Summary
Programs
Who Qualifies
Verdicts
What's Changed
SK Geography
Resources
Saskatchewan · Manufacturing · 2026

Manufacturing grants in Saskatchewan — see which you qualify for

Answer a few quick questions and watch the map narrow to the ones your Saskatchewan manufacturer can actually get — free, no account.

Quick answer: Saskatchewan manufacturers can access 8 targeted programs in 2026. The most direct path for agri-processing and manufacturing businesses is the Saskatchewan Lean Improvements in Manufacturing (SLIM) grant — up to $750,000 (50% of eligible costs) for automation, productivity, and emissions-reduction projects. The Saskatchewan Advantage Innovation Fund (SAIF) provides up to $450,000 (30% of project budget) for R&D projects with private sector partners. Investors in SK manufacturing companies can claim the SMEITC (45% tax credit), and growth-stage manufacturers should look at PrairiesCan BSP for interest-free repayable contributions up to $5M. Source: Saskatchewan SLIM program; Saskatchewan SAIF

Saskatchewan Manufacturing Funding Programs

Programs classified by type. Green = non-repayable grant or cost-share. Blue = tax credit. Amber = repayable contribution. Pink = rebate.

Saskatchewan's manufacturing funding ecosystem layers provincial-specific programs (SLIM, SAIF, SMEITC, SVAI, SaskEnergy rebate) with Prairies-regional programs (PrairiesCan BSP, CEDD) and national programs (IRAP, SR&ED, NGen). Stack them — they cover different cost categories.

1. Saskatchewan Lean Improvements in Manufacturing (SLIM)

Cost-Share Grant
Up to $750,000 (50% of eligible costs)
Admin: Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture Intake: Ongoing — apply before starting project Eligibility: SK agri-business or manufacturer; must adopt automation, advanced technology, or emission-reduction equipment

SLIM is Saskatchewan's primary grant for manufacturers and agri-processors adopting automation, robotics, lean-process technology, or clean-tech equipment. The 50% cost-share rate applies to eligible capital costs — conveyor systems, automated packaging lines, grain-handling automation, precision-ag technology, emissions-reduction retrofits. Projects must improve productivity or reduce environmental footprint. Tier 1 projects (up to $200K eligible costs) require a straightforward application; Tier 2 projects (up to $1.5M eligible costs, 50% grant = $750K) require a more detailed business case. Apply before purchasing equipment — retroactive claims are not accepted.

Source: Saskatchewan SLIM program page
SLIM Funding Tiers — Saskatchewan Manufacturing Grant
TierMax Eligible CostsMax Grant (50%)Application Complexity
Tier 1$400,000$200,000Standard application form
Tier 2$1,500,000$750,000Detailed business case required

2. Saskatchewan Advantage Innovation Fund (SAIF)

Cost-Share Grant
Up to $450,000 (30% of total project budget)
Admin: Innovation Saskatchewan Intake: Ongoing — project-specific intake Eligibility: SK-based organization leading R&D with at least one private sector partner; 70%+ industry-funded

SAIF supports applied R&D projects in Saskatchewan's priority sectors: renewable energy, manufacturing, healthcare, technology, and natural resources. The program requires a lead organization — often a manufacturer or technology company — and active private sector partners who fund at least 70% of total project costs. SAIF covers up to 30%, capped at $450,000. Projects must have a clear commercialization pathway. Manufacturers developing proprietary process technology, advanced materials, or industrial automation systems are strong candidates. Innovation Saskatchewan staff in Saskatoon and Regina provide pre-application advisory support.

Source: Saskatchewan SAIF program page
SK Manufacturing Grants — Side by Side
ProgramMax AmountGovernment ShareBest For
SLIM$750,00050%Automation & lean manufacturing
SAIF$450,00030%Applied R&D with industry partners
PrairiesCan BSP$5,000,000Varies (repayable)Scale-up & productivity

3. Saskatchewan Small and Medium Enterprise Investment Tax Credit (SMEITC)

Tax Credit (to Investors)
45% tax credit to investors; company raises up to $4,000,000
Admin: Saskatchewan Ministry of Finance Intake: Ongoing — apply for Eligible Business Corporation (EBC) status Eligibility: SK-incorporated SME in manufacturing, industrial, food-beverage, or related sectors; <$20M assets; active business requirement

The SMEITC awards a 45% non-refundable tax credit to investors who purchase newly-issued equity in eligible Saskatchewan manufacturing and industrial SMEs. The credit goes to the investor — not the company — but the company benefits by attracting capital at a substantially lower effective cost. Investors can claim up to $140,000/year (carrying forward unused credits up to 7 years). The company receives the investment proceeds directly. A manufacturing company raising $500,000 from SMEITC-eligible investors effectively attracts capital at a 45% discount. Apply to the Ministry of Finance for Eligible Business Corporation designation before issuing shares.

Source: Saskatchewan SMEITC

4. PrairiesCan Business Scale-up and Productivity (BSP)

Interest-Free Repayable
$200,000 to $5,000,000
Admin: Prairies Economic Development Canada (PrairiesCan) Intake: Ongoing — contact PrairiesCan office in Saskatoon or Regina Eligibility: Incorporated business in AB, SK, or MB; high-growth potential; manufacturing, technology, clean-tech, or agri-food sector

PrairiesCan's BSP program provides interest-free repayable contributions ($200K–$5M) for incorporated high-growth businesses scaling productivity, market reach, or operational capacity. Manufacturing businesses in Saskatoon, Regina, Prince Albert, Moose Jaw, Swift Current, or rural Saskatchewan are all eligible. PrairiesCan prioritizes projects in advanced manufacturing, clean technology, agri-food processing, and digital transformation. The interest-free structure means repayments go directly to reducing principal — no interest costs over the repayment period, which distinguishes PrairiesCan from commercial loans significantly. Contact the Saskatoon or Regina office before submitting; program officers conduct pre-application consultations.

Source: PrairiesCan BSP program
PrairiesCan Programs for Saskatchewan Manufacturers
ProgramAmount RangeTypeWho It Serves
BSP$200K–$5MInterest-free repayableHigh-growth manufacturers
CEDD$75K–$1.5MNon-repayableNon-profits, Indigenous organizations, municipalities
RAII$250K–$5MNon-repayableNon-profits deploying AI in manufacturing/logistics

5. Saskatchewan Value-Added Agriculture Incentive (SVAI)

Tax Credit
15–40% corporate income tax credit; maximum $250M per project
Admin: Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture Intake: Ongoing — project pre-approval required Eligibility: SK corporation; capital investment in new or expanded value-added agriculture processing; minimum $10M capital cost

The SVAI is Saskatchewan's flagship incentive for large capital investments in value-added agriculture processing facilities. The non-refundable corporate income tax credit rate starts at 15% and scales to 40% based on investment size, job creation, and Saskatchewan input use. A canola crusher in Yorkton building a $50M expansion, a lentil protein isolate facility in Humboldt, or a pea processing plant near Saskatoon all fit this program. The minimum $10M capital cost screens out smaller projects; SLIM is the better fit for sub-$1.5M capital investments. Revenue Saskatchewan administers tax certificate issuance after the Ministry of Agriculture approves the project.

Source: Saskatchewan SVAI program

6. SaskEnergy Commercial Space & Water Heating Rebate

Post-Install Rebate
$325–$10,000 per building
Admin: SaskEnergy / SaskPower Intake: Ongoing — apply within 90 days of installation Eligibility: SK commercial customer (manufacturing, industrial, commercial, retail); upgrading natural gas space or water heating equipment

SaskEnergy and SaskPower co-fund post-installation rebates for commercial and industrial customers upgrading to high-efficiency natural gas space heating, unit heaters, boilers, or water heating systems. Manufacturing and industrial facilities in Saskatoon, Regina, Prince Albert, and rural Saskatchewan qualify. Rebate amounts range from $325 (standard unit heater) to $10,000 (large industrial boiler systems). The rebate is not stacked with other utility rebates for the same equipment, but can be combined with SLIM for automation upgrades that also include building envelope improvements. Apply within 90 days of installation — retroactive claims beyond that window are rejected.

Source: SaskEnergy Commercial Rebates
SaskEnergy Rebate Amounts by Equipment Type
EquipmentRebate RangeEligibility Screen
Unit heater (gas)$325–$800≥80% AFUE efficiency
Packaged unit / rooftop$800–$3,000≥80% AFUE; commercial building
Industrial boiler$3,000–$10,000≥85% efficiency; registered installer

7. Industrial Research Assistance Program (IRAP)

Non-Repayable Grant
Up to $1M typical (average ~$94K); up to $10M for larger projects
Admin: National Research Council Canada (NRC) Intake: Ongoing — relationship-driven; contact ITA first Eligibility: Incorporated Canadian SME, 500 or fewer FTEs; genuine technological uncertainty required

Canada's largest non-repayable R&D grant, with NRC Industrial Technology Advisors (ITAs) based in Saskatoon and Regina serving Saskatchewan manufacturers. IRAP funds genuine technological uncertainty — developing a new manufacturing process, advancing a proprietary material, building custom automation software, or solving a production challenge with no established solution. Never start R&D before IRAP approval; IRAP cannot fund work already completed. The Saskatoon ITA office also connects manufacturers to NSERC partnerships and University of Saskatchewan research. Companies in aerospace components, precision agriculture equipment, food processing machinery, and advanced materials manufacturing are frequent IRAP recipients in Saskatchewan.

Source: NRC-IRAP program page

8. NGen AI for Manufacturing (AI4M) Challenge

Co-Investment Grant
Up to $3,200,000 (40% of eligible costs)
Admin: Next Generation Manufacturing Canada (NGen) Intake: Call-based — monitor ngen.ca for intake windows Eligibility: Industry-led consortium; significant Canadian manufacturing activity; AI deployed for production, quality, or supply-chain improvement

NGen's AI for Manufacturing challenge co-invests up to 40% (max $3.2M) in consortium projects deploying AI to improve productivity, quality control, or supply chain performance in Canadian manufacturing. Saskatchewan manufacturers in agri-processing, mining equipment, energy components, or precision agriculture manufacturing can lead or join a consortium. NGen requires industry partners to contribute at least 60% of eligible project costs. Projects must demonstrate a clear pathway to commercial deployment and measurable productivity gains. Contact NGen's industry development team before the next intake opens — relationship-building before a formal call significantly improves outcomes.

Source: NGen AI4M Challenge
Saskatchewan Manufacturing Funding by Project Size
Project BudgetBest ProgramsType
Under $500KSLIM, SaskEnergy rebate, IRAPGrant / rebate
$500K – $2MSLIM + SAIF + IRAP stackGrant + non-repayable
$2M – $10MPrairiesCan BSP + SVAI (if agri)Repayable + tax credit
$10M+SVAI, Strategic Innovation FundTax credit / contribution

Who Qualifies — Saskatchewan Manufacturing Personas

Your best funding path depends on your sector, project type, and business stage. Find your profile below.

Most Saskatchewan manufacturers should pursue two or three programs simultaneously — SLIM covers capital automation costs, IRAP or SAIF covers R&D, and PrairiesCan BSP covers scale-up. They fund different cost categories and do not conflict.
Persona 1

If You're an Agri-Processor in Saskatoon or Humboldt Automating Your Line

You operate a grain processing, oilseed crushing, pulse protein, or specialty crop facility in the Saskatoon region, the Central Saskatchewan Economic Region, or along the Highway 16 corridor. You want to add automated sorting, packaging, or quality-control equipment. Your annual revenue is $5M–$50M and capital investment budget is $500K–$3M.

Start with SLIM — 50% cost-share on eligible automation equipment up to $750,000. Apply to Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture before purchasing equipment. Stack SLIM with a PrairiesCan BSP contribution ($200K–$5M, interest-free repayable) for larger capital items that fall outside SLIM's 50% coverage. If the automation system involves genuine technological uncertainty (custom machine-vision systems, novel grain-cleaning algorithms), apply to IRAP through the NRC Saskatoon ITA — IRAP covers the R&D portion that SLIM does not. A company investing $2M total might realistically combine $750K SLIM + $500K IRAP + $750K PrairiesCan, covering the majority of the project cost.

Source: Saskatchewan SLIM; PrairiesCan BSP
Persona 2

If You're a Regina-Area Manufacturer Developing New Industrial Technology

You are an incorporated manufacturer in the Regina and Region Economic Region or the Saskatchewan–Missouri Coteau corridor. Your products include agricultural equipment components, mining machinery, energy infrastructure parts, or specialty industrial goods. You are investing in proprietary process R&D that involves genuine technological uncertainty. Revenue is $2M–$20M.

Apply to SAIF through Innovation Saskatchewan in Regina for up to $450,000 (30% of project budget) — you need at least one private sector partner and a clear commercialization plan. Stack SAIF with federal SR&ED (up to 35% refundable ITC on the first $6M of eligible expenditures — Budget 2025 raised this limit from $3M to $6M directly). A manufacturer investing $1.5M in eligible R&D could claim $450K SAIF + $525K SR&ED = $975K recovered, with the remainder funded through commercial operations or PrairiesCan. The SMEITC may also attract equity investors at 45% credit if you are incorporated and qualify as an Eligible Business Corporation.

Source: Saskatchewan SAIF; CRA SR&ED
Persona 3

If You're an Early-Stage Manufacturer Seeking Investment Capital in Saskatchewan

You operate a startup or early-growth manufacturer in technology, food processing, or industrial goods. You are incorporated in Saskatchewan with under $20M in assets and are raising equity from angel investors or family offices. You have between 5 and 50 employees.

The SMEITC makes your equity raise dramatically more attractive. Investors who purchase newly-issued shares in your company can claim a 45% non-refundable provincial tax credit — up to $140,000 per investor per year. Apply to the Saskatchewan Ministry of Finance for Eligible Business Corporation (EBC) status before issuing shares. A round of $500,000 from SMEITC-eligible investors costs those investors an effective $275,000 net after the credit. Stack SMEITC capital with a BDC Start-up Financing loan (up to $250,000) if you need debt alongside the equity. The Saskatchewan Technology Startup Incentive (STSI) (45% credit to investors in technology startups specifically) may also be available if your manufacturing operation has a significant technology component.

Source: Saskatchewan SMEITC
Persona 4

If You're a Rural Saskatchewan Manufacturer in Prince Albert, Swift Current, or Moose Jaw

You operate outside Saskatoon and Regina — in Prince Albert and Region, the Swift Current-Moose Mountain Economic Region, or the Weyburn–Estevan area. You produce value-added agricultural goods, oilfield equipment, construction materials, or food products. You want to modernize equipment and reduce operating costs.

PrairiesCan explicitly prioritizes rural economic diversification — applications from Prince Albert, Swift Current, Moose Jaw, Yorkton, and Estevan often score higher on community impact criteria than urban projects. Apply to PrairiesCan's CEDD program if you are a non-profit or development organization; apply to BSP for incorporated commercial businesses. For capital equipment, SLIM applies regardless of location within Saskatchewan — the agri-processing and manufacturing focus maps directly to rural SK industries. If your facility uses SaskEnergy natural gas, claim the SaskEnergy commercial rebate ($325–$10,000) when upgrading heating or hot water systems. Community Futures offices in your region provide pre-application advisory support and loan programs alongside provincial and federal programs.

Source: Community Futures Saskatchewan; PrairiesCan CEDD
Persona 5

If You're a Métis or Indigenous-Owned Manufacturer in Saskatchewan

You are Métis or Indigenous-owned and operate or plan to operate a manufacturing or processing business in Saskatchewan. You may be affiliated with a First Nation, the Métis Nation–Saskatchewan, or operating independently.

The Clarence Campeau Development Fund (CCDF) Métis Entrepreneur Equity Program provides $15,000–$75,000 in non-repayable equity contributions, paired with CCDF loan financing for Métis entrepreneurs across Saskatchewan. For Indigenous-owned manufacturers more broadly, PrairiesCan's Indigenous-stream CEDD provides non-repayable contributions for Indigenous-led businesses and organizations. The Aboriginal Entrepreneurship Program (AEP) through the National Aboriginal Capital Corporations Association provides access to capital up to $99,999 for individual Indigenous entrepreneurs — including manufacturers. These programs stack with SLIM and SAIF in most cases because they cover different eligible costs (equity/working capital vs. capital equipment and R&D).

Source: Clarence Campeau Development Fund; Aboriginal Entrepreneurship Program

Saskatchewan Manufacturing Funding Verdicts

These verdicts address the most common mistakes Saskatchewan manufacturers make — choosing the wrong program for their project type or stage.
The best option for an agri-processor automating equipment is SLIM, because it provides up to $750,000 at a 50% cost-share — the highest non-repayable rate available for SK capital investments.

No other Saskatchewan program offers 50% non-repayable funding on manufacturing capital equipment at this scale. The minimum project requirement is a genuine automation, productivity, or emissions-reduction purpose. Apply before purchasing equipment. Stack with PrairiesCan BSP for larger projects exceeding SLIM's eligible-cost cap.

The best option for a manufacturer doing applied R&D is SAIF + SR&ED together, because the two programs cover different cost categories with no double-dipping.

SAIF (30% of project budget, up to $450K) covers eligible R&D costs in a provincial grant context. Federal SR&ED (up to 35% refundable ITC on first $6M of eligible expenditures — raised from $3M by Budget 2025) covers qualifying current and capital R&D expenditures through CRA. They are not double-counted because SR&ED reduces the eligible cost base for SAIF. File both. The combined recovery on qualifying manufacturing R&D can be material.

The best option for attracting equity capital into a SK manufacturing business is SMEITC, because the 45% investor credit reduces the effective cost of capital by nearly half.

SMEITC makes angel investing into SK manufacturers unusually attractive compared to other provinces. Investors who face a 45% credit on their investment can provide capital at a significantly lower effective cost. The company must qualify as an Eligible Business Corporation (EBC) — apply for EBC status before issuing shares. The $4M cumulative raise cap is a screen; businesses needing more capital should look at PrairiesCan BSP for supplemental interest-free debt.

The best option for a large-scale value-added agriculture investment ($10M+) is SVAI, because the 15–40% tax credit scales with investment size and has no explicit dollar ceiling.

The $250M per-project maximum is not a realistic ceiling for most businesses — it signals Saskatchewan's ambition to attract major processing investments. The 15% base rate applies to all projects; the 40% rate requires larger investments, significant SK job creation, and high SK agricultural input use. A new lentil processing facility, canola biorefinery, or hemp fibre plant in the $10M–$100M range fits this program. Pre-approval from the Ministry of Agriculture is required before breaking ground.

Here's what you need to know about stacking Saskatchewan manufacturing programs: Total government assistance (grants + repayable contributions + tax credits) typically cannot exceed 75% of eligible project costs under PrairiesCan rules, though tax credits are often treated separately. A practical stack for a Saskatchewan manufacturer: SLIM (50% of capital costs, non-repayable) + IRAP or SAIF (30% of R&D costs, non-repayable) + PrairiesCan BSP (interest-free repayable for remaining eligible costs) + SR&ED (35% of eligible R&D wages, recovered via CRA). These programs cover distinct cost categories — capital equipment, R&D salaries, scale-up operations — so they do not conflict in most cases. Always disclose all other funding sources in each application. Source: PrairiesCan stacking guidelines

Decision Tree: SLIM vs SAIF vs PrairiesCan BSP — Which First?

Is your project primarily capital equipment (automation, machinery, processing line upgrades)?

  → YES: Apply to SLIM first (50% non-repayable, up to $750K). Supplement with PrairiesCan BSP for amounts above SLIM's eligible-cost cap.

  → NO: Does your project involve genuine technological uncertainty (developing a new process, novel material, custom software)?

    → YES: Apply to SAIF (30%, up to $450K) and file federal SR&ED (up to 35% refundable ITC).

    → NO: Is your project about scaling production capacity, entering new markets, or improving overall productivity without a capital equipment or R&D focus?

      → YES: Apply to PrairiesCan BSP (interest-free repayable, $200K–$5M).

      → ALL THREE may apply: Most significant manufacturing projects involve all three cost categories simultaneously. Consider applying to all three programs for distinct, non-overlapping eligible costs.

Decision Tree: Should You Pursue SMEITC?

Are you incorporated in Saskatchewan with under $20M in total assets?

  → YES: Is your primary business manufacturing, industrial processing, food-beverage, or an eligible sector?

    → YES: Are you raising equity capital from investors (angel investors, family offices, private individuals)?

      → YES: Apply for Eligible Business Corporation (EBC) status from the Saskatchewan Ministry of Finance before issuing shares. Investors in your company will claim the 45% SMEITC credit.

      → NO (you need debt, not equity): Consider PrairiesCan BSP (interest-free repayable), BDC loans, or the Canada Small Business Financing Program instead.

  → NO (you exceed $20M assets): SMEITC is not available. Consider SVAI (if agri-processing, $10M+ capital) or PrairiesCan BSP for larger-scale contributions.

What's Changed for Saskatchewan Manufacturing Funding in 2026

Five major updates for 2026: Budget 2025 raised federal SR&ED limit to $6M, NGen AI4M Challenge opened new intake, PrairiesCan expanded BSP priorities, Clean Technology Manufacturing ITC entered full implementation, and Regional Tariff Response Initiative (RTRI) launched.

Budget 2025 raised the federal SR&ED enhanced-rate expenditure limit from $3M directly to $6M. For Saskatchewan manufacturing CCPCs doing R&D, the maximum enhanced 35% refundable ITC is now $2.1M/year — up from $1.05M. This change is material for manufacturers investing in proprietary process technology, advanced materials R&D, or industrial automation software. The change took effect for tax years ending after Budget Day 2025. File a T661 and attach it to your corporate return for any tax year with qualifying R&D expenditures. Source: CRA SR&ED — Budget 2025 amendments

Clean Technology Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit (CTMITC) entered full implementation for 2026. The refundable CTMITC (up to 30%) applies to eligible depreciable property used in the manufacturing of clean technology products — wind turbines, solar panels, energy storage, EV components, and critical minerals processing. Saskatchewan manufacturers supplying clean technology supply chains are eligible for the first time at full implementation rates. The credit declines annually after 2031. Stack CTMITC with SLIM for capital equipment purchases where both credits apply to different eligible cost categories. Source: Finance Canada CTMITC

PrairiesCan expanded BSP eligibility criteria for 2026–2028. Prairies Economic Development Canada broadened the Business Scale-Up and Productivity program's priority sectors to more explicitly include agri-food processing modernization, energy component manufacturing, and advanced manufacturing in smaller Prairie centres. Rural Saskatchewan manufacturers in communities outside the two major metro areas (Saskatoon, Regina) are explicitly encouraged to apply; program officers note that community impact scoring favours projects demonstrating local employment growth. Source: PrairiesCan BSP 2026–2028 priorities

Regional Tariff Response Initiative (RTRI) launched in early 2026 for manufacturers affected by tariff uncertainty. RTRI provides non-repayable contributions ($200K–$1M) and repayable contributions ($200K–$5M) for Saskatchewan manufacturers demonstrating direct impact from Canada–U.S. tariff uncertainty. Eligible projects include diversifying supply chains away from U.S. inputs, entering new export markets, or adjusting production for domestic demand. PrairiesCan administers RTRI alongside BSP — contact the Saskatoon or Regina office. Source: PrairiesCan RTRI

NGen AI for Manufacturing (AI4M) Challenge opened a new intake in late 2025. Saskatchewan manufacturers interested in deploying AI for production optimization, quality control, or supply chain efficiency should monitor ngen.ca for the 2026 intake window. NGen's most recent challenge funded projects in food processing AI, predictive maintenance for industrial equipment, and automated quality inspection systems — all directly relevant to Saskatchewan's manufacturing base. Source: NGen AI4M Challenge

Saskatchewan Manufacturing Geography — Where Programs, Agencies, and Sectors Operate

Saskatoon is Saskatchewan's largest city and manufacturing hub. The Saskatoon Economic Region encompasses a concentration of agri-food processing, potash mining supply chain manufacturers, and precision agriculture technology companies. Innovation Place Research Park — one of Canada's largest — hosts over 140 companies and connects manufacturers to University of Saskatchewan research partnerships for IRAP and NSERC Mitacs collaborations. Innovation Saskatchewan maintains a Saskatoon office administering SAIF applications. PrairiesCan's Saskatoon office handles BSP and CEDD applications for northern and central Saskatchewan. The Saskatoon Chamber of Commerce and Greater Saskatoon Economic Partnership are key connectors for manufacturers entering the funding ecosystem.

Regina is Saskatchewan's capital and home to the provincial government ministries administering SLIM, SVAI, and SMEITC. The Regina and Region Economic Region includes significant agricultural equipment manufacturing, energy sector suppliers, and food processing operations. Revenue Saskatchewan in Regina handles SVAI certificate issuance and SMEITC EBC applications. PrairiesCan's Regina office covers southern Saskatchewan. Conexus Credit Union and Enterprise Saskatchewan provide complementary advisory services and loan programs for manufacturers in the Regina corridor. The Regina Industrial Park and Global Transportation Hub host logistics-adjacent manufacturers with direct access to intermodal rail connections.

Beyond the two major centres, Saskatchewan's manufacturing economy extends through the Prince Albert and Region Economic Region (forestry products, processing), the Swift Current–Moose Mountain Economic Region (agri-processing, energy), the Weyburn-Estevan area (oilfield equipment, potash supply), and the Yorkton–Melville Economic Region (grain processing, agriculture equipment). Community Futures Saskatchewan operates 16 offices across rural Saskatchewan providing business loans, advisory services, and connection to provincial programs. Ag-West Bio in Saskatoon supports agri-biotech manufacturers. The Saskatchewan Mining Association serves equipment manufacturers in the mining supply chain. Export Development Canada (EDC) in Regina provides trade finance and insurance for manufacturers exporting to the U.S., China, and emerging markets.

Fan-Out Coverage — All Sub-Questions Answered

Eligibility, process, amounts, deadlines, and stacking for Saskatchewan manufacturing funding.

Eligibility for Saskatchewan manufacturing grants: SLIM requires a Saskatchewan agri-business or manufacturer adopting automation, advanced technology, or emissions-reduction equipment. SAIF requires an SK-based organization with a private sector partner funding 70%+ of project costs. SMEITC requires an SK-incorporated SME with under $20M in assets in manufacturing or industrial sectors. PrairiesCan BSP requires an incorporated business in AB/SK/MB with high-growth potential. SVAI requires a minimum $10M capital investment in value-added agriculture processing. SR&ED and IRAP have no province-specific screens — any SK manufacturer with qualifying R&D expenditures is eligible. Source: Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture (SLIM/SVAI); Innovation Saskatchewan (SAIF); Ministry of Finance (SMEITC)
Application process for SK manufacturing programs: SLIM, SAIF, and SMEITC (EBC application) are all submitted through Saskatchewan Government portals with pre-application advisory support available from Ministry staff. PrairiesCan requires contact with the Saskatoon or Regina program officer before formal submission — pre-application consultation is expected, not optional. IRAP applications begin by contacting the NRC ITA in Saskatoon; the ITA assesses fit before any formal paperwork is filed. SR&ED claims are filed with your corporate tax return (T661 form) within 18 months of your fiscal year-end. NGen AI4M requires a consortium and is intake-specific — apply during open calls only.
Deadlines for Saskatchewan manufacturing grants: SLIM, SAIF, PrairiesCan BSP, SMEITC, and SVAI are all ongoing programs with no hard annual deadline — apply when your project is ready (and before committing expenditures). IRAP is ongoing but intake volume fluctuates with NRC budget cycles; apply early in the fiscal year (April–June) for best access. SR&ED claims must be filed within 18 months of fiscal year-end. NGen AI4M intakes are call-specific — typically once or twice per year. SaskEnergy rebates require application within 90 days of equipment installation.
Stacking Saskatchewan manufacturing programs: SLIM + IRAP + PrairiesCan BSP is the canonical manufacturing stack — each program covers different cost categories (capital equipment, R&D, scale-up respectively). SAIF + SR&ED together cover R&D from different angles (provincial non-repayable + federal tax credit). SMEITC attracts equity capital that is independent of grant programs. Total government assistance under PrairiesCan rules generally cannot exceed 75% of eligible project costs, but tax credits (SR&ED, SMEITC, CTMITC, SVAI) are often excluded from this calculation. Disclose all other public funding in every application.

Related Resources

All Saskatchewan Grants → All Manufacturing Grants → Complete Directory → SR&ED Calculator → Agriculture Grants →

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Funding Programs in This Category

Saskatchewan manufacturing programs in our database, each with eligibility, funding amounts and how-to-apply detail.

STEP — Market Diversification Program (MDP) Saskatchewan Trade and Export Partnership (STEP) · Grant SaskEnergy Commercial Space & Water Heating Rebate Program SaskEnergy / Saskatchewan Power Corporation · $325–$10K · Grant Saskatchewan Critical Minerals Processing Investment Incentive (CMPII) Government of Saskatchewan — Ministry of Energy and Resources · Tax Credit Saskatchewan Small and Medium Enterprise Investment Tax Credit (SMEITC) Government of Saskatchewan — Ministry of Finance (administered with the Ministry of Trade and Export Development) · Up to $140K/yr · Program Saskatchewan Research and Development Tax Credit Government of Saskatchewan — Ministry of Finance · Tax Credit Saskatchewan Value-Added Agriculture Incentive (SVAI) Government of Saskatchewan — Ministry of Trade and Export Development · Up to $250M/project · Tax Credit PrairiesCan Business Scale-up and Productivity (BSP) Prairies Economic Development Canada · $200K–$5M · Forgivable Loan Saskatchewan Lean Improvements in Manufacturing (SLIM) Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture · Up to $750K · Grant Saskatchewan Advantage Innovation Fund (SAIF) Innovation Saskatchewan · Up to $450K · Grant

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