In this article:
- Opening Answer
- Mistakes 1 to 10
- The Pattern Behind These Mistakes
- FAQ
- Next Step
Top 10 SR&ED Mistakes That Cost Canadian Businesses Thousands
Opening Answer
Most companies do not lose SR&ED funding because they are ineligible. They lose it because they make preventable mistakes.
In practice, businesses may recover 15% to 35% of eligible costs, but still leave $20,000 to $100,000 or more on the table because of avoidable errors. For example, a company with $300,000 in eligible work could miss $50,000 or more simply by under-claiming labour or failing to document uncertainty properly.
The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) evaluates claims based on strict criteria, and small mistakes can have large financial consequences.
Mistake 1: Poor Documentation
This is the most common reason claims get reduced or denied.
The Problem
- Describing what was built instead of what was uncertain
- No record of experiments or failed attempts
- Reconstructing documentation months later
Why It Costs You
The CRA expects contemporaneous evidence of technological uncertainty, testing and iteration, and technical learning. Without it, even valid work can be rejected.
Fix this early with a proper SR&ED documentation guide.
Mistake 2: Misunderstanding Eligibility
Many businesses apply the wrong definition of research and development.
The Problem
Some teams treat all development as eligible. Others assume none of it qualifies.
Reality
SR&ED is based on technological uncertainty, not business innovation or ordinary feature development.
Example
- Weak: We built a new platform
- Strong: We tested multiple architectures because standard methods failed under load constraints
See real qualifying work in our SR&ED examples article.
Mistake 3: Under-Claiming Eligible Work
This is more common than over-claiming.
What Gets Missed
- Partial developer time, such as 40% to 70%
- Technical leads and architects
- Supporting experimentation work
Real Impact
A company claiming only $150,000 in eligible work might actually have $250,000 or more, increasing its claim by $15,000 to $40,000 or more.
Mistake 4: Missing Filing Deadlines
SR&ED deadlines are strict.
Key Rule
You typically have 18 months after fiscal year-end to file.
Consequence
Missing the deadline means losing the claim entirely. There are no extensions.
Mistake 5: Weak Technical Narratives
Even with good work, poor explanations can sink a claim.
The Problem
- Vague language
- No clear uncertainty
- No explanation of failed approaches
What CRA Wants
- What was unknown
- Why standard methods failed
- What you tested
Mistake 6: Misaligned Financials
Your costs must match your technical story.
Common Issues
- Claiming employees not tied to SR&ED work
- No clear allocation of time
- Contractor costs incorrectly included
Result
- Claim reductions
- Increased audit risk
Mistake 7: Treating SR&ED as a Tax Exercise
Many companies only think about SR&ED at year-end.
The Problem
- No documentation during development
- Missed projects
- Poor cost tracking
Better Approach
Treat SR&ED as a funding strategy, not just a tax form.
Mistake 8: Ignoring Partial Eligibility
Work does not need to be 100% SR&ED to matter.
Reality
- A developer may be 50% eligible
- A project may have qualifying phases
Missed Opportunity
Companies often exclude valid partial work, reducing claims significantly.
Mistake 9: DIY Filing Without Strategy
Filing SR&ED yourself is not inherently wrong, but it is risky without experience.
Risks
- Misinterpreting CRA criteria
- Weak documentation structure
- Missing eligible costs
Outcome
- Lower claim value
- Higher audit exposure
Prepare properly with our SR&ED audit guide.
Mistake 10: Not Reviewing Past Years
Many businesses leave money behind in previous years.
Key Insight
You can often amend prior returns within allowed time limits, and past work may qualify even if you did not claim it originally.
Example
We frequently see companies recover $50,000 to $200,000 or more from missed claims in prior years.
The Pattern Behind These Mistakes
Across industries, the same pattern shows up. Businesses do not fail SR&ED because they lack eligible work. They fail because they misidentify it, misdocument it, or miscalculate it.
FAQ
What are the most common SR&ED mistakes?
Poor documentation, misunderstanding eligibility, under-claiming, and missing deadlines.
Can mistakes reduce my SR&ED refund?
Yes, significantly. Many companies lose tens of thousands because of preventable errors.
Is SR&ED hard to file?
The process is manageable, but mistakes can be costly without proper understanding.
Can I fix past SR&ED mistakes?
In many cases, yes, through amended filings within allowed timelines.
How do I avoid SR&ED claim issues?
By aligning technical documentation, financial records, and CRA criteria from the start.
Next Step
Most SR&ED mistakes do not look like mistakes. They look like claims that feel good enough. That is where businesses lose money.
We regularly uncover:
- Under-claimed projects
- Missing technical narratives
- Documentation gaps that reduce refunds
A focused review can quickly identify what is being missed and how to fix it.