12 July 2026
Business registration in Canada is the process of creating your business’s legal and tax identity so you can invoice, hire, open accounts, and comply with laws. It covers structure selection, name checks, CRA program accounts, and Ontario filings. From Etobicoke, you can complete most steps online and handle signatures locally in one visit.
By Vikram Sharma, Barrister, Solicitor & Notary Public • Last updated: July 13, 2026
| Service area | Etobicoke (Toronto) |
|---|---|
| Hours | Mon–Fri 9:00–18:00; Sat 10:00–18:00 |
| Average rating | 5.0 (Google reviews) |
| Key services | Business Law, Incorporation support, Shareholder agreements, Notary Public |
| Walk-in support | Walk-in Notary Public available |
Local insight for Etobicoke founders
We see three common founder groups here: trades and renovation crews, food entrepreneurs, and Humber Centre for Trades & Technology students spinning up side businesses. Each has different risk: workplace liability, permits, and IP/branding ownership. We map these before you register so your structure and agreements actually fit your day one realities.
Overview
Registering a Canadian business aligns federal tax setup with Ontario legal filings, then adds licenses, banking, and agreements to operate cleanly. Decide the structure first, then file, then paper relationships. This order prevents rework and keeps your first 90 days smooth.
In our experience, the biggest delays happen when a team files before agreeing on ownership and decision-making. One recent Etobicoke partnership incorporated first, then disagreed on roles; unwinding that sequence took extra paperwork and time with banks and customers. Set rules first, then the portals move quickly.
What Business Registration in Canada Actually Means (and What It Doesn’t Cover)
Business registration Canada gives you a recognized legal/tax identity to trade, invoice, and hire. It doesn’t decide founder rights, equity, or IP. Pair registrations with shareholder/partnership agreements, contractor terms, and IP assignments to protect your team and assets.
Registration usually includes:
- Choosing sole proprietorship, partnership, or incorporation.
- Checking and securing a business name (NUANS if naming a corporation).
- Getting a CRA Business Number and any program accounts (e.g., GST/HST, payroll).
- Completing Ontario Business Registry filings for Ontario operations.
- Opening banking/merchant accounts and lining up sector permits.
What it doesn’t cover: how founders make decisions, vest shares, or resolve exits; who owns code, photos, or the logo; and what contractors can use or disclose. We solve these with Corporate & Commercial agreements and Business Law support before you register, so you don’t draft under time pressure later.
For sequencing context, see this overview of registration order and this incorporation checklist. Toronto permit themes are summarized in this permit guide.
Sole Proprietorship vs. Incorporation — Choose Before You Register
Pick a sole proprietorship for simplicity and low risk. Choose incorporation when you need liability separation, multiple owners, shares, or investor readiness. Don’t start any portal until equity, roles, and decision rights are written and signed.
Here’s a quick comparison we use with founders:
| Factor | Sole Proprietorship | Incorporation | Partnership |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liability | Personal liability for business debts | Limited liability (corporate veil) | Shared per partnership terms |
| Tax & payroll | Business income on personal return | Corporate return; payroll for owners/staff | Info return; partners report their share |
| Complexity | Low | Moderate (minute book, filings) | Moderate (partnership agreement) |
| Investor readiness | Limited | Best for equity investment | Possible with care |
| Good fit for | Testing demand, solo work | Scaling teams, IP-heavy work | Professional groups, shared clients |
Example: a two‑founder design studio we assisted wanted to share profits now but avoid deadlock. We built a shareholder agreement with vesting and tie‑break rules, then filed. If either founder wanted Independent Legal Advice before signing (a smart step), we provide that in‑house — and because we’re a Walk‑in Notary Public, we certify copies in the same visit.
Step-by-Step: How to Register a Business in Canada
Decide your structure, confirm your name, gather IDs/addresses, obtain a CRA Business Number, file in the Ontario Business Registry, then open banking and adopt core agreements. Keep receipts and confirmations together for future changes.
- Choose your structure. Match risk, growth plans, and owner count to sole prop, partnership, or corporation.
- Search and secure your name. Confirm availability; named incorporations typically require a NUANS search.
- Collect founder details. IDs, addresses, share splits, directors/officers, and registered office info.
- Get your CRA Business Number. Add GST/HST and payroll if required; online issuance is often quick.
- Complete Ontario filings. Use the Ontario Business Registry; save articles, receipts, and confirmations.
- Open banking and merchant accounts. Bring articles and resolutions; align bookkeeping/payroll from day one.
- Close legal gaps. Sign shareholder/partnership terms, contractor or employment agreements, and IP assignments.
- Finalize notarizations. For certified true copies or affidavits, see our notary Toronto guide.
Tip from practice: don’t upload anything to the Ontario portal until founders agree — in writing — on equity and roles. We’ve seen teams lose days re‑papering banks and vendors after changing structure post‑filing.

What Government Portals Won’t Tell You (Legal Gaps to Close First)
Portals file forms; they don’t set founder rules or protect IP. Close gaps with shareholder/partnership agreements, IP assignments, contractor and employment terms, and basic privacy policies before money and data start moving.
We often pause a filing 24–48 hours to align the team. That short delay prevents long‑term headaches. Common pre‑filing fixes include:
- Ownership & vesting: Equity now vs. earned over time; what happens if someone leaves.
- Decision rights: Board structure, tie‑breakers, signature and banking authority.
- IP ownership: Assign code, designs, and brand to the company (including contractor work).
- Contractor/employment: Confidentiality, non‑solicit, invention assignment, termination, and dispute process.
- Privacy & data: Baseline privacy terms and breach steps that fit your sector.
- Regulated work: Trade or sector permits before you advertise or accept deposits.
We handle the drafting under Corporate & Commercial, keep you compliant with Business Law, and notarize certified copies the same day.
Free 15-minute consult: Not sure whether to incorporate yet? Book a quick call. We’ll map risk, timing, and exact filings so you register once — and only once.
Toronto-Specific Considerations for New Business Owners
Ontario filings run through the Ontario Business Registry; CRA issues your Business Number and program accounts. Certain Toronto sectors need municipal permits. Align these with banking requirements to avoid opening‑day delays.
Practical notes we give Etobicoke founders:
- Ontario Business Registry: Have IDs and, for named corporations, a NUANS result ready before you start.
- Permits: Trades, food, and personal‑services businesses often require municipal permissions before operating.
- Banking: Expect to present articles, resolutions, and valid ID at account opening.
- Minute book: Keep organizational resolutions, registers, and share issuances from day one.
- Records: Store CRA and Ontario confirmations together; it simplifies future changes and audits.
Local considerations for Etobicoke
- Apprentices and graduates from the Humber Centre for Trades & Technology often launch side businesses; schedule filings between term dates for smoother ID and residency paperwork.
- If you’re serving customers near Martin Grove Mall, plan early‑morning notarizations for faster parking and same‑day banking.
- We regularly support trades and food operators; we’ll flag permit and insurance checkpoints during your structure decision.

When to Involve a Business Lawyer Before You File
Involve a lawyer if you have multiple founders, plan to hire or raise funds, expect IP creation, or must meet licensing rules. Early advice avoids re‑filings, cleans up ownership, and prevents avoidable disputes.
Bring us in early if any of these apply:
- Two or more founders who need clarity on equity, roles, and decision‑making.
- Enterprise contracts or supplier agreements arriving soon.
- Hiring/contracting developers, designers, or sales in the first quarter.
- Brand or software assets that must be company‑owned from day one.
- Regulated activities or sector approvals needed to operate.
- Banking/finance steps you want to pass on the first attempt.
We cover Business Law, Corporate & Commercial, and fast notary Toronto documentation. If real estate or family planning intersects with your venture, we can coordinate Power of Attorney and Wills & Estates so everything aligns.
Frequently Asked Questions
Founders ask about federal vs. provincial steps, NUANS, and whether articles alone are enough. These answers reflect how we handle registrations for Etobicoke clients.
Do I register federally or provincially first?
Handle tax accounts with the CRA and corporate formation with the corporate registry for your jurisdiction. In Ontario, incorporations and business name registrations run through the Ontario Business Registry, while your Business Number and program accounts are with the CRA.
Is a NUANS report always required?
If you’re incorporating with a named corporation, a NUANS name search is generally required to confirm availability. Numbered corporations don’t need it. We check whether your facts require NUANS and help interpret results to avoid conflicts.
What legal documents should I have besides the articles?
Most teams need a shareholder or partnership agreement, IP assignments, contractor/employment agreements, banking resolutions, and organizational resolutions. These cover governance, ownership of work product, and signature authority so operations start cleanly.
Can I switch from a sole proprietorship to a corporation later?
Yes, you can migrate, but it adds extra steps and updates with customers, banks, and tax accounts. If you expect partners, employees, or IP‑heavy growth soon, forming a corporation at the outset often saves time and re‑papering later.
Key takeaways
Decide structure first, then register, then paper relationships. Align CRA setup with Ontario filings and close governance/IP gaps early. Local, same‑day notarization helps you move fast without missing protections.
- Choose structure based on risk, growth, and owners; incorporate when scaling or sharing equity.
- Complete CRA BN and Ontario Business Registry filings; keep confirmations organized.
- Adopt governance and IP documents before revenue and hiring begin.
- Use local notary and affidavits to finalize certified copies and declarations on the same day.




