A non-disclosure agreement (NDA) — also called a confidentiality agreement — is a contract in which one or both parties agree to keep specified information confidential and not to disclose it to third parties or use it for unauthorized purposes. NDAs are used in a wide range of commercial and employment contexts across Canada: before sharing business plans with potential investors, in mergers and acquisitions due diligence, when engaging contractors, and in employment relationships. While federal and provincial contract law applies uniformly to contracts entered into in Canada, the specific enforceability analysis for NDAs involves some provincial nuances. This guide focuses on drafting an NDA that will be enforceable under Canadian law.

Provincial vs. Federal Enforceability

Contract law in Canada is primarily provincial — each province's courts apply their own common law (or civil law, in Quebec) to interpret and enforce contracts. The key enforceability principles are similar across common law provinces: an NDA must be supported by valid consideration, must define its subject matter with sufficient certainty, and must not be unreasonably broad or contrary to public policy.

In Quebec, the Civil Code of Quebec governs contracts — the principles of good faith, proportionality of obligations, and the prohibition against abusive clauses apply and may give Quebec courts broader latitude to reduce or set aside excessive NDA provisions. If your NDA may be subject to Quebec law, ensure the confidentiality obligations are proportionate to the legitimate business interests being protected.

Defining Confidential Information: Must Be Specific

The most important drafting decision in any NDA is the definition of "Confidential Information." A definition that is too broad ("all information shared between the parties") is often unenforceable because it lacks sufficient certainty and may be found unreasonably restrictive on trade. A definition that is too narrow may fail to capture the specific information you actually want to protect. Best practice is to:

Marking Documents "Confidential": A practical way to protect yourself under an NDA is to mark every document, email, or presentation that contains confidential information with the word "CONFIDENTIAL" at the top. This creates a clear record of what was intended to be protected and makes it harder for the receiving party to argue they did not know the information was confidential.

Standard Exclusions from Confidentiality

Every well-drafted NDA should include standard exclusions — categories of information that are excluded from the definition of Confidential Information even if they would otherwise qualify:

Remedies: Injunction, Damages, and Accounting of Profits

The typical remedies for breach of an NDA in Canada are:

Mutual vs. Unilateral NDAs

NDAs come in two basic structures:

Mutual NDAs require careful attention to symmetry — if the obligations are not truly mutual (e.g., one party is disclosing far more than the other), the receiving party may later argue the agreement is one-sided and seek to limit its obligations accordingly. Where the disclosure is genuinely asymmetric, a unilateral NDA may be more appropriate.

Duration of Confidentiality Obligations: Many Canadian NDAs are drafted with perpetual confidentiality obligations — the obligation never expires. While perpetual NDAs are enforceable for genuine trade secrets, courts may find a perpetual obligation unreasonable for general business information. A defined term (2–5 years for general information; perpetual for genuine trade secrets) is both more enforceable and more commercially realistic.

Limitation Period for NDA Breaches

Under Ontario's Limitations Act, 2002 and equivalent provincial legislation across Canada, a claim for breach of an NDA is generally subject to the standard 2-year limitation period from the date the breach was discovered (or ought reasonably to have been discovered). However:

Choice of Law and Forum

Canadian NDAs should include a governing law clause specifying which province's law governs the interpretation and enforcement of the agreement, and a forum clause specifying where disputes will be resolved. For a business in Ontario, using Ontario law and the Ontario courts (or binding arbitration in Ontario) is standard. Key considerations:

Post-Employment NDAs

NDAs in the employment context have specific enforceability considerations. A post-employment NDA (one that restricts disclosure after the employment ends) must be: