Canada · Food service · 2026

Restaurant and food-business grants in Canada: see what you qualify for

Pure restaurant grants are scarce. Answer a few quick questions and watch the list narrow to the storefront, food-safety, hiring, and energy programs your food business can actually get, free, no account needed.

The short answer

There is almost never a grant open to a restaurant just for being a restaurant. Governments rarely fund a single food-service business directly. What a restaurant, cafe, or food business can get is category-based: municipal storefront and facade grants, provincial food-safety rebates, federal and provincial hiring subsidies, and utility energy retrofit rebates. Start with your city's storefront programs, add a food-safety or hiring subsidy, and use the matcher above to see which of these actually apply to your business.

Updated July 17, 2026. Every figure below is checked against our own catalog data or a named government source.

What's actually in our catalog We track 126 programs tagged for food and beverage or hospitality businesses across Canada. 70 are active right now, 37 are between intakes (register interest, do not apply yet), and 14 are fully closed. The median maximum award across the active grants with a published cap is $90,000. But here is the honest part: only five programs in the whole catalog carry the word "restaurant" or "dining" in their name, and every single one of those is either closed or between intakes today. The money a restaurant can actually get is filed under storefront, food safety, hiring, and energy, not under "restaurant grant."

Why restaurant grants barely exist

In one line Governments almost never write a grant for a single restaurant, so the honest answer to "are there restaurant grants" is: not directly, but there is real money one category over.

Search "restaurant grants Canada" and you will find listicles promising programs that, on inspection, are closed, US-only, or open to a Business Improvement Area rather than an individual restaurant. That is not a coincidence. Food service is one of the most crowded sectors in the country, so governments fund it indirectly, through the building you occupy, the certifications you earn, the people you hire, and the energy you use, rather than cutting a cheque to the restaurant itself.

Here is the citation-vacuum framing that most pages skip. This is what is confirmed in the catalog as of July 17, 2026, and what is genuinely not the case:

The verdict

Stop searching for a "restaurant grant." The single highest-value move for most food businesses is to search by what you are spending money on instead, a storefront renovation, a certification, a hire, or an equipment upgrade, because that is where the money is actually filed.

Common question

Is the DoorDash restaurant grant real, and can I apply?

It is real, but it is reserved and not always open. The DoorDash #BlackFoodEnergy Restaurant Grant, run with the Black Opportunity Fund, awards a fixed $10,220 to roughly 30 recipients per cohort, and every recipient receives the same amount rather than a variable award. Two things matter before you plan around it. First, it is restricted to Black-owned or Black-led food businesses, defined as majority ownership or leadership by Black Canadians, so it is not open to every restaurant. Second, it is currently between intakes, which means the correct action is to register interest through the Black Opportunity Fund and wait for the next round to open, not to submit an application today. If you qualify on ownership, it is one of the few genuinely restaurant-specific grants in the country and worth watching.

Where the real money actually is

In one line Four categories carry almost all the funding a restaurant can realistically get, and each is a different kind of money with different cash-flow rules.

Once you stop looking for a "restaurant grant" and start looking by spending category, the landscape opens up. These four buckets hold nearly all the money a food business can actually reach, and each behaves differently once you win it.

Storefront and facade

Municipal, most restaurant-relevant

City and Business Improvement Area grants that pay for a facade, a fit-out, or filling a vacant space. Hyper-local and the closest thing to a true restaurant grant.

ExampleOttawa heritage facade, up to $75,000
Food safety

Provincial certification rebates

Provinces reimburse a large share of food-safety training and audit costs. Best fit for a food business that also processes or wholesales.

ExampleManitoba, up to $40,000 (60% cost-share)
Hiring and energy

Wage subsidies and utility rebates

Federal and provincial wage subsidies for students and summer staff, plus utility rebates for efficient kitchen equipment. Open to almost any business.

ExampleStudent placements, $5,000 each

The distinction between these is not academic. A storefront grant is usually reimbursement-based, so you pay the contractor first and claim the money back. A food-safety rebate is cost-share, so you fund your 30 to 40% share up front. A wage subsidy pays out per pay period once the hire is on payroll. Knowing which one you are looking at changes how you plan cash flow.

The verdict

For a restaurant with a physical location, the municipal storefront and facade programs are the best single bet, because they are the closest to a true restaurant grant and often cover 50 to 75% of a renovation. The catch is that they are hyper-local, so which ones exist depends entirely on your city and district.

Common question

What is the biggest grant a single restaurant can realistically get?

For most independent restaurants the largest single grant is a municipal storefront or facade program. Ottawa's Centretown Heritage Facade Improvement Program covers up to 75% of eligible costs to a maximum of $75,000, though it is restricted to designated heritage storefronts. Provincial food-safety programs go up to $40,000 in Manitoba and $20,000 in Nova Scotia. The eye-catching figures you sometimes see, like Toronto's Dining District Stream 2 at up to $100,000, almost always require a Business Improvement Area or non-profit to lead the application on behalf of a whole street, not a single restaurant applying on its own. A realistic planning number for one independent restaurant is $10,000 to $75,000 across one or two stacked programs, not a single six-figure cheque.

Storefront and facade programs

Answer capsule Municipal facade, fit-out, and commercial-vacancy grants are the most genuinely restaurant-relevant money in Canada, and they typically cover 50 to 100% of eligible renovation costs, capped between $10,000 and $75,000.

If your restaurant has a physical storefront, this is the category to check first. These programs are run by cities and Business Improvement Areas, which means they are hyper-local: the ones available to you depend entirely on your address. The table below is a representative sample of active and recent programs from our catalog, not an exhaustive national list, because there are hundreds of municipal programs and most cover a single neighbourhood.

ProgramWhereAmountStatus
Centretown Heritage FacadeOttawa, ONUp to $75,000 (75% of costs)Active to Dec 2026
PME MTL Retail FundMontreal, QCUp to $25,000 (80% of costs)Active, rolling
Hamilton Commercial Vacancy AssistanceHamilton, ONUp to $10,000Active, ongoing
PME MTL Commerce X DesignMontreal, QC$10,000 flat (min $50,000 project)Active until funds exhausted
West End BIZ Business DevelopmentWinnipeg, MBUp to $1,000 ($3,000 large projects)Active, ongoing
Toronto Economic Resiliency (TERI)Toronto, ONUp to $24,000Between intakes
Toronto Dining DistrictToronto, ONUp to $100,000 (BIA-led Stream 2)Between intakes
CafeTO Dining DistrictToronto, ONUp to $25,000 (50% cost-share)Closed (BIA-led)
Read the applicant, not just the amount. Two of the biggest numbers here, Toronto Dining District's $100,000 and CafeTO's $25,000, are open to a Business Improvement Area or non-profit, not to an individual restaurant. If you are a single restaurant, the ones you can apply to yourself are the facade, retail-fund, and vacancy programs. Ask your local BIA whether it runs or plans a dining-district program you could benefit from.
Sources: City of Ottawa (Centretown Heritage Facade Improvement Program); PME MTL; City of Hamilton (Commercial Vacancy Assistance Program); Winnipeg West End BIZ; City of Toronto (Dining District and CafeTO programs). Program statuses verified against the GrantCompass catalog, July 17, 2026.
If you're opening in a previously empty storefront

Look first at commercial-vacancy programs like Hamilton's, which are built specifically to reward a new tenant taking over a vacant ground-floor space. These reward exactly what a new restaurant does, and the eligibility test is usually just that the space was recently empty.

If your building is a designated heritage property

Heritage facade programs like Ottawa's are the most generous storefront money, up to 75% of eligible costs, but the gate is real: the property has to be designated or a contributing heritage building. Confirm your building's status with your city before you count on it.

Food-safety and certification rebates

Answer capsule If you are pursuing a formal food-safety certification, several provinces reimburse most of the cost. Nova Scotia covers 100% of training and 70% of other costs up to $20,000; Manitoba funds 60% of costs up to $40,000.

This category is a strong fit for a food business that processes, packages, or wholesales, and a partial fit for a restaurant that is formalizing its food-safety practices. The programs target training, audits, and the upgrades needed to pass a recognized certification like SQF or BRCGS.

ProgramWhereAmountStatus
Manitoba Food Safety & TraceabilityManitobaUp to $40,000 (60% cost-share)Active (annual intake)
NS Local Supplier Food Safety SupportNova ScotiaUp to $20,000 (100% training, 70% other)Active to Sep 15, 2026
Timing note: Manitoba's program runs an annual intake, and its 2026 application deadline was July 16, 2026, so it is now between cycles until the next intake opens. Nova Scotia's pilot is accepting applications until September 15, 2026. Always confirm the current intake on the delivering department's page before you build a timeline around either one.
Sources: Manitoba Agriculture (Food Safety and Traceability Program, delivered under the Sustainable Canadian Agricultural Partnership); Nova Scotia Department of Agriculture (Local Supplier Food Safety Support Pilot). Deadlines and statuses per the GrantCompass catalog, July 17, 2026.
Common question

Does a sit-down restaurant qualify for these food-safety programs, or only processors?

These programs are written primarily for food producers, processors, warehouses, and suppliers rather than a dine-in restaurant, so the cleanest fit is a food business that also manufactures or wholesales, a bakery with a packaged retail line, a caterer with a commissary kitchen, or a restaurant launching a bottled sauce or frozen-meal product. If that describes you, the reimbursement is generous: Nova Scotia covers 100% of eligible training costs, which is unusual, and 70% of everything else up to the $20,000 cap. If you are a pure dine-in restaurant with no processing arm, you are more likely to find value in the storefront, hiring, and energy categories on this page. The matcher above checks your actual business type against the specific eligibility rules so you are not guessing which side of that line you fall on.

Hiring and wage subsidies

Answer capsule Restaurants are labour-heavy, and several wage subsidies are open to any Canadian employer. The Student Work Placement Program pays $5,000 per student ($7,000 for underrepresented groups); Canada Summer Jobs subsidizes up to 100% of minimum wage for summer staff.

Wage subsidies are one of the few funding categories that is genuinely open to almost any restaurant, because most are sector-agnostic. They will not pay for a renovation, but for a business where labour is the largest line item, they can meaningfully offset the cost of a seasonal or student hire.

ProgramWhat it paysAmountStatus
Student Work Placement ProgramWage subsidy for post-secondary student placements$5,000/placement ($7,000 underrepresented)Active, ongoing
Canada Summer JobsSummer wage subsidy for youth aged 15 to 30Up to 100% of minimum wageBetween intakes
Timing note: Canada Summer Jobs runs one annual cycle. The 2026 intake closed December 11, 2025, and the next intake is expected around November 2026, so this is one to prepare for rather than apply to right now. The Student Work Placement Program accepts applications on an ongoing basis and requires the hire to be a post-secondary student in a relevant program. Several provinces also run their own wage subsidies open to restaurants, including options in Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, and Yukon.
Sources: Employment and Social Development Canada (Student Work Placement Program); Government of Canada (Canada Summer Jobs). Intake windows per the GrantCompass catalog, July 17, 2026.
The verdict

For a restaurant hiring students or summer staff anyway, the Student Work Placement Program is the lowest-friction win on this page, ongoing intake, sector-agnostic, and $5,000 per placement, with no renovation or certification required.

Energy and equipment retrofits

Answer capsule Commercial kitchens are energy-intensive, and provincial utility programs rebate a large share of efficient refrigeration, HVAC, and lighting upgrades, often 40 to 80% of equipment cost.

A restaurant's refrigeration, cooking, and HVAC load makes it a strong candidate for utility efficiency rebates, which exist in nearly every province and are usually run by the electric or gas utility rather than a government department. These are among the most reliably available programs in this guide because they are ongoing rather than competitive intakes.

ProgramWhereAmountStatus
Efficiency NS Small Business EnergyNova ScotiaUp to 80% rebate on eligible upgradesActive, ongoing
BC Hydro Business Energy-Saving IncentivesBritish Columbia~40% of equipment cost; $50,000+ customActive, ongoing
SaskPower Commercial Energy OptimizationSaskatchewanUp to $200,000 per businessActive (pre-app by Jul 31, 2026)
Not everything here is grant money. Quebec restaurants can also look at ESSOR Component 1C for digital and point-of-sale upgrades (up to $50,000 at 50% cost-share), and Manitoba runs a Business Security Rebate of up to $2,500 for camera and alarm systems. Check your own province's utility and economic-development pages, since the specific programs vary by jurisdiction and most are not restaurant-specific.
Sources: Efficiency Nova Scotia (Small Business Energy Solutions); BC Hydro (Business Energy-Saving Incentives); SaskPower (Commercial Energy Optimization Program). Statuses per the GrantCompass catalog, July 17, 2026.

Which one fits your business

Your best starting point depends on what you are actually doing. Use the matcher at the top of this page to see it applied to your exact business, or read the verdicts below.

Renovating or opening a storefront

Start with your city and BIA storefront programs. A facade or commercial-vacancy grant is the closest thing to a real restaurant grant and often covers half or more of the work.

Processing or wholesaling food, not just serving it

Check your province's food-safety rebate, up to $40,000 in Manitoba, up to $20,000 in Nova Scotia, especially if you are pursuing a formal certification.

Hiring students or summer staff

Apply to the Student Work Placement Program now (ongoing, $5,000 per student) and prepare a Canada Summer Jobs application for the next cycle.

Upgrading kitchen equipment or systems

Go to your provincial utility efficiency program for refrigeration, HVAC, and lighting rebates, and look at a digital or security rebate if your province runs one.

Black-owned or Black-led

Watch the DoorDash #BlackFoodEnergy grant ($10,220, reserved, between intakes) alongside the general categories above. Register interest so you hear when the next cohort opens.

Not sure yet

Answer the questions in the matcher at the top of this page. It checks your business against every food and hospitality program in the catalog, not just the ones on this list.

How to apply

There is no single restaurant-grant portal in Canada. Each program applies to the body that delivers it, but the sequence that works for most food businesses is the same.

  1. Reframe away from "restaurant grant." Decide what you are actually spending money on, a storefront renovation, a certification, a hire, or an equipment upgrade, and search by that category. This alone finds most of the money.
  2. Check your city and BIA first. Municipal facade, vacancy, and commercial-district programs are the most restaurant-relevant and the most hyper-local. Call your Business Improvement Area, since these programs often are not well indexed online.
  3. Claim food-safety rebates if you certify. If you are pursuing SQF, BRCGS, or provincial food-safety certification, apply to your province's program before you start spending, since most reimburse rather than pre-pay.
  4. Line up hiring subsidies around your staffing plan. Apply to the Student Work Placement Program whenever you hire a student, and mark the Canada Summer Jobs intake (expected November 2026) on your calendar.
  5. Add an energy or equipment rebate. Contact your provincial utility before buying refrigeration, HVAC, or lighting, since pre-approval is often required to qualify.
  6. Match your business to the full catalog. Use the free matcher at the top of this page to check your province, structure, and revenue against every food and hospitality program at once, so you are not relying on a single category.

FAQ

Are there grants for opening a restaurant in Canada?
There is almost never a grant open to any restaurant simply to open or operate. Governments rarely fund an individual food-service business directly because the sector is large and competitive. What restaurants can get is category-based: municipal storefront and facade grants, provincial food-safety rebates, federal and provincial hiring subsidies, and utility energy retrofits. A new restaurant with a physical build-out is most likely to qualify for a city storefront or commercial-vacancy program.
What is the biggest grant a restaurant can realistically get?
For most independent restaurants the largest single grant is a municipal storefront or facade program. Ottawa's Centretown Heritage Facade Improvement Program covers up to 75% of eligible costs to a maximum of $75,000 for a designated heritage storefront. Food-safety programs like Manitoba's cover up to $40,000 and Nova Scotia's up to $20,000. Figures in the hundreds of thousands, like Toronto's Dining District Stream 2 at up to $100,000, generally require a Business Improvement Area or non-profit to lead the application, not a single restaurant.
Is there a DoorDash restaurant grant in Canada?
Yes, but it is reserved and not always open. The DoorDash #BlackFoodEnergy Restaurant Grant, run with the Black Opportunity Fund, awards a fixed $10,220 to roughly 30 Black-owned or Black-led restaurants per cohort. It is currently between intakes, meaning you register interest for the next round rather than apply today, and it is restricted to Black-owned or Black-led food businesses.
Can a restaurant get a hiring or wage subsidy?
Yes. The Student Work Placement Program pays $5,000 per post-secondary student placement, or $7,000 for students from underrepresented groups, and any Canadian employer in any sector can apply. Canada Summer Jobs subsidizes up to 100% of minimum wage for summer positions but runs an annual cycle; the 2026 intake closed in December 2025, with the next intake expected around November 2026. Several provinces also run their own wage subsidies open to restaurants.
Are there grants to renovate a restaurant?
Renovation money for restaurants almost always comes from municipal programs tied to a physical storefront. Examples include Ottawa's heritage facade program (up to $75,000), Hamilton's Commercial Vacancy Assistance Program for new tenants of a vacant ground-floor space (up to $10,000), and Montreal's PME MTL retail fund for street-facing shops (up to $25,000). These are hyper-local, so the ones available to you depend entirely on your city and district.
Do food-safety certifications get funded?
In several provinces, yes. Nova Scotia's Local Supplier Food Safety Support Pilot reimburses 100% of training costs and 70% of other food-safety costs up to $20,000. Manitoba's Food Safety and Traceability Program funds 60% of eligible costs up to $40,000. These target food producers, processors, and suppliers pursuing formal certification, so a restaurant that also processes or wholesales food is the best fit.
How many restaurant and food grants does GrantCompass track?
We track 126 programs tagged for food and beverage or hospitality businesses across Canada. Of those, 70 are active, 37 are between intakes, and 14 are fully closed. The median maximum award across the active grants with a published cap is $90,000. Only a handful carry the word restaurant in their name, and every one of those is either closed or between intakes right now, which is why the real money is filed under storefront, food safety, hiring, and energy instead.

Sources and official references

  1. Business grants and funding, City of Ottawa (Centretown Heritage Facade Improvement Program)
  2. PME MTL (Retail Fund and Commerce X Design)
  3. Funding and incentives, City of Hamilton (Commercial Vacancy Assistance Program)
  4. Student Work Placement Program, Employment and Social Development Canada
  5. Canada Summer Jobs, Government of Canada
  6. Business energy programs, Efficiency Nova Scotia
  7. Black Opportunity Fund (DoorDash #BlackFoodEnergy Restaurant Grant delivery partner)

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