Canada is dangling up to CA $5 million per project to help home-grown start-ups pay their spiralling GPU bills. The AI Compute Access Fund, opened on 25 June 2025, is the first spending line of Ottawa’s CA $300 million Canadian Sovereign AI Compute Strategy and is taking applications until 31 July 2025, 11:59 p.m. EST.
Launched by Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED), the fund attacks the single biggest cost in modern AI development: cloud computing. Officials consulted more than 1,000 ecosystem players last year, all pointing to scarce domestic GPU capacity and “eye-watering” rental fees that push promising firms to U.S. providers. By covering local compute now, Ottawa hopes to keep intellectual property, and talent, inside Canada while a larger public super-computing build comes online later this decade.
“The AI Compute Access Fund will help break down barriers and empower businesses and entrepreneurs to develop made-in-Canada solutions,” said Evan Solomon, Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation, at the 25 June launch.
Who qualifies and what’s on offer?
Eligible applicants are Canadian-registered, for-profit SMEs with fewer than 500 employees, a Canadian R & D team, and either revenue or at least Series A backing. Projects may run up to three years and must show a clear commercial pathway. Funding ranges from CA $100 000 to CA $5 million and reimburses two-thirds of approved costs for Canadian cloud-based compute or half for non-Canadian services. Awards can be non-repayable, repayable, or conditionally repayable terms set during due diligence.
The application flow starts with a short Statement of Interest; ISED promises an eligibility verdict within five business days. Successful firms then file a full proposal covering milestones, customers and IP plans. All submissions close at the end of July, after which programme officers, and external AI experts, will score projects for market potential, management capacity and public benefit before issuing contribution agreements.
Entrepreneurs can begin the process via the “Apply now” portal on ISED’s fund page, which also hosts the full application guide and contact form.
Why it matters for business
For Canada’s AI founders, compute is often the make-or-break line item: training a mid-sized language model can run well above CA $1 million in cloud fees. By underwriting up to two-thirds of that expense, the Access Fund stretches runway, accelerates model iteration and keeps data residency, and resulting IP, on Canadian soil. Investors gain too: lower burn rates flatten the climb to product-market fit and could unlock fresh deal flow just as global AI capital intensifies. For Ottawa, every funded project is a hedge against brain-drain and a step toward positioning Canada as more than an R & D outpost in the worldwide AI race.