Many businesses in Canada are looking for ways to give back to their communities while maintaining their primary for-profit operations. One common question is whether a for-profit business can have a nonprofit division. The short answer is yes—but it comes with important legal, tax, and operational considerations.
This guide explains how a for-profit business can be involved with a nonprofit, the key legal and financial implications, and the best way to structure such an arrangement under Canadian law.
Before exploring how a for-profit company can have a nonprofit division, it's important to understand the fundamental differences between these two entities:
A for-profit company cannot technically have a “nonprofit division” in the same legal entity. However, it can establish a separate nonprofit organization that aligns with its social goals. This means the for-profit business can:
If a for-profit business wants to support a nonprofit legally and effectively, it must structure the relationship properly. Here’s how:
The nonprofit must be incorporated as a separate legal entity under either:
If the nonprofit wants to issue tax receipts for donations, it must apply for charitable status with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Charities face additional compliance requirements, including:
There are several tax and legal factors that businesses must keep in mind when supporting a nonprofit:
In the past, if a registered charity wanted to work with an organization that wasn't a "qualified donee" — including any nonprofit that wasn't itself a registered charity, and certainly any for-profit company — it generally had to maintain strict "direction and control" over how the money was spent.
Following the 2022 amendments to the Income Tax Act and CRA's CG-032 guidance (finalized in late 2023), charities can now make qualifying disbursements to non-qualified donees under an accountability-based framework instead. In practice:
For a full walkthrough, including due-diligence steps, see CRA Grant Regime: Replacing Direction and Control in Canada. You can also review CRA's own checklist on engaging in allowable activities, which references CG-032 directly.
What this means for a for-profit business: if your company's related nonprofit isn't a registered charity, it may now be easier for a charitable partner — such as a community foundation — to grant funds toward a joint project, without your company needing to register its own charity. The core rule hasn't changed, though: your business still cannot be the direct recipient of charitable funds.
A business owner can establish a private foundation — a registered charity controlled by the founder's family — to formalize long-term giving. Private foundations face additional restrictions, including limits on holding shares in the founder's company and on transactions with it.
A social enterprise is a business model, not a separate legal status in Canada. It typically means a nonprofit (or, less commonly, a for-profit) that earns revenue through commercial activity to fund a social mission. If a registered charity operates the enterprise, the activity generally needs to qualify as a "related business" — connected to the charity's purpose or run substantially by volunteers.
"Certified B Corporation" is a private certification from B Lab, not a Canadian legal or tax status. A for-profit business can become a B Corp while remaining an ordinary taxable corporation — it does not create a nonprofit division and does not change how CRA treats the company.
These can complement — but don't replace — the core options above: a separate nonprofit, a separate registered charity, or a CSR partnership with an existing charity.
A Canadian tech company launches a separate nonprofit to provide free coding classes for underserved communities. The company provides financial support but allows the nonprofit to operate independently with its own board.
A restaurant chain starts a registered charity that runs food banks across Canada. The charity raises funds from public donors, while the restaurant makes corporate donations and hosts fundraising events.
A law firm creates an independent nonprofit that provides free legal aid to low-income individuals. While the law firm donates office space and some resources, the nonprofit is run separately to maintain compliance.
A manufacturing company wants to fund a job-training program in its community but doesn't want to set up its own charity. It donates to a local community foundation (a registered charity), which then grants the funds to a non-charitable training nonprofit under CRA's grant regime for non-qualified donees — with the foundation handling due diligence and reporting.
A for-profit business in Canada cannot have a nonprofit division within the same legal entity, but it can create and support an independent nonprofit or charity. This requires careful legal structuring, financial transparency, and compliance with tax regulations.
If your business is considering launching a nonprofit organization, it’s important to seek professional legal and accounting advice to ensure compliance with Canadian laws.
If you're looking to incorporate a nonprofit or register a charity in Canada, our team can guide you through the process.
Don't navigate the complex world of nonprofit law alone. At B.I.G. Charity Law Group, we specialize in helping businesses like yours successfully incorporate nonprofits and register charities in Canada. Our experienced team will guide you through every step of the process, from initial structuring to ongoing compliance requirements.
Contact B.I.G. Charity Law Group today for a free consultation and let us help you turn your charitable vision into reality:
📧 Email: dov.goldberg@charitylawgroup.ca
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Here are answers to common questions about nonprofit organizations in Canada, covering ownership structures, asset transactions, qualification requirements, and governance matters.
No, for-profit companies cannot own nonprofits in Canada. Nonprofits must operate independently for public benefit, not private gain. For-profits can partner with nonprofits or place representatives on boards, but they cannot control them. Each nonprofit maintains its own independent board of directors.
Yes, nonprofits can sell assets to for-profit companies at fair market value if the sale supports their charitable purposes. The board must ensure the sale benefits the organization's mission without providing private gain. The nonprofit must use all proceeds to advance its charitable goals.
Organizations qualify as nonprofits when they operate exclusively for charitable, educational, or community benefit without distributing profits to members or shareholders. They must incorporate under nonprofit legislation and have governing documents that prevent private benefit. Registered charities meet additional Canada Revenue Agency requirements for tax-exempt status.
You can verify if an organization is a nonprofit by checking several sources and indicators. For registered charities, search the Canada Revenue Agency's online charity database using the organization's name or registration number. Review the organization's governing documents, which should state its nonprofit purposes and prohibit profit distribution to members. Look for incorporation documents that show it was established under nonprofit legislation. Additionally, examine the organization's financial statements and annual reports, which should demonstrate that any surplus funds are reinvested into programs rather than distributed as profits.
Canadian nonprofits need at least three board members. The Canada Not-for-profit Corporations Act requires three directors for federally incorporated nonprofits, though provinces may set different minimums. Organizations can have more than three directors based on their governance needs.
Yes, nonprofits can pay board members reasonable compensation if they disclose and justify it at fair market value. Many nonprofits use volunteer boards to maximize program funding, but payment is allowed. Boards must approve, document, and disclose any compensation in annual filings. Registered charities face additional restrictions to protect their charitable status.
Yes. A business owner can establish a private foundation as a separate registered charity, often family-controlled, to manage long-term giving. The foundation must operate exclusively for charitable purposes, file its own annual return with the CRA, and follow rules limiting its dealings with the founder's company, including restrictions on holding shares in that company.
Since 2022 amendments to the Income Tax Act and CRA's CG-032 guidance, registered charities can make qualifying disbursements to organizations that aren't registered charities, as long as the charity ensures funds are used for its own charitable purposes, conducts due diligence on the recipient, and keeps proper records and agreements. This replaced the older "direction and control" requirement with an accountability-based approach.
No. Registered charities cannot direct funds to a for-profit business for the business's own commercial benefit. Even under the newer grant regime for non-qualified donees, any funds granted must support charitable activities that serve the public, not a company or its owners.
No. A social enterprise is a revenue-generating activity that supports a social mission, usually run by a nonprofit or charity as a related business. It isn't a division of a for-profit company — it still needs to be operated by a properly incorporated nonprofit or charity to access tax-exempt status or issue donation receipts.
The material provided on this website is for information purposes only.. You should not act or abstain from acting based upon such information without first consulting a Charity Lawyer. We do not warrant the accuracy or completeness of any information on this site. E-mail contact with anyone at B.I.G. Charity Law Group Professional Corporation is not intended to create, and receipt will not constitute, a solicitor-client relationship. Solicitor client relationship will only be created after we have reviewed your case or particulars, decided to accept your case and entered into a written retainer agreement or retainer letter with you.

DOV GOLDBERG, J.D. is a lawyer at B.I.G. Charity Law Group and has dedicated his career exclusively to Charity and Not-for-Profit Law for over a decade. Dov guides charities, foundations, and non-profit organizations through every stage of the registration process, offering practical legal advice with a focus on compliance, governance, and long-term success. Known for his hands-on approach and deep knowledge of CRA requirements, Dov is committed to helping clients build strong, sustainable, and legally sound organizations.