Most Canadian digital media companies leave six figures on the table every year. This isn't because they don't qualify for government funding, but because they don't realize they can stack multiple programs together. 

If you're developing video games, VR/AR experiences, or educational software in Canada, you likely qualify for four to six different funding programs simultaneously. The question isn't which program to choose; it's how to optimize across all of them. 

This guide shows you exactly how to stack Interactive Digital Media Tax Credits (IDMTC) with federal SR&ED, NRC IRAP, Canada Media Fund grants, and other sources to maximize your non-dilutive capital in 2026. 

The Funding Stack: What Canadian Digital Media Companies Can Access 

Here's the reality: A B.C.-based game studio with $600K in eligible development expenses could potentially access: 

  • B.C. IDMTC: $150,000 (25% of $600K) 
  • Federal SR&ED: $210,000 (35% of $600K) 
  • NRC IRAP: $80,000 (80% of specific project costs) 
  • Canada Media Fund: $250,000 (production funding) 

Total Potential Funding: $690,000+ from four programs 

But only if you understand which programs can be combined, how to allocate expenditures correctly, and which common mistakes to avoid. 

Understanding the Core Programs 

  1. Provincial IDMTC (B.C., Ontario, Others)

What it is: Refundable tax credit for interactive digital media development Credit rate: 25% (B.C.) to 40% (Ontario) of eligible labour Best for: Game development, VR/AR, educational software, training simulators 

Key requirement: Products must educate, inform, or entertain users interactively 

  1. Federal SR&ED

What it is: Canada's largest R&D tax incentive program Credit rate: 35% refundable (CCPCs under enhanced rate), 15% non-refundable (others) Enhanced limit: Now applies to $6M expenditures (doubled from $3M in 2026) 

Key requirement: Work must address technological uncertainty through systematic investigation 

  1. NRC IRAP

What it is: Non-repayable grants for innovative R&D projects Funding: Up to 80% of eligible wages, 50% of contractor costs Project size: Typically $50K-$500K+ depending on scope 

Key requirement: Innovative, technology-driven products with commercialization potential 

  1. Canada Media Fund (CMF)

What it is: Production and development funding for Canadian content Experimental Stream: Up to $250,000 for innovative interactive media Convergent Stream: Larger funding for multi-platform projects 

Key requirement: Canadian content with cultural significance or innovation 

The Golden Rules of Program Stacking 

Rule #1: You CANNOT Claim the Same Dollar Twice 

The fundamental principle: You cannot claim the same expenditure under multiple programs that prohibit it. 

What this means in practice: 

  • IDMTC + Federal SR&ED = Allowed (with assistance reduction) 
  • IDMTC + Provincial SR&ED = Not allowed on same expenses 
  • NRC IRAP + Federal SR&ED = Allowed (IRAP reduces SR&ED base) 
  • CMF + SR&ED = Allowed (CMF reduces SR&ED base) 

Rule #2: Government Assistance Reduces Your SR&ED Base 

Any government funding you receive (grants, IDMTC, IRAP, CMF) is considered "government assistance" and must be deducted from your SR&ED eligible expenditure pool. 

Example: 

  • Total eligible wages: $500,000 
  • B.C. IDMTC claimed on full amount: $125,000 (25%) 
  • SR&ED base is now: $500,000 – $125,000 = $375,000 
  • Federal SR&ED credit: $375,000 × 35% = $131,250 
  • Combined total: $256,250 

Even though your SR&ED is reduced, the combined benefit significantly exceeds claiming SR&ED alone ($175,000). 

Rule #3: Strategic Allocation Maximizes Total Returns 

Smart companies don't just claim everything under one program—they strategically segment activities to optimize across all available funding. 

Strategy #1: IDMTC + Federal SR&ED (The Foundation) 

This is the baseline stack every qualifying digital media company should implement. 

Why This Works 

Provincial IDMTC programs explicitly allow claiming federal SR&ED on the same expenditures (with assistance reduction). Since IDMTC rates (25-40%) significantly exceed provincial SR&ED rates (10% in B.C.), you get better returns. 

How to Optimize 

Step 1: Identify All Qualifying Activities 

Segment your development work into categories: 

  • IDMTC-eligible: Design, animation, programming, sound, UX/UI, testing, project management 
  • SR&ED-eligible: Experimental development addressing technological uncertainty 
  • Overlap: Many digital media R&D activities qualify for both 

Step 2: Maximize IDMTC Claims 

Claim all qualifying labour under provincial IDMTC first: 

  • Higher credit rates (25-40% vs. 10% provincial SR&ED) 
  • Broader eligibility (routine development vs. experimental only) 
  • Simpler documentation requirements 

Step 3: Claim Federal SR&ED on Reduced Base 

After deducting IDMTC as government assistance, claim federal SR&ED on remaining eligible expenditures. 

Real-World Example 

Ontario Game Studio: 

  • $400,000 eligible Ontario labour (game development) 
  • $200,000 eligible experimental development (SR&ED qualifying) 

Option A: Only Federal SR&ED 

  • Federal SR&ED: $600,000 × 35% = $210,000 

Option B: OIDMTC + Federal SR&ED ? 

  • OIDMTC: $400,000 × 40% = $160,000 
  • Federal SR&ED: ($600,000 – $160,000) × 35% = $154,000 
  • Total: $314,000 (+$104,000) 

Strategy #2: Adding NRC IRAP to the Stack 

NRC IRAP provides non-repayable grants for innovative R&D projects, making it an excellent complement to tax credits. 

When to Add IRAP 

Consider IRAP if you're: 

  • Developing genuinely innovative technology (new game mechanics, novel VR interaction, breakthrough AI) 
  • Undertaking a defined R&D project with clear milestones 
  • Willing to work with an Industrial Technology Advisor (ITA) 
  • Able to cover 20% of wage costs and 50% of contractor costs 

How IRAP Stacks 

Key insight: IRAP funds specific projects, while IDMTC and SR&ED cover broader annual activities. You can claim IRAP on a subset of your work, then claim tax credits on everything (including IRAP-funded work). 

The math: 

  1. IRAP covers 80% of wages for specific innovative project 
  2. Company pays remaining 20% of wages 
  3. IDMTC claims on 100% of wages (including IRAP-covered portion) 
  4. Federal SR&ED claims on amount after deducting IDMTC 

Example: 

VR Training Studio with $300K Innovative Project: 

  • Total project wages: $300,000 
  • NRC IRAP grant: $240,000 (80% of wages) 
  • Company pays: $60,000 (20% of wages) 

Tax Credit Stack: 

  • B.C. IDMTC: $300,000 × 25% = $75,000 
  • Government assistance: $240,000 IRAP + $75,000 IDMTC = $315,000 
  • Federal SR&ED base: $300,000 – $315,000 = $0 (maxed out) 

Total funding: $315,000 on $60,000 cash outlay = 525% return 

Important IRAP Considerations 

Timing matters: IRAP requires pre-approval before project start. You can't claim retroactively. 

Not all work qualifies: IRAP focuses on innovative, risky R&D. Routine game development won't qualify, but novel AI systems, breakthrough rendering techniques, or innovative multiplayer architectures might. 

Relationship-based: Success requires building trust with your ITA and demonstrating technical capability. 

Strategy #3: Layering Canada Media Fund 

The Canada Media Fund's Experimental Stream supports innovative interactive digital media projects with production funding. 

CMF + Tax Credits: The Power Combo 

CMF grants can fund production costs while tax credits offset labour expenses, creating a comprehensive funding package. 

CMF Experimental Stream: 

  • Development funding: Up to $15,000 
  • Production funding: Up to $250,000 
  • Marketing funding: Up to $30,000 

Strategic approach: 

  1. Use CMF for production costs (voice acting, music licensing, marketing, equipment rental) 
  2. Use IDMTC/SR&ED for internal labour costs 
  3. Minimal overlap = maximum combined funding 

Real-World CMF Stack 

Educational VR Studio: 

  • Internal development labour: $500,000 
  • External production costs: $150,000 
  • Marketing expenses: $30,000 

Funding stack: 

  • CMF Experimental: $250,000 (production) + $30,000 (marketing) = $280,000 
  • Ontario OIDMTC: $500,000 × 40% = $200,000 
  • OIDMTC Marketing Credit: $30,000 × 40% = $12,000 
  • Federal SR&ED: ($500,000 – $200,000) × 35% = $105,000 

Total funding: $597,000 on $680,000 total costs = 88% funded 

CMF Eligibility Requirements 

Content must: 

  • Be Canadian content (Canadian ownership, creative control, key roles) 
  • Be innovative or experimental in nature 
  • Have cultural or educational value 
  • Be distributed publicly (not internal corporate tools) 

Application process: 

  • Requires broadcaster partnership or digital distributor 
  • Competitive application with funding rounds 
  • Detailed project plan and budget required 

Strategy #4: Provincial Innovation Grants (Ontario Creates, Creative BC, etc.) 

Provincial agencies offer additional grants that can stack with tax credits. 

Ontario Creates 

Digital Media Programs: 

  • Interactive Digital Media Fund (IDM Fund): Up to $250,000 for development/production 
  • Market Development Programs: Travel, marketing, partnership support 

Stacking approach: 

  • Use IDM Fund for specific project milestones 
  • Claim OIDMTC on all eligible labour 
  • Claim federal SR&ED on experimental activities 
  • Reduce SR&ED base by assistance received 

Creative BC 

Interactive & Digital Media Programs: 

  • Domestic Motion Picture Fund: Production support 
  • Market and Export Development: International expansion 
  • Professional Development: Training and skills 

Stacking strategy: 

  • Leverage grants for non-labour costs (equipment, travel, marketing) 
  • Maximize B.C. IDMTC on labour (25% rate) 
  • Layer federal SR&ED on reduced base 

Strategy #5: Youth Employment Programs 

Wage subsidies can offset labour costs before calculating tax credits, creating compounding benefits. 

NRC IRAP Youth Employment Program 

Funding: Up to $30,000 per youth hire (ages 15-30, recent graduates) Application: Through your IRAP ITA 

Strategic value: 

  • Hire junior developers, artists, testers at subsidized rates 
  • Still claim full wages (including subsidy) under IDMTC and SR&ED 
  • Effectively get government to pay for government-subsidized talent 

Canada Summer Jobs 

Funding: Up to 50% of minimum wage for summer students Duration: 6-16 weeks 

Use case: Supplement your team with summer interns whose wages are partially covered, then claim tax credits on full wages paid. 

Advanced Stacking Strategies 

Segmentation by Activity Type 

Not all development work qualifies equally across programs. Smart segmentation maximizes total funding. 

Activity mapping:

Activity IDMTC Federal SR&ED IRAP CMF
Routine programming yes no no no
Novel AI development yes yes yes no
Graphics/animation yes no no yes
Experimental Rendering yes yes yes no
UX Design yes no no yes
Testing/QA yes no no no
Voice acting/music no no no yes

Optimization approach: 

  1. Identify truly innovative R&D ? IRAP application 
  2. All qualifying labour ? Provincial IDMTC 
  3. Experimental development ? Federal SR&ED (after IDMTC reduction) 
  4. Production costs ? CMF or provincial grants 

Multi-Province Operations 

Companies with teams in multiple provinces can claim IDMTC in each jurisdiction. 

Example: Studio with B.C. and Ontario Teams 

B.C. team: 10 developers, $800K wages 

  • B.C. IDMTC: $800K × 25% = $200,000 

Ontario team: 8 developers, $600K wages 

  • OIDMTC: $600K × 40% = $240,000 

Federal SR&ED on both: 

  • Total wages: $1.4M 
  • Less IDMTC assistance: $440K 
  • SR&ED base: $960K 
  • Federal SR&ED: $960K × 35% = $336,000 

Total funding: $776,000 across three programs 

The Capital Expenditure Opportunity (New for 2026) 

Federal SR&ED now includes capital expenditures again—creating new stacking opportunities for equipment-heavy projects. 

Use case: VR Studio Equipment 

  • VR headsets, motion capture equipment, servers: $200,000 
  • Capital expenditure SR&ED credit: $200,000 × 35% = $70,000 
  • Labour IDMTC + SR&ED: (calculated separately on wages) 

Strategic value: Companies can now fund both labour (via IDMTC + SR&ED) and equipment (via SR&ED capital) simultaneously. 

Common Stacking Mistakes to Avoid 

Mistake #1: Claiming Provincial SR&ED Instead of IDMTC 

The error: Companies claim provincial SR&ED (10% in B.C.) when IDMTC offers 25-40%. 

The fix: Always evaluate IDMTC first for digital media work. Provincial SR&ED only makes sense if your work doesn't qualify for IDMTC. 

Lost opportunity: On $500K wages, choosing B.C. SR&ED over IDMTC costs you $75,000. 

Mistake #2: Not Tracking Government Assistance Properly 

The error: Forgetting to reduce SR&ED base by assistance received (IDMTC, IRAP, grants). 

The consequence: CRA audit, claim reduction, potential penalties. 

The fix: Maintain detailed records of all government funding received and ensure proper assistance calculation. 

Mistake #3: Applying for IRAP Too Late 

The error: Seeking IRAP funding after project already started. 

The consequence: IRAP requires pre-approval. Post-project applications are rejected. 

The fix: Contact IRAP ITA during project planning phase, ideally 3-6 months before project start. 

Mistake #4: Double-Claiming the Same Expense 

The error: Claiming identical expenditure under both provincial IDMTC and provincial SR&ED. 

The consequence: Claim rejection, audit, potential program ban. 

The fix: Choose ONE provincial program per expenditure. Federal SR&ED can layer on top of provincial IDMTC (with assistance reduction). 

Mistake #5: Poor Documentation Segregation 

The error: Not clearly documenting which activities qualify under which program. 

The consequence: Audit challenges, difficulty defending claims, reduced credits. 

The fix: Implement time tracking and project codes that map to each funding program from day one. 

Implementation Roadmap: How to Start Stacking 

Month 1: Assessment & Planning 

Week 1-2: Inventory Your Opportunities 

  • Calculate current/historical R&D expenditures 
  • Identify which products/activities qualify for IDMTC 
  • Assess innovation level for potential IRAP projects 
  • Research CMF and provincial grant deadlines 

Week 3-4: Create Your Funding Strategy 

  • Map activities to optimal program combinations 
  • Calculate potential returns from each program 
  • Identify documentation gaps 
  • Set up tracking systems 

Month 2: Applications & Implementation 

IDMTC: 

  • Register with provincial Ministry of Finance (B.C., Ontario, etc.) 
  • Implement employee residency tracking 
  • Set up payroll categorization by eligible/ineligible activities 

NRC IRAP: 

  • Call 1-877-994-4727 to connect with local ITA 
  • Prepare project proposal for innovative R&D work 
  • Build relationship with ITA through regular updates 

CMF & Provincial Grants: 

  • Review application deadlines and requirements 
  • Prepare broadcaster/distributor partnerships if needed 
  • Develop detailed project budget and plan 

SR&ED: 

  • Document technological uncertainties and experiments 
  • Implement project tracking that captures SR&ED work 
  • Ensure overlap with IDMTC is properly tracked for assistance calculation 

Month 3-12: Ongoing Optimization 

Quarterly Reviews: 

  • Track government assistance received to date 
  • Adjust SR&ED base calculations 
  • Monitor IRAP project milestones 
  • Document IDMTC qualifying activities 

Annual Filing: 

  • File IDMTC claims within 18 months of fiscal year-end 
  • Include IDMTC assistance in SR&ED calculation 
  • File federal SR&ED with corporate tax return 
  • Track total funding secured across all programs 

Tools & Systems for Successful Stacking 

Essential Tracking Requirements 

Time tracking system: 

  • Employee hours by project 
  • Project categorization (IDMTC vs. SR&ED vs. IRAP vs. routine) 
  • Activity type classification 
  • Client work vs. internal product development 

Financial systems: 

  • Separate GL codes for each program 
  • Government assistance tracking account 
  • Detailed payroll by program eligibility 
  • Capital expenditure tracking (for SR&ED) 

Documentation platform: 

  • Technical project documentation (for SR&ED) 
  • Product descriptions (for IDMTC eligibility) 
  • IRAP milestone reports 
  • Residency verification (T4 tracking) 

How Boast Automates the Stack 

Managing multiple funding programs manually creates complexity, errors, and missed opportunities. Boast's platform automates the entire stack: 

Automated data integration: 

  • Connects with payroll, time tracking, and project management tools 
  • Automatically categorizes expenditures across programs 
  • Tracks government assistance in real-time 
  • Calculates optimal allocation across IDMTC, SR&ED, and other programs 

Expert optimization: 

  • Tax specialists review every claim 
  • Strategic guidance on IRAP applications 
  • CMF and provincial grant support 
  • Multi-province coordination for distributed teams 

Comprehensive audit defense: 

  • Documentation automatically meets all program requirements 
  • 100% audit support included 
  • Provincial ministry and CRA communication handling 
  • Track record of successful multi-program claims 

Frequently Asked Questions 

Yes! You can claim provincial IDMTC and federal SR&ED on the same expenditures. However, the IDMTC amount reduces your SR&ED eligible expense base (as government assistance). You cannot claim provincial IDMTC and provincial SR&ED on the same expenses.

Absolutely. For most digital media companies, adding IDMTC to your SR&ED claim increases total returns by $50,000-$150,000 annually. The programs complement each other.

IRAP looks for innovation, technical risk, and commercialization potential. If you’re solving novel technical challenges (not just building features), contact an IRAP ITA at 1-877-994-4727 for assessment.

While each program has specific requirements, much documentation overlaps. A good system captures information once and formats it for each program’s needs. Boast’s platform automates this.

Not properly tracking government assistance. Every grant or tax credit you receive must be deducted from your SR&ED base. Missing this creates audit issues.

No. IDMTC requires eligible expenditures to be paid to employees. However, contractors can be eligible under SR&ED (at 80% of cost) and IRAP (at 50% of cost).

Generally 3 years from your fiscal year-end, but provincial limitations vary. Many companies recover $100,000+ in retroactive IDMTC claims.

Not if done correctly with proper documentation. In fact, companies using specialized providers like Boast often have lower audit rates due to comprehensive documentation quality.

Conclusion: Stop Leaving Money on the Table 

Canadian digital media companies have access to the most generous combination of innovation funding programs in the world. Between provincial IDMTC, federal SR&ED, NRC IRAP, CMF grants, and provincial innovation programs, it's possible to fund 50-90% of your development costs through non-dilutive government programs. 

But only if you understand how to stack them strategically. 

The companies that master this art gain unfair advantages: 

  • Extended runway without dilution 
  • Ability to compete with better-funded US competitors 
  • Resources to take creative risks 
  • Capital to hire top talent 
  • Funding to weather market downturns 

The question isn't whether you can afford to optimize your funding stack—it's whether you can afford not to. 

Every dollar you leave unclaimed is a dollar you can't invest in: 

  • Completing your next game or platform 
  • Hiring that senior developer or artist 
  • Marketing at launch 
  • Surviving until revenue scales 
  • Building the next innovative feature 

Ready to maximize your funding stack? 

Schedule a free consultation with Boast's R&D funding specialists to: 

  • Calculate your specific opportunity across all programs 
  • Get a strategic roadmap for stacking IDMTC, SR&ED, IRAP, and grants 
  • Identify activities you're not claiming but should be 
  • Understand exactly what documentation you need 

The funding you need is waiting. Let's unlock it together.