's paused between application windows, which is normal for smaller programs that fund on an annual or semi-annual cycle. Bookmark its GrantCompass page and check back; we track status changes as programs reopen.

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Eligibility, funding amounts, deadlines and how to apply

Eligibility requirements

Every program on this page publishes its own eligibility list — a legal registration requirement, a province of operation, sometimes a demographic or sector restriction. Unlike a single "$5,000 grant" myth, there is no shared eligibility bar across all 50 programs; check each program's own page before assuming you qualify.

Funding amounts and cost-share ratios

Amounts on this page range from a $1,000 Edmonton storefront reimbursement to a $10,000 flat cash grant. Many are cost-shared (the government or funder pays 50–80% of an eligible expense) rather than a flat cheque; read the "Amount" column above for the exact structure before budgeting around it.

Application process and timeline

Government micro-grants use a standard online application through the administering agency's own portal. Corporate contests (Amex, RBC, Pizza Hut, Zensurance) typically add a short pitch or story component. Step: open the program's linked page above, confirm the current status, then apply directly on the official site — GrantCompass does not process applications.

Key deadlines

Most programs on this page are rolling or run multiple intakes per year rather than one fixed annual deadline — 37 of the 50 are open right now. A handful of corporate contests (Zensurance, Pizza Hut) run exactly one or two fixed cycles a year; those are marked "Between intakes" above when the current cycle has closed.

Stacking these programs

Unlike a single national program, most micro-grants here are funded by different levels of government or different companies, so a business can often combine a national wage subsidy with a provincial cost-share program on the same hire or project. Confirm total-assistance caps with each program directly.

What's Changed in 2026