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About

Built by people who worked in law, for the people who actually run the files.

SupaCorp exists because the entity management software available to small Canadian firms was a choice between enterprise pricing, legacy desktop tools, or a binder full of Word templates.

Why we built it

The smallest firms were being asked to act the most like large ones.

Canadian corporate compliance requires strict adherence to jurisdiction-specific rules. Federal and provincial requirements have been adding up for years. Minute books are expected to be consistent. Annual returns are expected to land on time. Client expectations have moved faster than the tools serving small firms.

Meanwhile, the two entity management products with real market share were built and priced for in-house legal departments at large organizations. For a three-person firm, that is a non-starter. So most small practices ended up somewhere worse: a shared folder, a spreadsheet of deadlines, and manual tracking.

SupaCorp is the alternative. It keeps entity records clean and tracks deadlines. Priced like a tool. Built by people who lived in the work.

Principles

Four things that do not change with the roadmap.

Our foundational principles.

  1. 01

    We deliver complete, functional tools

    We focus entirely on delivering the software that exists today. When a feature is listed, it is fully built, tested, and ready for your firm to use.

  2. 02

    We respect the person running the file

    Paralegals and legal assistants run most entity work in small firms. The product is designed around their week, rather than a partner's dashboard.

  3. 03

    We are Canadian by default

    Designed for federal and every provincial jurisdiction, not as a locale file bolted onto a US product.

  4. 04

    Absolute data separation

    We strictly enforce absolute data separation, ensuring row-level firm isolation without exception.

Canadian, deliberately

Built in Canada, for Canadian practice.

The product knows the difference between a CBCA corporation and an Ontario OBCA corporation, between an initial return in Ontario and an annual return in British Columbia, between a named and numbered company. The jurisdictions are not a settings page. They are the product.

Federal (CBCA)
Ontario
British Columbia
Alberta
Quebec
Manitoba
Saskatchewan
Nova Scotia
New Brunswick
Newfoundland
PEI
Territories

If this sounds like the tool your firm has been missing, let's talk.