The Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC) is a federal Crown corporation with a single mandate: support Canadian entrepreneurs. Unlike commercial banks that must balance shareholder returns with lending activity, BDC is explicitly designed to lend to businesses that conventional banks find too risky — startups, companies with limited collateral, and businesses in growth phases that look unprofitable on paper. If a bank has turned you down, BDC is often the next call to make.
The Business Development Bank of Canada was established in 1944 as the Industrial Development Bank and became BDC in 1995. It is wholly owned by the Government of Canada and operates as a Schedule I bank under the BDC Act. BDC is self-sustaining — it generates revenue from its lending activities and does not rely on annual government appropriations for operations.
BDC's mandate differs from commercial banks in a critical way: BDC is required to be complementary to private sector financing, not competitive with it. This means BDC focuses on situations where conventional banks won't lend or will only lend on terms that don't work for the business. In practice, this makes BDC a lender of choice for businesses that have been declined by traditional banks or that need specialized financing structures.
BDC's core product is a medium to long-term loan for purchasing assets, expanding facilities, or funding business growth. Key features:
Designed specifically for working capital needs — the short-term funding gap between paying your bills and collecting your receivables. BDC's working capital loans are structured differently from asset-based lending and can be used for inventory, operating expenses, and growth initiatives. This is particularly valuable because the CSBFP program (government-guaranteed loans) does not allow working capital use — BDC fills that gap directly.
For smaller financing needs, BDC offers a streamlined small business loan product with a simplified application process. These loans are typically in the $100–$100,000 range and designed to be approved faster than larger commercial loans. Available to businesses that may not yet have the financial history for a conventional bank loan.
Specifically designed for businesses purchasing technology — software, hardware, IT infrastructure, e-commerce platforms, and digital transformation initiatives. Technology can be difficult to finance conventionally because it depreciates quickly and has limited collateral value. BDC's technology loan addresses this with more flexible collateral requirements and terms matched to technology adoption timelines.
For high-growth technology companies that have raised equity financing but need debt capital to extend their runway. BDC venture loans are structured as term loans with warrants and are designed to be complementary to venture capital, not a replacement for it. This product is aimed at tech startups and scale-ups rather than traditional small businesses.
Subordinate financing (quasi-equity) for businesses going through a transition — acquisition, management buyout, succession, or significant expansion. This product fills the gap between senior debt and equity, which is often the hardest financing to secure in a transaction.
Beyond lending, BDC offers management consulting and advisory services to small businesses. Services include:
Some advisory services are subsidized for BDC loan clients. Even if you don't need financing, BDC's advisory programs can be valuable for business owners who want expert guidance without paying full consulting rates.
BDC's interest rates are generally higher than conventional bank rates. This reflects BDC's higher-risk lending mandate — they take on deals banks won't, and price accordingly. As of early 2025:
The rate premium is generally worth paying if BDC financing allows you to access capital you couldn't get elsewhere, or to preserve equity by taking on debt rather than giving up ownership stakes.
BDC lends to a very wide range of businesses, but there are basic eligibility criteria:
Notably, BDC does not have a minimum time-in-business requirement for all products — they will lend to startups if the business plan is strong and the owner has relevant experience.
BDC is the right choice when:
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