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When most people think of R&D, they picture breakthroughs in aerospace, pharmaceuticals, or artificial intelligence, million-dollar initiatives with large labs, long timelines, and dedicated research departments. But the reality on the ground is shifting. In today’s fast-paced, a growing share of this R&D is actually micro R&D, small, targeted experiments that respond quickly to real-world challenges. It’s time the SR&ED conversation caught up.
Welcome to the Micro-R&D Revolution, where real progress happens one experiment at a time.
Gone are the days when only Fortune 500 companies could afford to innovate. Across sectors, from food processing and manufacturing to cleantech and forestry, businesses are tweaking formulations, testing materials, and adapting processes to meet new challenges.
These aren’t headline-grabbing discoveries, but they’re R&D all the same. What matters for SR&ED eligibility isn’t size or industry, it’s whether your team tackled a technological uncertainty using systematic testing and analysis.
If you didn’t know whether a new method would work and had to test, adjust, and try again, you may already be doing SR&ED without realizing it.
Here are a few examples of small but SR&ED-eligible projects:
None of these projects involved patents, white coats, or multi-year budgets. But all of them involved unpredictable challenges, structured problem-solving, and a clear attempt to create new knowledge.
There are three reasons small-scale experimentation is becoming the dominant form of innovation:
In competitive markets, the ability to rapidly test and iterate is often more valuable than building a “perfect” solution on the first try. This favours companies that innovate through process rather than product.
Innovation is no longer siloed in R&D departments. It happens on the floor, in the field, and in the codebase, often by operations staff, field engineers, or frontline developers solving live issues.
From field logs to Jira tickets, companies today generate a digital footprint of their experiments by default, creating a natural paper trail that supports SR&ED claims when properly structured.
The beauty of the SR&ED program is that it recognizes technical merit over commercial success. Even if your tests fail, even if the outcome is that something doesn’t work, you can still claim eligible costs if the work was structured, documented, and aimed at solving a technological problem.
This makes SR&ED uniquely well-suited to the micro-innovation model. You don’t need to invent something new, you just need to advance your knowledge.
Ask yourself:
If you answered yes to any of these, you might already be in the Micro-R&D club, and leaving money on the table.
In a world where innovation is increasingly decentralized, agile, and fast-moving, SR&ED needs to be reframed not as a tax credit for the “R&D elite,” but as a tool for everyday innovators.
If your business is solving problems creatively, adapting processes on the fly, or making iterative improvements under real-world constraints, you’re not just keeping operations running. You’re contributing to Canada’s innovation economy.
And the government is willing to pay you for it.
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