Book Consultation

Gondaliya CPA

Incorporation Guide · Ontario

Articles of Incorporation Ontario: How to Complete

A field-by-field walkthrough of the Ontario Articles of Incorporation form. Covers corporation name, NUANS search, registered office, director requirements, share structure, restrictions, common mistakes and the federal vs. Ontario decision — written by a licensed Ontario CPA who files these weekly.

What Are Articles of Incorporation in Ontario?

Articles of Incorporation are the legal document filed with the Ontario Ministry of Public and Business Service Delivery (or Corporations Canada for federal incorporation) that creates your corporation as a separate legal entity. Once accepted and a Certificate of Incorporation is issued, the corporation exists as a legal person — it can enter contracts, own property, sue and be sued, open bank accounts and carry on business independently of its shareholders.

The Articles of Incorporation define the fundamental structure of the corporation: its name, registered office address, number of directors, share classes, share rights and restrictions, business restrictions and other provisions. These are not decisions you change easily after incorporation — amending the Articles requires filing Articles of Amendment with the ministry and paying an additional fee. Getting the Articles right at incorporation saves thousands in legal and accounting fees down the road.

Ontario corporations file Articles of Incorporation under the Business Corporations Act (BCA) through the Ontario Business Registry. Federal corporations file under the Canada Business Corporations Act (CBCA) through Corporations Canada. This guide covers both, with a comparison to help you choose the right jurisdiction.

Federal vs. Ontario Incorporation — Which Should You Choose?

FactorFederal (CBCA)Ontario (BCA)
Cost through Gondaliya CPA$35$335
Government filing fee$200 (online)$300 (online via OBR)
Name protectionNational — name protected across all of CanadaProvincial — name protected in Ontario only
NUANS search requiredYes — federal NUANSYes — Ontario NUANS (unless number name)
Residency requirement for directors25% of directors must be resident CanadiansNo residency requirement since April 2021
Annual filingAnnual return to Corporations Canada + Ontario annual returnOntario annual return only
Extra-provincial registrationMust register in each province where business is carried onNot required for Ontario-only operations
Best forMost Ontario businesses — cheaper, national name protection, required for cross-border trade and customs bondingOntario-only businesses that want simpler annual compliance and 100% non-resident directors

Our Recommendation: For most Ontario businesses, federal incorporation is the better choice. It costs less through Gondaliya CPA ($35 vs. $335), protects the corporate name nationally, is required for CBSA customs bonding and US CBP importer registration, and supports multi-province operations. Ontario incorporation may be preferred only if all directors are non-resident (Ontario removed the residency requirement in April 2021 while the federal CBCA still requires 25% resident Canadians). Start Incorporation →

Articles of Incorporation — Field-by-Field Walkthrough

The following table walks through every field on the Ontario BCA Articles of Incorporation form (Form 5351E) and the equivalent federal CBCA form. Each field is explained with what to enter and common mistakes to avoid.

FieldWhat to EnterCommon Mistakes
Corporation NameThe full legal name including a legal element: "Inc.", "Ltd.", "Corp.", "Incorporated", "Limited" or "Corporation." Must match the NUANS search exactly. Or select a number name (e.g. 1234567 Ontario Inc.) — no NUANS required for number names.Name does not match NUANS report exactly. Missing legal element. NUANS report expired (valid 90 days from search date for Ontario, 90 days for federal).
NUANS Name SearchAn Ontario-biased NUANS report for Ontario incorporation or a federal NUANS for federal. Enter the report reference number, proposed name searched and date of search. Keep the report at the registered office.Using a federal NUANS for an Ontario filing or vice versa. Searching the name without the legal element. Report older than 90 days at time of filing.
Registered Office AddressA full street address in Ontario (for Ontario incorporation). Must include street number, street name, city, province, postal code. P.O. Box alone is not acceptable.Using a P.O. Box without a street address. Address not in Ontario. Using a residential address without confirming municipal zoning permits home-based businesses.
Number of DirectorsChoose either a fixed number (e.g. 1) or a minimum and maximum range (e.g. 1 to 10). At least one director required. For federal: 25% must be resident Canadians.Setting a fixed number of 1 when you plan to add directors later (requires Articles of Amendment to change). Not confirming director residency for federal incorporation.
Director Names and AddressesFull legal name and address for service of each director. Indicate if each director is a resident Canadian. Directors must be individuals age 18+.Using a company name instead of an individual's name. Not indicating resident Canadian status (required field). Listing a director who has not signed a Consent to Act.
Consent to Act as First DirectorAny director who is not also an incorporator must sign Form 5260 (Consent to Act as First Director). Keep at the registered office — do not file with the ministry.Not obtaining the consent before filing. Consent lost and not available when CRA or the ministry requests it.
Share Structure (Classes of Shares)Define the classes and maximum number of shares the corporation can issue. Most small businesses use a single class of unlimited common shares. See share structure section below for advanced options.Using a generic template without considering holdco planning, LCGE multiplication or family shareholder dividends. Setting a maximum share limit that is too low for future needs.
Rights, Privileges, Restrictions and ConditionsDefine the rights attached to each share class: voting, dividends, dissolution rights. If only one class, all three rights must be attached. If multiple classes, rights can be distributed differently.Single class of shares without specifying that all rights are attached. Conflicting rights between classes (e.g. two classes both claiming 100% of dividends).
Restrictions on Share TransferCommon for private corporations: "No shares shall be transferred without the approval of the directors by resolution." This restriction supports the CCPC small business deduction and LCGE eligibility.Omitting the transfer restriction — which may affect the corporation's status as a "private corporation" and eligibility for certain tax benefits.
Restrictions on BusinessEnter "None" unless the corporation is a professional corporation (CPSO, RCDSO, OCP, LSO) which must restrict business to the regulated profession.Adding unnecessary business restrictions that limit future flexibility. Professional corporations omitting the mandatory restriction required by their regulatory college.
Other ProvisionsEnter "None" unless you need specific provisions such as a borrowing power clause, lien on shares clause or provisions required by a shareholders' agreement.Leaving this blank instead of entering "None." Adding overly complex provisions that should be in the corporate by-laws instead of the Articles.
Incorporator(s)Name and address of each incorporator. Incorporators can be individuals or corporations. The incorporator signs the Articles. For a solo founder, you are typically both the incorporator and the sole director.Incorporator address does not match the format required. Corporate incorporator missing the OCN and signing officer details.
NAICS CodeThe North American Industry Classification System code for the corporation's primary business activity. Administrative only — does not appear on public record.Using the wrong NAICS code — while administrative only, some government programs reference the NAICS code on file.

Share Structure Templates for Ontario Corporations

The share structure you define in the Articles of Incorporation determines your tax planning options for the life of the corporation. Changing the share structure later requires Articles of Amendment and potentially a share reorganisation under Section 86 of the Income Tax Act. Getting it right at incorporation costs nothing extra — fixing it later costs thousands.

StructureShare ClassesBest ForTax Planning Enabled
Simple (solo founder)Unlimited Class A Common (voting, dividends, dissolution)Solo founder, no family shareholders, no holdco plannedSBD at 12.2%, basic salary vs. dividend planning
Standard (recommended)Unlimited Class A Common (voting, dividends, dissolution) + Unlimited Class B Non-Voting (dividends, dissolution)Most Ontario small businesses — allows future family shareholders, holdco and LCGE multiplicationSBD, salary vs. dividend, family dividends on non-voting shares (where TOSI permits), holdco planning, LCGE multiplication
Professional CorporationClass A Voting (professional only) + Class B Non-Voting (family members)Physicians (CPSO), dentists (RCDSO), pharmacists (OCP), lawyers (LSO)SBD, holdco management fees, LCGE multiplication, family dividends within TOSI rules
Multi-FounderClass A Common (Founder 1, voting) + Class B Common (Founder 2, voting) + Class C Non-Voting (optional investors)Partnerships, co-founders, investor-ready startupsSeparate share classes enable different dividend policies per founder, investor preferences and shotgun clauses
Holdco-Ready (advanced)Class A Voting (founder) + Class B Non-Voting (holdco) + Class C Non-Voting (family) + Class D Preferred (freeze shares for estate planning)Business owners planning an estate freeze, holdco structure and multi-generational wealth transferFull suite: SBD, holdco dividends at 0% inter-corporate rate, estate freeze via preferred shares, LCGE multiplication across family

Design the Share Structure for Where You Want to Be, Not Where You Are Today: The standard two-class structure (Class A voting + Class B non-voting) costs nothing extra at incorporation and preserves every future tax planning option. The simple single-class structure locks you into a structure that requires an expensive share reorganisation if you later want to add a holdco, bring in family shareholders or multiply the LCGE on a business sale. We recommend the standard two-class structure for every Ontario corporation we incorporate.

The Incorporation Process — Step by Step

1

Choose Federal or Ontario

Federal recommended for most ($35 through Gondaliya CPA, national name protection). Ontario if 100% non-resident directors needed.

2

NUANS Name Search

Order an Ontario or federal NUANS report for your proposed name. Or choose a number name (no NUANS required). Valid 90 days from search date.

3

Prepare Articles

Complete all fields: name, registered office, directors, share structure, restrictions. We prepare the entire document for you.

4

File and Receive Certificate

Filed electronically. Certificate of Incorporation issued same day (federal online) or 1–3 business days (Ontario OBR).

5

Corporate Minute Book

First directors resolution, by-laws, share issuance, banking resolution. We prepare the complete minute book.

6

CRA Registration

Register Business Number, HST, Payroll and Corporate Tax accounts. 1–3 business days. We handle the entire process.

7

Open Bank Account

Bring the Certificate of Incorporation, Articles and directors resolution to your bank. Open a business chequing account.

8

Set Up Bookkeeping

Configure QuickBooks Online or Xero with your chart of accounts, HST tax codes and bank feeds. We set this up for every client.

Cost of Filing Articles of Incorporation in Ontario

ItemFederal (through Gondaliya CPA)Ontario (through Gondaliya CPA)
Gondaliya CPA incorporation fee$35$335
Government filing fee (included in above)$200 (online)$300 (online via OBR)
NUANS name search (if named corporation)IncludedIncluded
Articles of Incorporation preparationIncludedIncluded
Corporate minute book (resolutions, by-laws, shares)IncludedIncluded
CRA Business Number and account registrationIncludedIncluded
Ontario extra-provincial registration (federal corps)$80 (if operating in Ontario)N/A
Total — typical Ontario business$35 (most common)$335

10 Most Common Mistakes When Filing Articles of Incorporation

#MistakeConsequence
1Using a single class of shares instead of voting + non-votingCannot add family shareholders, holdco or multiply LCGE without a costly share reorganisation (Section 86)
2NUANS report expired before filing (older than 90 days)Application rejected by the ministry — must order a new NUANS search and start over
3Registered office address is a P.O. Box onlyApplication rejected — a full street address in Ontario is mandatory
4Not including a share transfer restrictionMay affect CCPC status and eligibility for the small business deduction and LCGE
5Setting a fixed number of directors at 1 when planning to add a holdco director laterRequires Articles of Amendment ($150–$300 government fee) to change the director structure
6Not obtaining Consent to Act from a director who is not an incorporatorDirector appointment may be challenged. Ministry can request the consent at any time
7Professional corporation omitting the mandatory business restrictionRegulatory college (CPSO, RCDSO, OCP, LSO) may reject the incorporation or revoke the certificate
8Choosing Ontario incorporation when federal is more appropriateOverpays by $300 for the filing, does not get national name protection, cannot use for customs bonding
9Not registering CRA accounts immediately after incorporationCannot collect HST, process payroll or file the T2 without a Business Number. Delays cost real revenue
10Filing the Articles without professional advice on share structureThe share structure is permanent unless amended. Wrong structure at inception compounds into tens of thousands in lost tax planning over the life of the corporation

Frequently Asked Questions — Articles of Incorporation Ontario

What are Articles of Incorporation?
Articles of Incorporation are the legal document filed with the Ontario government (or Corporations Canada for federal) that creates a corporation as a separate legal entity. The document defines the corporation's name, registered office, directors, share structure and any business restrictions. Once accepted and a Certificate of Incorporation is issued, the corporation exists.
How much does it cost to file Articles of Incorporation in Ontario?
Federal incorporation through Gondaliya CPA costs $35 total. Ontario provincial incorporation costs $335. Both include the government filing fee, NUANS search, Articles preparation, corporate minute book and CRA registration. Start Incorporation →
Should I incorporate federally or provincially in Ontario?
Federal is recommended for most Ontario businesses. It is cheaper through Gondaliya CPA ($35 vs. $335), protects the corporate name nationally, supports multi-province operations and is required for CBSA customs bonding. Ontario incorporation is preferred only if all directors are non-residents (Ontario removed the residency requirement in April 2021).
Do I need a NUANS search to incorporate?
Yes — if you want a named corporation (e.g. "Your Business Name Inc."). The NUANS search checks for name conflicts with existing corporations across Canada. The report is valid for 90 days from the search date. If you choose a number name (e.g. "1234567 Ontario Inc."), no NUANS search is required.
What share structure should I choose?
We recommend a minimum of two classes: Class A Common (voting, dividends, dissolution) and Class B Non-Voting (dividends, dissolution). This standard structure preserves every future tax planning option including holdco, family shareholder dividends and LCGE multiplication — at no additional cost. A single class of shares locks you into a structure that requires an expensive reorganisation to change later.
What is a share transfer restriction and do I need one?
A share transfer restriction prevents shares from being transferred without director approval. It is recommended for every private Ontario corporation because it supports the corporation's status as a "private company" — which is relevant for CCPC eligibility, the small business deduction and the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption. The standard restriction is: "No shares shall be transferred without the approval of the directors by resolution."
Can I change the Articles of Incorporation after filing?
Yes — by filing Articles of Amendment with the Ontario Business Registry (or Corporations Canada for federal). The government fee is $150 (federal) or $180 (Ontario). Common amendments include changing the share structure, adding share classes, changing the number of directors and changing the corporate name. Getting the Articles right at incorporation avoids these costs.
How long does it take to incorporate in Ontario?
Federal online incorporation through Corporations Canada is typically processed same day. Ontario online incorporation through the Ontario Business Registry takes 1–3 business days. CRA Business Number registration takes an additional 1–3 business days after the Certificate of Incorporation is issued. We handle the entire process from start to finish.
Do all directors need to be Canadian residents?
Ontario: No — Ontario removed the director residency requirement in April 2021. All directors can be non-residents. Federal: 25% of directors must be resident Canadians (if fewer than 4 directors, at least one must be a resident Canadian). This is a key difference for businesses with non-resident owners.
What do I need to do after receiving the Certificate of Incorporation?
Prepare the corporate minute book (first directors resolution, by-laws, share issuance, banking resolution). Register CRA accounts (Business Number, HST, Payroll, Corporate Tax). Open a business bank account. Set up QuickBooks or Xero. File the Ontario annual return within 60 days. We handle every step. Start Incorporation →

Ready to Incorporate? From $35.

Gondaliya CPA prepares and files your Articles of Incorporation, corporate minute book, CRA registration and share structure.

Licensed CPA Ontario
900+ Five-Star Reviews
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Incorporation from $35
Incorporate for $35Book Free Consultation
Scroll to Top