Buying a Franchise as a New Immigrant to Canada
By ScoreVet Editorial · 2026-04-18 · Canada
TL;DR — Key Facts
- →New immigrants can access BDC and CSBFP loans for franchise purchases — Canadian credit history is not always required.
- →The Immigrant Investor Program and SUV (Start-Up Visa) are separate pathways — franchise buying typically uses standard business financing, not immigration programs.
- →Ontario and Alberta's franchise disclosure laws protect all buyers regardless of immigration status.
- →The April 2026 Montreal Franchise Expo had significant immigrant buyer representation — you are not alone in this path.
- →Lower-investment service franchises ($30k–$150k CAD) are the most accessible entry point for buyers with limited Canadian credit history.
New to Canada? Here's where franchise buyers actually stand
The April 2026 Montreal Franchise Expo was full of immigrant couples in their 30s and 40s — not the retirees the industry's dated newsletters still target. One generation is exiting business ownership; another is actively entering. Immigrant buyers represented one of the most engaged and financially prepared segments at the event.
If you are a new immigrant considering a franchise in Canada, you are in good company and better position than you might think. You face specific challenges — limited Canadian credit history, unfamiliarity with some local brands and regulatory nuances, potentially limited professional networks — but none of these are insurmountable, and the franchise model is in many ways better suited to new Canadians than independent business ownership.
Why franchising works for immigrants: - The playbook is provided: you do not need a decade of local market experience to follow an established operating system - The brand exists: you are not starting with zero customer awareness - The supply chain is arranged: you are not negotiating supplier contracts in an unfamiliar regulatory environment - The training is structured: language and cultural barriers matter less when operations are documented in detail
The challenge is financing. Building Canadian credit history, qualifying for business loans without Canadian tax returns, and navigating provincial franchise disclosure requirements takes preparation. This guide covers each of these.
Financing a franchise as a new immigrant in Canada
The most common barrier for new immigrant franchise buyers is financing. Here is what is actually available:
BDC (Business Development Bank of Canada): The BDC explicitly serves newcomers and underrepresented entrepreneurs. Their immigrant entrepreneur financing program does not require multiple years of Canadian tax returns — they evaluate the business plan, the franchise brand's track record, and your professional background from your home country. The BDC has offices in major Canadian cities and provides free pre-application consultations.
Canada Small Business Financing Program (CSBFP): Government-backed loans for businesses with less than $10M annual revenue, administered through chartered banks and credit unions. Covers franchise fees, equipment, and leasehold improvements up to $1M. Canadian residency is required; Canadian credit history is helpful but the government guarantee reduces lender risk.
Caisses Desjardins (Quebec): In Quebec specifically, Desjardins credit unions have a strong mandate to serve immigrant entrepreneurs. Caisse managers have more local credit authority than Big Six bank branches and give meaningful weight to character and professional background.
Franchisor financing: Some brands offer in-house financing or have preferred lender relationships that accommodate buyers with limited Canadian credit history. Ask any franchisor directly whether they have immigrant buyer financing programs.
Personal capital: Many immigrant buyers bring substantial savings from their home country. In Canada, there are no restrictions on using foreign-sourced funds for business investments, provided standard AML/KYC banking procedures are followed.
Which franchise categories are most accessible for new immigrants
Not all franchise categories are equal for new immigrant buyers. Categories where immigrant buyers have had the most success in Canada:
Home services and cleaning: Commercial and residential cleaning franchises have low language barriers for the service delivery itself, manageable investment requirements ($30k–$130k CAD), and recurring contract revenue that builds from a small initial client base. Many immigrant operators in this category have grown to multi-territory businesses within 3–5 years.
Food service — own-culture concepts: Immigrant operators often succeed in food service by focusing on cuisines with strong cultural authenticity demand. Jollibee Canada (Filipino), various halal QSR concepts, and Asian bubble tea and dessert brands have immigrant founder and operator profiles that align with buyer experience.
Convenience retail: Independent convenience store ownership is one of the most common immigrant business categories in Canada. Branded convenience franchise concepts (Mac's, On the Run, and regional brands) provide the brand and supply chain structure while the operator brings community relationships and operational discipline.
Senior care: The care sector in Canada has a high proportion of immigrant workers and operators. The franchise model — structured care delivery, documented processes, BDC-eligible investment — suits buyers who want to formalize and scale what many already do informally.
Understanding your legal protections by province
Ontario and Alberta have franchise-specific legislation that applies to all buyers, regardless of immigration status:
Ontario — Arthur Wishart Act: Franchisors operating in Ontario must provide a full franchise disclosure document at least 14 days before signing. You have a statutory right to rescind (cancel) the agreement within 2 years if the franchisor did not comply with disclosure requirements. The Act also prohibits franchisors from restricting your ability to associate with other franchisees.
Alberta — Franchises Act: Similar disclosure requirements and rescission rights. Strong franchisee protections that are more explicit than most other provinces.
Other provinces: BC, Manitoba, PEI, and New Brunswick have franchise legislation with varying levels of protection. Quebec has no franchise-specific law — buyers rely on the Civil Code of Quebec.
Practical implication: If you are choosing between a franchise opportunity in Ontario versus a non-regulated province, and all else is equal, the Ontario legal protections are a meaningful advantage for a buyer who is unfamiliar with Canadian commercial law.
Regardless of province, work with a Canadian franchise attorney — ideally one who speaks your language if English is your second language. The Canadian Franchise Association (CFA) maintains a supplier directory of vetted franchise lawyers across Canada.
Avoiding the mistakes that cost new immigrant buyers their savings
The mistakes that cause significant financial harm to new immigrant franchise buyers are not unique to immigrants — but immigrants may be more vulnerable to them because of information gaps and social pressure.
Mistake 1: Trusting a community referral without due diligence. In immigrant communities, word-of-mouth recommendations carry significant social weight. A franchise opportunity recommended by a trusted community member still requires independent due diligence — the FDD review, franchisee calls, and attorney review. Community trust is not a substitute for verification.
Mistake 2: Signing before reading. The pressure to sign quickly — limited availability, competitor buyers, special pricing — is a sales tactic. A legitimate franchisor gives you 14+ days to review the FDD. Signing without reading it, or signing before your attorney has reviewed it, is one of the most common and costly mistakes in franchise buying.
Mistake 3: Underestimating working capital. New franchise locations — particularly in food service and retail — take 6–18 months to reach stable profitability. Budget for 6 months of operating costs beyond the initial investment. Buyers who run out of working capital before reaching break-even lose everything they invested.
Mistake 4: Ignoring the location. Two US EB-2 visa vendors were at the April 2026 Montreal Franchise Expo — the clearest signal that cross-border buyers are actively comparing paths to Canadian business ownership. These buyers are sophisticated, financially prepared, and increasingly focused on the specific trade area economics of Canadian franchise sites. Do not be less rigorous than the competition.
Resources specifically for immigrant franchise buyers in Canada
Several Canadian organizations specifically serve immigrant entrepreneurs in franchise evaluation:
BDC Immigrant Entrepreneur Program: Free business plan support, loan pre-qualification, and mentorship for newcomers. bdc.ca/immigrants
Futurpreneur Canada: Supports entrepreneurs aged 18–39 with mentorship and financing. Explicit programming for immigrant youth entrepreneurs.
Immigrant Access Fund (Canada): Microloans and business development support for newcomers. Particularly useful for sub-$50k franchise investments.
Local ACCES Employment centres (Ontario) and CAMO (Quebec): Employment and business integration services for immigrants that include small business guidance.
Canadian Franchise Association (CFA): The CFA's 'Be The Boss' educational resources are available in French and English and cover franchise due diligence from a Canadian regulatory perspective.
Local SBDC equivalents: In Quebec, the SAJE (Support for Active Entrepreneurship) network provides free mentorship for small business buyers including franchisees.
For immigrant buyers specifically interested in Quebec, the Montreal Expo (April annually) is the most concentrated opportunity to meet active franchisors in the provincial market in person.
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