How to Incorporate a Business in Alberta

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in Alberta creates a corporation, not just a registered business name. That distinction matters. A corporation is a separate legal entity from its shareholders. It can own assets, sign contracts, borrow money, sue, and be sued. It also brings new responsibilities: corporate records, director information, annual returns, tax accounts, and filings when information changes. … Read more

How to Incorporate a Business in British Columbia

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in British Columbia creates a company that is separate from its shareholders. That is different from registering a sole proprietorship, registering a business name, or getting a municipal business licence. A B.C. company can own assets, take on debt, enter contracts, sue, and be sued. It also has records, annual reports, directors, shares, and … Read more

How to Incorporate a Business in Saskatchewan

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in Saskatchewan creates a business corporation, which is different from registering a sole proprietorship, partnership, or business name. A corporation gives the business its own legal identity. It can hold property, sign contracts, have directors and officers, issue shares, and continue separately from the original owner. It also comes with corporate records, annual returns, … Read more

How to Incorporate a Business in New Brunswick

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in New Brunswick creates a business corporation under the Business Corporations Act. It is not the same as registering a business name, getting a municipal licence, or setting up tax accounts. A corporation has its own legal identity, directors, shares, formal records, registry filings, and annual return obligations. That structure can be useful, but … Read more

How to Incorporate a Business in Nova Scotia

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in Nova Scotia creates a company. It is different from registering a business name, setting up a sole proprietorship, or getting a licence to operate in a city or regulated industry. Most small for-profit incorporations in Nova Scotia are companies limited by shares, often called limited companies. A limited company has shareholders, directors, formal … Read more

How to Incorporate a Business in Quebec

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in Quebec creates a Quebec corporation. It is not the same as registering a sole proprietorship, registering an operating name, or getting the permits you need to work in a municipality or regulated industry. A corporation is a separate legal person. It can hold property, sign contracts, have directors, issue shares, sue, and be … Read more

Federal vs Provincial Incorporation in Canada

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Choosing between federal and provincial incorporation is not really about which option sounds more official. It is about where the corporation will operate, how important national name protection is, how much extra registration work you are willing to handle, and whether the benefits of federal incorporation justify the added steps. Both routes can create a … Read more

How to Incorporate a Business in Newfoundland and Labrador

Illustration of HelperX Bot holding business documents beside the text “Learn with Tech Help Canada,” with icons for registration, licences, taxes, marketing, and funding.

Incorporating in Newfoundland and Labrador creates a local company under the province’s Corporations Act. It is different from registering a sole proprietorship, choosing a trade name, getting a municipal licence, or opening tax accounts. A corporation is a separate legal entity from its shareholders. It can own property, sign contracts, borrow money, issue shares, sue, … Read more