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Comments Due By: November 7, 2025
The Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO) is proposing to amend the Fee Model related to the Approved Person (AP) Fees Component of the Annual Fee of the Dealer Member Fee Model, revising the rate to $300 from $250 per AP of the Dealer Member (the Proposed Fee Amendment). Concurrently, CIRO is proposing to cease collection of its main activity-based registration-related submission fees collected through the National Registration Database1 (CIRO NRD fees). CIRO will also end its cost recovery arrangements with certain provincial securities regulatory authorities. The following materials are provided for comment:
CIRO is proposing that the amendment be effective on April 1, 2026.
On April 1, July 1, and October 1, 2025 CIRO was delegated and assigned additional registration functions for investment dealers (ID), mutual fund dealers (MFD), and the individuals who act on their behalf. It is anticipated that by Spring 2026, additional delegation for investment and mutual fund dealers and the individuals they regulate will be granted in the remaining jurisdiction.
The new registration functions delegated and assigned to CIRO by the provincial securities regulatory authorities are as follows:
A. Additional ID Registration Functions (by Jurisdiction)
| Firms | Individuals |
|---|---|
|
|
B. Additional MFD Registration (by Jurisdiction)
| Firms | Individuals |
|---|---|
|
|
In compliance with Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) Recognition Orders and the CIRO’s Guiding Principles (discussed below), CIRO must ensure full cost recovery. Currently, CIRO has been recovering certain registration costs through activity-based submission fees from the NRD and cost recovery arrangements relating to ID registration activities with certain provincial securities regulatory authorities. With this Proposed Fee Amendment, CIRO will cease collecting CIRO NRD fees2 and end its cost recovery arrangements with certain provincial securities regulatory authorities and instead adopt a harmonized and simplified approach that recovers all costs by way of the Annual Dealer Member Fee.
The proposal would amend only the AP Fees Component, increasing the annual AP rate by $50 a year, from $250 to $300. This adjustment is intended to recover the incremental costs associated with expanded registration responsibilities, replaces the existing CIRO NRD fees and cost recovery arrangements with certain provincial securities regulatory authorities, while also meeting the key tenants of CIRO’s Guiding Principles.
In the development and evaluation of the proposed fee amendment, CIRO continued to apply the following overarching principles (“Guiding Principles”) per CSA Recognition Orders:
This Proposed Fee Amendment satisfies the above noted Guiding Principles while also minimizing the impact on Dealer Members upon implementation. Registration responsibilities (and costs) are driven by changes in the number of APs. By increasing the AP Fees Component, this allows for a more appropriate and equitable cost recovery from those members with higher AP count.
The Proposed Fee Amendment was presented to both the CIRO Finance, Audit & Risk Committee and CIRO Board on September 23-24, 2025, where it was approved for publication for comment.
In the upcoming weeks, CIRO will be sending communication to materially impacted Dealer Members with information on the directional impact of the Proposed Fee Amendment on their Annual Dealer Member Fee.
Comments on the Proposed Fee Amendment should be in writing and delivered by November 7, 2025 (30 days from the publication date of this Bulletin) to:
Membership Services
Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization
40 Temperance Street, Suite 2600
Toronto, Ontario M5H 0B4
e-mail: MembershipServices@ciro.ca
A copy should also be delivered to the CSA:
Trading and Markets
Ontario Securities Commission
22nd Floor
20 Queen Street West Toronto, Ontario M5H 3S8
e-mail: MTradingandMarkets@osc.gov.on.ca
and
Capital Markets Regulation
B.C. Securities Commission
P.O. Box 10142, Pacific Centre
701 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V7Y 1L2
e-mail: MCMRdistributionofSROdocuments@bcsc.bc.ca
Commentators should be aware that a copy of their comment letter will be made publicly available on the CIRO website at www.ciro.ca.
After considering the comments on the Proposed Fee Amendment received in response to this Request for Comments together with any comments of the CSA, CIRO staff may recommend revisions to the Proposed Fee Amendment. If the revisions and comments received are not material in nature, the Board has authorized the President to approve the revisions on CIRO’s behalf and the revised Proposed Fee Amendment will be subject to approval by the CSA. If the revisions or comments are material, CIRO staff will submit the revised Proposed Fee Amendment to the Board for approval for republication or implementation, as applicable.
These include CIRO’s activity-based fees for the initial registration of individuals, reactivation and reinstatement of individuals, adding jurisdictions or an additional sponsoring firm, changing or surrendering categories, and ending registration or permitted individual status.
CIRO will continue to collect through the NRD:
CIRO had previously been delegated authority to register firms and individuals who act on behalf of IDs in Alberta, British Columbia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Saskatchewan. Ontario and Québec had delegated authority for ID individuals only. CIRO, and one of the predecessor organizations (The Mutual Fund Dealers Association), did not conduct any registration activity for MFD firms or individuals.
On November 20, 2024, the CSA announced that its members are exploring delegating and assigning certain registration functions and powers to CIRO.
On April 1, 2025, nine CSA jurisdictions delegated to CIRO registration functions for ID and MFD firms and individuals.3 The Autorité des marchés financiers (AMF) delegated registration functions for ID, MFD and Derivatives Dealers and individuals who act on behalf of MFD on July 1, 2025. On October 1, 2025, the Manitoba Securities Commission assigned to CIRO registration functions for ID and MFD firms and individuals, and the Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchewan assigned to CIRO additional registration function for MFD firms and individuals.
With the additional delegation and assignment of powers taking effect on April 1, 2025, July 1, and October 1, 2025 delegation of registration functions across the country for ID and MFD is largely harmonized.4
Prior to the additional delegation and assignment, CIRO recovered the costs of performing registration-related regulatory activities in three ways:
For the fiscal year ending March 31, 2025, CIRO collected approximately $1.9 million in NRD fees and recovery from provincial securities regulatory authorities. For FY26, CIRO has undertaken transitory measures to help fund its expanded registration activities (refer to Section 4).
Starting April 1, 2026, CIRO will cease collecting CIRO NRD fees5, as well as cost recovery arrangements with certain provincial securities regulatory authorities. Instead, full costs are proposed to be recovered through the Annual Dealer Member Fee. The additional delegation and assignment results in incremental costs for CIRO, including costs of performing Canadian and international criminal, bankruptcy and insolvency checks, staffing requirements, and related IT support. The incremental costs are mostly driven by the delegated and assigned MFD registration functions as CIRO had not previously performed any of these activities. CIRO estimates annual incremental costs to be approximately $4.6 million.
In totality, the Annual Dealer Member Fee must recover $6.5 million (consisting of the incremental costs plus fees previously collected) to offset the additional registration functions delegated and assigned to CIRO.
Under the Dealer Member Fee Model, a CIRO Dealer Member pays, among other fees, Annual Fees for each fiscal year. The Annual Dealer Member Fee is the primary method of recovering operating costs from Dealer Members.
The Annual Fee for each Dealer Member is determined with reference to the following components:
To recover the $6.5 million in the Dealer Member Fee Model, the proposal would amend only the AP Fees Component of the Annual Fee, increasing the annual rate from $250 to $300.
Under the CIRO Fee Model, the AP Fee Component of the Annual Dealer Member Fee is calculated by taking the number of APs of the Dealer Member based on the 12-month average of the previous calendar year and multiply by the AP rate ($300 in the Proposed Fee Amendment). Each AP is only counted once for each Dealer Member, regardless of how many categories or provincial jurisdictions that person is registered in.
Fiscal Year ending March 31, 2026
CIRO started to incur incremental costs commensurate with additional delegation activities in FY26. As part of CIRO’s FY26 Budget, the Board of Directors approved $2 million of the reserves to be used to fund the net deficit related to these activities during this transition year. To ensure continuing alignment with CIRO’s Guiding Principle, CIRO is required to recover the full costs starting FY27.
Fiscal Year ending March 31, 2027
In FY27, we propose to cease collecting CIRO NRD fees.
In Québec, until CIRO begins conducting all oversight activities related to MFDs and the individuals acting on their behalf, and receives approval from the AMF, the applicable CIRO NRD fees will continue to apply, along with the transitionary measures in Section 2.2 under the Integrated Fee Model will remain in effect.
In Ontario, we will continue to receive the OSC’s NRD fees related to ID and MFD registration activities until March 31, 2027.
CIRO conducted a comprehensive analysis of the impact upon Dealer Members under the Proposed Fee Amendment with the Annual Dealer Member Fee. Important considerations of this analysis includes:
Until CIRO begins delivering full regulatory services to MFD Members in Québec and obtain the AMF’s approval, the transitionary measures in Section 2.2 under the Integrated Fee Model will remain in effect.
| Member Division and Size | Total CIRO Fee Impact | Allocation of Total CIRO Fee Increase | Max Individual Member Impact ($M and %) |
|---|---|---|---|
| ID | |||
| Small firms | ($0.1) / (3%) | (1%) | - |
| Medium-sized firms | $0.4 / 3% | 9% | $0.1 / 10% |
| Large firms | $1.0/ 2% | 18% | $0.3 / 2% |
| Total ID | $1.3/ 2% | 26% | |
| MFD | |||
| Small firms | $0.1 / 9% | 1% | <$0.1 / 12% |
| Medium-sized firms | $0.2 / 14% | 5% | $0.1 / 19% |
| Large firms | $3.5 / 14% | 68% | $0.6 / 13% |
| Total MFD | $3.8 / 14% | 74% | |
| All Members | $5.2 / 5% | 100% |
| Total CIRO Fee Impact | # of Member Firms | % of Member Firms | Max Individual Member Impact ($M and %) |
|---|---|---|---|
| <$5,000 or 5% | 221 | 86% | $0.3 / 1% |
| $5,000-$10,000 or 5%-10% | 13 | 5% | $0.1 / 10% |
| >$10,000 and >10% | 22 | 9% | $0.6 / 13% |
In determining the methodology for cost recovery of the additional costs associated with the additional registration delegation and assignment, we considered several alternatives:
We compared our Proposed Fee Amendment of the AP Fees Component to those of other comparable regulators with similar principles and methodologies, like the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), the British Columbia Securities Commission (BCSC), the Alberta Securities Commission (ASC), and the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC).
Overall, the Proposed Fee Amendment meets the Guiding Principles:
Appendix A – Integrated Fee Model – blacklined
Appendix B – Integrated Fee Model – clean
Appendix C – Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
The criteria for categorization of firms by size is noted below:
| Firm Size | Number of firms | ID Members | MFD Members |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small | 123 | Revenues < $10 million | AUA < $1 billion |
| Medium | 106 | Revenues >= $10 million and < $1 billion | AUA >= $1 billion and < $10 billion |
| Large | 27 | Revenues >= $1 billion | AUA >= $10 billion |
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