Business Visitor
Conduct international business legally - without a work permit, with Canada Central
A Business Visitor is a foreign national who comes to Canada temporarily to conduct international business activities for an employer or company outside Canada, without entering the Canadian labour market.
Conduct international business legally – without a work permit, with Canada Central
A Business Visitor is a foreign national who comes to Canada temporarily to conduct international business activities for an employer or company outside Canada, without entering the Canadian labour market.
In most genuine business-visitor cases, no work permit is required. However, you must still hold the correct entry document – either a Temporary Resident Visa (TRV) or an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA) – depending on your nationality.
With Canada Central, business visitors avoid the most common mistake: being misclassified as a worker, which can lead to refusal at the border or future immigration issues.
Who Qualifies as a Business Visitor
You may qualify as a business visitor if all of the following apply:
- Your stay in Canada is temporary, usually less than six months
- You will leave Canada at the end of your visit
- You will not join the Canadian labour market
- You will not be employed by a Canadian company
- You will not be paid from a Canadian source
- Your main place of business, income, and profits remain outside Canada
- You can prove strong ties to your employer and country abroad
- You meet standard entry requirements (passport, funds, admissibility)
If you will actually perform work for a Canadian company (technical, managerial, production, hands-on services) or stay long-term, you usually need a work permit, not business-visitor status.
Canada Central evaluates your activities in advance to confirm whether business visitor or work permit is legally required.
Typical Business-Visitor Activities
(No Work Permit Required)
The following activities are generally permitted as a business visitor:
- Attending business meetings, conferences, conventions, trade shows, or fairs
- Negotiating contracts or taking orders for a foreign company
- Purchasing Canadian goods or services for a foreign business
- Participating in after-sales service (advisory, training, or supervision only – not hands-on construction or manual work)
- Being trained by a Canadian parent or affiliate company while remaining employed and paid abroad
- Training staff at a Canadian branch of your foreign employer
- Exploring investment opportunities or strengthening cross-border business relationships
Once your activities cross into daily operational work for a Canadian entity, you are no longer a business visitor and a work permit is required.
Entry Documents: TRV or eTA
Even though a work permit is usually not required, business visitors must have the correct entry document.
You need a TRV (Visitor Visa) if:
- You are from a visa-required country
You apply as a visitor, clearly explaining your business-visitor purpose.
You need an eTA if:
- You are from a visa-exempt country
- You are travelling to Canada by air
At the airport or border, a Canadian officer will decide whether you qualify as a business visitor based on your documents and explanation.
Canada Central prepares your documentation so your purpose is immediately clear to border officers.
Essential Documents to Carry as a Business Visitor
Strong documentation is critical for business-visitor entry.
Recommended documents include:
- Invitation letter from the Canadian host company
Explaining:- Purpose of visit
- Duration
- Planned activities
- Confirmation you will not be employed or paid in Canada
- Purpose of visit
- Employer letter from abroad
Confirming:- Your job title and duties
- Employment start date
- Salary and payment source
- That your position remains outside Canada
- Your job title and duties
- Proof of foreign business operations
(company registration, website, contracts) - Travel evidence
(hotel booking, return flight) - Proof of funds
To cover your stay and return
Clear, consistent documents are often the difference between smooth entry and refusal at the border.
Business Visitor vs Work Permit – Why Classification Matters
Many refusals happen because applicants underestimate what counts as “work.”
Business Visitor | Work Permit Required |
Paid outside Canada | Paid by a Canadian source |
Short-term meetings & negotiations | Daily operational work |
No Canadian payroll | Canadian payroll or supervision |
No job creation in Canada | Filling a Canadian role |
Canada Central helps businesses and professionals avoid accidental non-compliance.
Why Choose Canada Central for Business Visitor Travel
Business-visitor entry is often decided at the border, not just on paper.
Canada Central helps you:
- Confirm whether business visitor status is appropriate
- Avoid being misclassified as a worker
- Prepare border-ready documentation
- Reduce the risk of refusal or questioning
- Protect future work permit or PR options
With Canada Central, business travel to Canada is handled professionally, compliantly, and with confidence – so you can focus on business, not border issues.
Expert guidance on visa requirements and eligibility criteria.
Eligibility Assessment
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