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| title | collection | path | parentDocument | outlineId | updatedAt | createdBy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario Funding Landscape | Ontario Hub | Ontario Hub/Ontario Funding Landscape | null | e8c241c0-7c0f-45c8-919f-e4b3affc8c42 | 2026-03-16T16:06:00.507Z | Jennie R.F. |
- Explain ideas for experimental R&D
OIDMTC details, Ontario Creates funding programs, any provincial co-op incentives, GTA-specific resources. Feeds into Session 6 content.
OIDMTC 40% labour credit
Ontario Interactive Digital Media Tax Credit is an extremely valuable incentive for ON studios.
(Note: studios can claim 3 years from fiscal year end retroactively!!)
It provides:
- a refundable tax credit of 40% on eligible Ontario labour expenditures for studios that develop and self-publish their own games (weirdly called "non-specified products")
- up to $100,000 in marketing and distribution expenditures per product
- Fee-for-service work earns a 35% credit.
There is no annual cap on eligible labour expenditures
Administered through Ontario Creates (which issues a certificate of eligibility) and the CRA (which processes thje credit on the T2).
Studios must apply within 18 months of the tax year in which a product was completed
Administration fee is 0.15% of eligibile expenditures ($1,000-$10,000)
There are 4 streams, with different requirements.
-
Non-specified (own IP, self-published)
- 40%
- 80/25 rule; product must be completed; revenmue stream required.
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Specified (fee-for-service)
- 35%
- 80/25 rule; arm's-length purchaser; product completed
-
Qualifying digital game corporation
- 35%
- Min $1M Ontario labour over 36 months; product need not be completed
-
Specialized digital game corporation
- Min $500K Ontario labour/year; 80%+ payroll or 90%+ revenue from games; annual filing
The 80/25 rule
- 80% of total dev labour must be performed in Ontario
- 25% must be paid as wages to employees of the claiming corporation (not contractors)
- This second requirement is particularly important for co-ops. Worker-members must be on payroll receiving T4 slips to count toward the 25% employee test. If a co-op treats its members primarily as independent contractors, it will likely fail this threshold.
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Stacking OIDMTC
SR&ED
Studios can claim OIDMTC and SR&ED credits in the same year, but cannot claim the same labour expenditures under both programs.
Approach ideas:
- Allocate experimental R&D work[^1] to SR&ED and regular game dev work to OIDMTC
SR&ED provides a 35% refundable credit for CCPCs on the first $6 million in qualifyinf expenditures.
Studios should also claim the Ontario Innovation Tax Credit (OITC), which provides an additional 10% refundable credit on SR&ED expenditures in Ontario
Now includes capital expenditures - for equipment
SR&ED credits are not considered "government assistance" that would reduce OIDMTC eligible expenditures
NRC IRAP
NRC IRAP provides non-repayable grants for innovative R&D projects with clear milestones (vs sr&ed which is for broader annual activities). You must be able to cover 20% of wage costs and 50% of contractor costs.
You can claim IRAP on a subset of your work, then claim tax credits on everything
Important: Requires pre-approval before project start. Cannot be claimed retroactively. Not all work qualififies. It needs to be "innovative" risky R&D. You really need to build trust with your assigned Industrial Technology Advisor.
Canada Media Fund
Experimental Stream:
- Development funding: Up to $15,000
- Production funding: Up to $250,000
- Marketing funding: Up to $30,000
Approach:
- Use CMF for production costs (voice acting, music licensing, marketing, equipment rental)
- Use OIDMTC/SR&ED for internal labour costs
Eligibility
- Canadian ownership, control, and key personnel
- Innovative and experimental
- Cultural or educational value
- Public distribution – requires digital distributor
- Provide very detailed project plan and budget
Provincial grants
Ontario Creates
- Interactive Digital Media Fund (IDM Fund): Up to $250,000 for development/production
- Market Development Programs: Travel, marketing, partnership support
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Ontario Arts Council
Toronto Arts Council
Youth employment programs
Eligibility
- For-profit cooperative corporations can likely claim it.
- legislation requires only "Canadian corporation" status without specifying incorporation type, though co-ops must ensure for-profit structure, employee treatment of worker-members (for the 25% employee test), and should seek professional confirmation given no explicit co-op guidance exists in the program.
Functional cooperative legal framework
- federal patronage dividend deductions
Dense GTA support ecosystem
- Ontario Creates funding up to $300K
- But EVERYTHING designed with standard corporations in mind
- Coops are not excluded, but they are never explicitly addressed. This creates ambiguity that studios need to resolve with program admins and tax/accountants.
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What (Ontario) coops should do
- Coops should incorporate as for-profit under CCA if they want to take advantage of any of these opportunities.
- Track EVERY expense carefully from the first day of development - start nOW!!
- Put workers on payroll – must be employees not contractors to claim credits
- Join the OCA and CWCF for development support and the Tenacity Works loan fund
- Do Futures Forward training to unlock Ontario Creates (IF less than 3 years in IDM)
- Begin claiming OIDMTC from the first eligible tax year
- Carefully separate SR&ED-eligible experimental work
- Get in touch with program admins at OC EARLYT to confirm eligibility before applying
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[^1]: Work must address technological uncertainty through systematic investigation