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Significant part of duties registration threshold for organizations and corporations

Effective date

This interpretation bulletin takes effect on January 19, 2026. Read the backgrounder.

Join us for an info session on the new registration threshold and an overview of the requirements related to lobbying.

The purpose of this bulletin is to describe how the Commissioner of Lobbying interprets and applies the significant part of duties registration threshold set out in paragraph 7(1)(b) of the Lobbying Act (Act).

The elements of subsection 7(1) of the Act

The Act requires the officer responsible for filing returns of an organization or a corporation (the most senior paid officer) to file an in-house registration in the Registry of Lobbyists when:

  1. one or more employees of the organization or corporation communicate with public office holders on behalf of their employer about any of the matters listed in paragraph 7(1)(a); and
  2. engaging in such communications constitutes, either individually or collectively, a “significant part of the duties” of one employee within the meaning of paragraph 7(1)(b).

Matters referred to in paragraph 7(1)(a)

Communications that employees have with public office holders on behalf of their employers about any of the following matters count towards the significant part of duties registration threshold:

  • the development of any legislative proposal by the Government of Canada or by a member of either the Senate or House of Commons;
  • the introduction, passage, defeat or amendment of any Bill or resolution in the Senate or the House of Commons;
  • the making or amendment of any federal regulation;
  • the development or amendment of any federal government policy or program; and
  • the awarding of any grant, contribution or other financial benefit by or on behalf of the Government of Canada.

Please note that paragraph 7(1)(a) does not apply to any communications that employees have with public office holders on behalf of their employer about the awarding of a contract by or on behalf of the Government of Canada. As a result, such communications do not count towards the significant part of duties registration threshold.

The significant part of duties registration threshold set out in paragraph 7(1)(b)

The Commissioner of Lobbying interprets the term “significant” as used in the phrase “significant part of the duties” to mean a “notable” or “noteworthy” part of an employee’s duties.

In practice, the Commissioner of Lobbying considers the significant part of duties registration threshold to be met when the total volume of communications that one or more employees of an organization or corporation have with public office holders about any of the matters listed in paragraph 7(1)(a) amounts to 8 or more hours in any given consecutive 4-week period.

In determining whether this registration threshold is met, the Commissioner of Lobbying considers the number of hours employees spend preparing for and participating in oral communications with public office holders as well as drafting written communications to public office holders about any of the subject matters listed in paragraph 7(1)(a). The time employees spend making appeals to the public (i.e., grassroots communications) about any of those same subject matters also counts towards the registration threshold.  

When determining whether this threshold has been met, the Commissioner of Lobbying considers the total number of hours of oral and written communications that employees have with public office holders about any of the subject matters listed in paragraph 7(1)(a) in any given consecutive 4-week period

For example, the significant part of duties registration threshold would be met and the most senior paid officer would be required to file an in-house registration in the Registry of Lobbyists if, between January 16 and February 12: 

  • one employee spends 3 hours drafting a letter sent to a public office holder (3 hours)
  • one employee spends 2 hours drafting and another employee spends 1 hour editing and finalizing an information package that is provided to the public office holder (3 hours)
  • four employees each spend 30 minutes in a face-to-face meeting with a public office holder (2 hours).

The most senior paid officer has two months from the date the significant part of duties registration threshold is met to file an in-house organization or corporation registration return in the Registry of Lobbyists.

Ask the Office of the Commissioner of Lobbying

Contact our Office if you have any questions about whether your organization or corporation meets the significant part of duties registration threshold.

Nancy Bélanger
Commissioner of Lobbying

July 16, 2025
Effective January 19, 2026

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