Lebanon's economic collapse, currency crisis, and ongoing political instability have driven one of the most significant waves of Lebanese emigration in decades. For Lebanese business owners and senior managers based in Dubai β€” a city that has long served as a regional hub for Lebanese professionals β€” the BC Entrepreneur Stream offers one of the most direct routes to a stable, Western country with an established Lebanese-Canadian community.

Canada is home to approximately 250,000 Lebanese-Canadians, with significant concentrations in Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. The Lebanese diaspora in BC is active and well-networked β€” a practical advantage for a new entrepreneur establishing a business in the province.

Who this guide is for: Lebanese citizens currently based in Dubai and the UAE, Lebanese nationals still in Lebanon, and Lebanese diaspora members elsewhere who are considering Canadian entrepreneur immigration. The program framework is the same for all β€” the asset documentation challenges are specific to the Lebanese context.

The Core Numbers

Net Worth Required
CAD 600K
Minimum Investment
CAD 200K
Typical Timeline
18–28 months

Why BC Suits Lebanese Profiles

Lebanese entrepreneurs typically have strong commercial instincts, multilingual capabilities (Arabic, French, English), and experience operating in complex, volatile business environments β€” qualities that translate well to the Canadian market. BC's economy is diverse, its immigrant business community is well-established, and Vancouver's quality of life is a genuine draw for Lebanese families accustomed to an urban, cosmopolitan lifestyle.

Lebanon's historical ties to France and the Francophone world also give many Lebanese applicants a language advantage β€” French proficiency can be used to meet the CLB 4 language requirement, which is an option not available to most other Middle Eastern applicants.

Eligibility Snapshot

  • Net worth: Minimum CAD 600,000, legally obtained and documentable
  • Investment: Minimum CAD 200,000 into a qualifying BC business, with at least 33.3% ownership
  • Business experience: At least 3 years of business ownership or 4 years of senior management in the last 10 years
  • Job creation: Create at least 1 full-time job for a Canadian citizen or permanent resident
  • Active management: Day-to-day operational role in the business
  • Language: CLB 4 minimum in English or French β€” IELTS 4.0 or equivalent DELF score
  • Exploratory visit: Pre-application visit to BC required

The Lebanese Reality β€” What Most Applicants Don't Realise

Documenting assets held in Lebanese banks

Since the 2019 banking crisis, Lebanese bank deposits have been largely frozen or converted to Lira at unfavourable rates. For net worth verification purposes, Lebanese bank statements alone are insufficient β€” the Canadian net worth assessor will need to understand the actual recoverable value of any assets held in Lebanese banks, not just the nominal balance. Assets that have been moved to UAE, European, or other international accounts before the crisis need a clear transfer trail. Lebanese property valuations require certified appraisals from recognised Lebanese real estate assessors.

Currency documentation

Lebanon has operated with multiple exchange rates simultaneously since the crisis. For Canadian net worth verification, all Lebanese-denominated assets need to be converted using documented, defensible exchange rates β€” not the official Lebanese Central Bank rate (which significantly overvalues the Lira) but the market or Sayrafa platform rate. Your net worth assessor needs to be experienced with Lebanese currency documentation specifically.

Lebanon allows dual citizenship

Lebanon permits its citizens to hold dual citizenship without restriction. This means Lebanese applicants who obtain Canadian PR and eventually citizenship do not need to renounce their Lebanese nationality. For Lebanese families, this is a significant practical advantage β€” maintaining Lebanese identity and property rights while gaining Canadian citizenship.

Lebanese apostille is functional but document conditions vary

Lebanon is a signatory to the Hague Apostille Convention, which simplifies document authentication compared to Iran or some other countries in the region. However, given the instability of Lebanese government institutions, obtaining apostilled documents can be slower and more inconsistent than the treaty technically allows. Allow 8–12 weeks for Lebanese document collection and authentication.

Documents You Will Need

  1. Lebanese passport β€” applicant and all dependents, valid at least 6 months beyond planned application date
  2. Civil registration documents β€” Lebanese ID (Hawiye), family registration extract (Qaid Nufus)
  3. Birth certificates β€” applicant and dependents, apostilled
  4. Marriage certificate β€” if applicable, apostilled
  5. Business registration documents β€” Lebanese company registration, shareholder records, financial statements
  6. Net worth documentation β€” UAE and international bank statements, Lebanese bank statements with currency documentation, property deeds and valuations, investment records
  7. Tax records β€” Lebanese tax filings where available
  8. Education credentials β€” degrees with apostille and credential equivalency assessment (WES)
  9. Language test β€” IELTS General Training or equivalent French test, valid within 2 years
  10. Police clearances β€” from Lebanon, UAE (if resident 6+ months), and any other country of residence
  11. Medical examination β€” through IRCC-approved panel physician

Costs β€” Honest Breakdown

Cost ItemEstimated Amount (USD)
BC PNP application fee~$2,200
Federal PR application fees (family of 4)~$3,200
Right of Permanent Residence fee (per adult)~$430
Lebanese document apostille and certification$800–2,000
Certified translations$1,500–3,000
Lebanese asset valuation and currency documentation$1,500–3,500
IELTS or French language test~$320
Medical exams (family of 4)$1,200–1,800
Credential assessment (WES)~$280
Exploratory visit to BC (10-day trip, family of 4)$8,000–12,000
Total fees before business investment~$22,000–32,000
Plus business investmentCAD 200,000+

Typical Timeline

Month 1–2
Eligibility Assessment & Asset Review
Profile review, net worth assessment with focus on Lebanese asset documentation and currency issues, language test scheduling.
Month 2–4
Document Collection & Authentication
Documents from Lebanon, apostille processing, certified translations, Lebanese property valuations, currency documentation for net worth assessor.
Month 4–5
Exploratory Visit to BC
7–14 day market research visit. For Lebanese applicants with UAE residency, travel to Canada is straightforward β€” Canadian visa applications are processed in Abu Dhabi.
Month 5–7
Business Plan & Registration of Interest
Business plan drafted, Registration of Interest submitted. Lebanese applicants with trading or hospitality backgrounds often build strong plans in these sectors.
Month 8–16
BC PNP Review & Performance Agreement
BC reviews, may request additional documents, successful applicants sign Performance Agreement and receive work permit support letter.
Month 16–28
Business Establishment & Final Nomination
Move to BC, establish business, meet milestones. BC nominates for PR, federal processing completes permanent residency.

Common Mistakes Lebanese Applicants Make

Presenting Lebanese bank statements at face value

Lebanese bank accounts showing large balances in Lebanese Pounds are not evidence of net worth β€” given the currency collapse, those balances may represent a fraction of their nominal value. Your net worth documentation needs to address the real, recoverable value of all Lebanese-denominated assets explicitly. Ignoring this creates problems that surface mid-application.

Underestimating the urgency of moving assets

Lebanese applicants who still have significant assets locked in Lebanese banks should be working with financial advisors to move what they can before starting the immigration process. Assets that cannot be repatriated cannot be reliably presented as liquid net worth for Canadian immigration purposes.

Choosing BC because of Toronto

Many Lebanese applicants target BC in the immigration application but privately intend to move to Toronto where the Lebanese community is larger. BC expects genuine intent to settle in the province β€” and monitors your compliance. If Toronto is genuinely where you want to be, Ontario is the right program to apply to.

The dual citizenship advantage: Lebanon permits its citizens to hold dual citizenship. Once you obtain Canadian citizenship, you can hold both passports simultaneously β€” maintaining Lebanese identity, property rights, and family connections while having full Canadian citizenship. This is a significant long-term advantage for Lebanese applicants compared to nationalities that require renunciation.

See if you qualify

We assess your profile against BC and the other three Canadian entrepreneur streams and tell you honestly which one fits your situation. Free, with no commitment.

Get My Free Assessment β†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use my Lebanese property as part of my net worth for BC Entrepreneur? +
Yes β€” Lebanese property can be included in your net worth, but it must be professionally appraised by a recognised Lebanese real estate assessor and documented with the property deed. Given the economic situation in Lebanon, the Canadian net worth assessor will scrutinise Lebanese property valuations carefully. Properties that are mortgaged or encumbered need the debt offset. Properties in areas affected by conflict or infrastructure damage may face additional scrutiny on valuation.
Do I need to speak English to qualify, or can I use French? +
BC accepts both English and French to meet the CLB 4 language requirement. Many Lebanese applicants are more comfortable in French β€” the DELF B1 or equivalent French language test can satisfy the language requirement. This is a genuine advantage for Lebanese applicants and worth factoring into your preparation timeline.
Will Lebanon allow me to keep my Lebanese citizenship if I become Canadian? +
Yes β€” Lebanon permits dual citizenship without restriction. There is no requirement to renounce Lebanese nationality when acquiring Canadian citizenship. This is explicitly confirmed in Lebanese nationality law. You can hold both passports, maintain property rights in Lebanon, and return to Lebanon freely while being a full Canadian citizen.
I have been in Dubai for 8 years and my assets are mostly in the UAE β€” does that help? +
Yes significantly. UAE-held assets β€” UAE bank accounts, UAE property, UAE business interests β€” are straightforward to document for Canadian net worth verification. UAE banks issue statements in English, UAE property is easily appraised, and UAE banking is connected to the international financial system. If you have moved most of your assets to the UAE over the years, your net worth documentation will be much cleaner than for applicants with most assets still in Lebanon.
Can I apply for BC Entrepreneur while also applying for Canadian citizenship for my children born in Lebanon? +
The BC Entrepreneur program application and any Lebanese citizenship-by-descent or registration applications are entirely separate processes. The BC program is about your immigration to Canada as an entrepreneur β€” it does not affect or interact with any claims your children may have to citizenship through other means. Speak to a Canadian immigration lawyer separately about any citizenship-by-descent questions.

Why Unican

Unican has been based in Dubai since 2004. We have a strong Lebanese client base and understand the specific documentation challenges β€” Lebanese bank accounts, currency conversion issues, property valuations β€” that affect Lebanese BC applications. We tell you honestly whether your asset profile supports a clean application before you invest time and money in the process.