>

Categories

Archives


August 17, 2025

On August 14, 2025, Canada’s federal Competition Bureau (Bureau) announced that it had issued new guidance for companies and others to develop competition law compliance programs (see: “Develop a compliance program for your business in 10 easy steps!”).

In general, the Bureau has published on its Compliance Bootcamp web page videos describing competition law compliance programs, its recommended ten steps to develop a credible and effective compliance program and recommendations to comply with many of the core criminal and civil provisions of the Competition Act including abuse of dominance (sections 78 and 79), bid-rigging (section 47), deceptive marketing (under Parts VI and VII.1), exclusive dealing / tied selling / market restriction (section 77), mergers (Parts VIII and IX), price-fixing (section 45), refusal to deal (section 75), price maintenance (section 76) and wage-fixing and no-poaching agreements (section 45(1.1)).

The Bureau’s Compliance Bootcamp videos are part of its overall competition law compliance guidance, which includes the Compliance Hub (which is the Bureau’s key resource that sets out its recommendations for credible and effective competition law compliance programs in Canada).

The Bureau’s competition law compliance guidance also includes related compliance quizzes, some of its previous key compliance guidance and core related Enforcement Guidelines.

Some of the specific topics that the Bureau discusses in its Compliance Bootcamp compliance videos include the following:

Deceptive Marketing

– General false or misleading claims

– Online marketing claims

– The general impression test

– Disclaimers

– Performance claims and adequate and proper testing

– Influencer marketing

– Third-party liability for deceptive marketing claims

– Online reviews and testimonials

– Drip pricing

– Ordinary selling price and sale claims

– Fines and penalties for deceptive marketing

– Competition law compliance programs

Bid-Rigging

– Common types of bid-rigging (bid rotation, cover bidding, bid suppression and market division)

– How bid-rigging agreements can be formed

– Practices to detect and avoid bid-rigging

– Bureau criminal investigations

– The Bureau’s Immunity and Leniency Programs

– Fines and penalties for bid-rigging

– Competition law compliance programs

Price-Fixing

– Types of price-fixing agreements

– How price-fixing agreements can be formed

– Practices to avoid price-fixing

– Competition Bureau investigations

– Wire taps and search warrants

– The Bureau’s Immunity and Leniency Programs

– Fines and penalties for price-fixing

– Competition law compliance programs

Abuse of Dominance

– Types of abusive conduct (e.g., predatory pricing and exclusionary and disciplinary conduct)

– Anti-competitive effects of abuse of dominance

– Penalties for abuse of dominance

– Competition Bureau complaints

– The Toronto Real Estate Board abuse of dominance case

Wage-fixing and No-poaching Agreements

– Definitions of wage-fixing and no-poaching agreements

– Anti-competitive effects of wage-fixing/no-poaching agreements

– Fines and penalties for wage-fixing/no-poaching agreements

– The Bureau’s Immunity and Leniency Programs

– Competition law compliance programs

– Competition Bureau complaints

For more information, about competition law compliance in Canada, see: Compliance and Association Compliance.

**********

SERVICES AND CONTACT

We are a Toronto based competition and advertising law firm offering business and individual clients efficient and strategic advice in relation to competition/antitrust, advertising, Internet and new media law and contest law. We also offer competition and regulatory law compliance, education and policy services to companies, trade and professional associations and government agencies.

Our experience includes advising clients in Toronto, Canada and the United States on the application of Canadian competition and regulatory laws and we have worked on hundreds of domestic and cross-border competition, advertising and marketing, promotional contest (sweepstakes), conspiracy (cartel), abuse of dominance, compliance, refusal to deal and pricing and distribution matters. For more information about our competition and advertising law services see: competition law services.

To contact us about a potential legal matter, see: contact

For more information about our firm, visit our website: Competitionlawyer.ca

Comments are closed.

    buy-contest-form Templates/precedents and checklists to run promotional contests in Canada

    buy-contest-form Templates/precedents and checklists to comply with Canadian anti-spam law (CASL)

    WELCOME TO CANADIAN COMPETITION LAW! - OUR COMPETITION BLOG

    We are a Toronto based competition, advertising and regulatory law firm.

    We offer business, association, government and other clients in Toronto, Canada and internationally efficient and strategic advice in relation to Canadian competition, advertising, regulatory and new media laws. We also offer compliance, education and policy services.

    Our experience includes more than 20 years advising companies, trade and professional associations, governments and other clients in relation to competition, advertising and marketing, promotional contest, cartel, abuse of dominance, competition compliance, refusal to deal and pricing and distribution law matters.

    Our representative work includes filing and defending against Competition Bureau complaints, legal opinions and advice, competition, CASL and advertising compliance programs and strategy in competition and regulatory law matters.

    We have also written and helped develop many competition and advertising law related industry resources including compliance programs, acting as subject matter experts for online and in-person industry compliance courses and Steve Szentesi as Lawyer Editor for Practical Law Canada Competition.

    For more about us, visit our website: here.