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Tax Credits

SR&ED Tax Credit in 2026: Who Qualifies and How Much You Can Claim

The Scientific Research and Experimental Development tax credit returns up to 65% of eligible R&D spending for Canadian businesses. Here's what qualifies, what doesn't, and how to claim it.

Jhordan Édouard·Founder, Fruxal··8 min read

The Scientific Research and Experimental Development program is the single largest federal R&D incentive in Canada. In 2024 it returned $3.2 billion to roughly 17,000 businesses. The average claim was $187,000.

Most of your peers who qualify never file. Here is how the program works in 2026.

Who qualifies

Any Canadian-Controlled Private Corporation (CCPC) that attempts to resolve a technical uncertainty through systematic investigation. "Technical uncertainty" is the key phrase — it does not require a lab coat. Examples CRA has accepted:

  • Custom software development where the outcome was unknown at the start
  • Manufacturing process experiments to reduce defect rates
  • New formulation testing in food, cosmetics, or chemicals
  • Iterative prototype development where each cycle taught something new
  • Algorithm tuning that required testing multiple approaches

Ordinary software development using known techniques does not qualify. The bar is whether a competent professional would have known the answer in advance.

What you can claim

For a CCPC, the federal credit is 35% refundable on the first $3M of qualifying expenditures. Above that threshold, it drops to 15% non-refundable.

Provincial credits stack on top: - Québec: +30% refundable on salaries - Ontario: +8% refundable (ORDTC) + 3.5% non-refundable (OITC) - British Columbia: +10% refundable - Alberta: 8% non-refundable (IRDTC)

A Québec CCPC combining federal + provincial can recover up to 65% of qualifying salary costs.

What counts as an eligible expense

  • Salaries and wages of employees directly performing R&D
  • Subcontractor costs (at 80% of invoiced amount)
  • Materials consumed or transformed in R&D
  • Overhead via the proxy method (55% of salary) or traditional method

The 18-month deadline

Claims must be filed within 18 months of your fiscal year-end. After that, the credit is lost forever. Many businesses discover the program too late to claim back years.

Why most eligible businesses never file

Three reasons dominate:

1. They assume they don't qualify. Software shops, manufacturers, and even service businesses with internal tool development regularly leave SR&ED unclaimed. 2. The technical narrative is intimidating. CRA requires a written description of the uncertainty, the hypothesis, and the systematic investigation. Most accountants don't write these; most engineers don't know they need to. 3. Cash-flow timing. The refund lands 3–6 months after filing. Businesses that need the cash sooner defer the claim and then forget.

How Fruxal handles this

Fruxal's recovery team includes SR&ED specialists who draft the technical narrative, assemble supporting documentation, and file on your behalf. Contingency pricing only — if the claim is denied, you pay nothing. If it's approved, Fruxal takes 12% of the refund.

Check if your business qualifies →

Jhordan Édouard

Founder, Fruxal

Research and analysis from Fruxal's financial recovery team. Fruxal helps Canadian SMBs find and recover hidden revenue leaks — on contingency. More about the team →

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