Scope and territorial reach
Where it applies — 1 jurisdictions
Seven principles (Article 5)
The constitutional backbone — every processing activity must satisfy all seven simultaneously.
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01
Accountability Schedule 1, Principle 4.1
An organization is responsible for personal information under its control and must designate an individual (privacy officer) accountable for compliance. Responsibility extends to information transferred to third-party processors via contract. The organization must implement policies, train staff, and handle complaints — accountability cannot be outsourced even when processing is.
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02
Identifying purposes Schedule 1, Principle 4.2
The purposes for collecting personal information must be identified at or before the time of collection. New purposes require fresh consent unless permitted by law. Purposes must be documented and communicated to the individual orally or in writing — a privacy notice is the standard mechanism. Vague catch-all purposes are not acceptable under OPC guidance.
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03
Consent Schedule 1, Principle 4.3
Knowledge and consent of the individual are required for collection, use, or disclosure of personal information, except where inappropriate. Consent must be meaningful — the individual must reasonably understand what they agree to. Form (express vs implied) varies with sensitivity. Withdrawal must be possible at any time, subject to legal or contractual restrictions.
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04
Limiting collection Schedule 1, Principle 4.4
Collection of personal information is limited to what is necessary for the identified purposes. Information must be collected by fair and lawful means — no deception, no over-collection 'just in case'. The OPC's Tim Hortons finding (2022) made this principle bite: collecting continuous geolocation 'for marketing' was disproportionate to the stated purpose.
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05
Limiting use, disclosure, retention Schedule 1, Principle 4.5
Personal information may only be used or disclosed for the purposes identified at collection, except with consent or as required by law. Retention is limited to fulfilling those purposes, after which data must be destroyed, erased, or anonymized. Organizations must develop guidelines and procedures including minimum and maximum retention periods.
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06
Accuracy Schedule 1, Principle 4.6
Personal information must be as accurate, complete, and up-to-date as is necessary for the purposes for which it is to be used. Routinely updating data is not required unless inaccuracy could prejudice the individual. Individuals may challenge accuracy and have inaccurate data corrected — feeds directly into the right of access (Principle 4.9).
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07
Safeguards Schedule 1, Principle 4.7
Personal information must be protected by security safeguards appropriate to sensitivity. Methods include physical (locked cabinets), organizational (clearance levels, training), and technological (encryption, access controls). Sensitivity, amount, distribution, format, and method of storage all factor in. Failure here triggers PIPEDA's mandatory breach reporting (s. 10.1, in force since 1 November 2018).
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08
Openness Schedule 1, Principle 4.8
Organizations must make readily available specific information about their policies and practices relating to personal information management. This is the privacy-policy principle — must include name and contact info of the accountable person, means to access personal information, what kinds of information are held and for what purposes, and a description of any third-party data sharing.
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09
Individual access Schedule 1, Principle 4.9
Upon request, an individual must be informed of the existence, use, and disclosure of their personal information and given access to it. The individual can challenge accuracy and completeness. Default response time is 30 days; extensions up to 30 more days are permitted with notice. Refusals must be justified in writing and the individual informed of recourse.
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10
Challenging compliance Schedule 1, Principle 4.10
An individual must be able to address a challenge concerning compliance with the above principles to the designated accountable person. Organizations must have complaint-handling procedures that are easily accessible and simple to use. They must investigate complaints, and if a complaint is justified, take appropriate measures including amending policies and practices.
Six lawful bases (Article 6)
You must identify and document one before processing — and consent isn't always the right one.
Express consent
Required for sensitive information or when reasonable expectations would not include the use — opt-in checkbox, signature, or affirmative action.
Implied consent
Permissible only when use is obvious from context, non-sensitive, and within reasonable expectations. OPC guidance has tightened — implied consent for online tracking is increasingly rejected.
Business transaction exception
Personal information may be used or disclosed for a prospective or completed business transaction (M&A, asset sale) without consent, subject to safeguarding and post-transaction notice obligations.
Required by law / legal authority
Disclosure to government institution with lawful authority (subpoena, warrant, statutory authority), or where required by law.
Investigation / breach response
Use or disclosure without consent is permitted to investigate a breach of agreement or contravention of law, or to detect/suppress fraud.
Publicly available information
Narrow exception — only specified categories: telephone directories, professional/business listings, public registries, court records, and publications. Web-scraping general public content is NOT covered (OPC v. Clearview AI, 2021).
Information voluntarily disclosed by the individual
Where an individual has voluntarily made information public (e.g., on a public profile) for a purpose, use consistent with that purpose may proceed — but this is narrowly construed and not a general 'social-media is fair game' carve-out.
Eight data-subject rights (Articles 12–22)
What individuals can demand from you, with the response window and scope.
| Right | Article | Response | Scope |
|---|---|---|---|
| Right to access personal information | Schedule 1, Principle 4.9 + s. 8 | 30 days | Individual may request access to their personal information held by the organization, including how it has been used and to whom disclosed. Response within 30 days; one 30-day extension permitted with written notice. Refusals must cite a statutory exception (s. 9). |
| Right to challenge accuracy | Schedule 1, Principle 4.6 + 4.9.5 | 30 days | If the individual demonstrates information is inaccurate or incomplete, the organization must amend it. If the challenge is unresolved, the substance must be recorded and disclosed to third parties who received the information. |
| Right to withdraw consent | Schedule 1, Principle 4.3.8 + OPC Guidelines on Consent (2018) | 30 days | Individual may withdraw consent at any time, subject to legal or contractual restrictions and reasonable notice. Organization must inform the individual of the implications of withdrawal (e.g., service discontinuation). |
| Right to complain to the Commissioner | s. 11 | At collection | Individual may file a written complaint with the OPC against any organization for contravention of PIPEDA. The Commissioner investigates, attempts mediation, and issues a report of findings (well-founded, not well-founded, resolved, settled, discontinued). |
| Right to seek Federal Court remedy | s. 14 | At collection | After receiving the Commissioner's report, the complainant may apply to the Federal Court within one year for a hearing. Court can order the organization to correct practices, publish a notice of corrective action, and award damages — including for humiliation. |
| Right to be informed of a breach | s. 10.1 (in force 2018-11-01) | At collection | Where a breach of security safeguards creates a 'real risk of significant harm' (RROSH), the organization must notify the individual and report to the OPC as soon as feasible. Records of all breaches must be kept for 24 months — failure is a criminal offence (s. 28) up to CAD $100,000. |
National addons
GDPR is a Regulation — directly applicable, no transposition required. But Member States layer additional rules on top via national acts.
| Country | National act | Stricter than GDPR baseline? | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇨🇦 Canada (federal) CA-FED | PIPEDA — S.C. 2000, c. 5 | Aligned | Federal default. Applies to all federally regulated businesses (banks, telecom, airlines, inter-provincial transport) Canada-wide, AND to private-sector organizations in any province lacking 'substantially similar' legislation. Bill C-27 (CPPA) died on the Order Paper at January 2025 prorogation and was not revived after the April 2025 election. |
| 🇨🇦 Quebec CA-QC | Law 25 (modernized Act respecting the protection of personal information in the private sector) | Stricter | Three-phase rollout: Phase 1 (22 Sep 2022) — privacy officer + breach notification to CAI; Phase 2 (22 Sep 2023) — privacy policy, PIA mandate, automated-decision disclosure, biometric registration; Phase 3 (22 Sep 2024) — right to data portability. Penalties up to CAD $25M or 4% of global turnover — by far Canada's strictest. |
| 🇨🇦 Alberta CA-AB | Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA), 2003 | Aligned | Substantially similar to PIPEDA. Enforced by the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Alberta (OIPC AB). Currently under legislative review (Standing Committee on Resource Stewardship, 2024). |
| 🇨🇦 British Columbia CA-BC | Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA), 2003 | Aligned | Substantially similar to PIPEDA. Enforced by the Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner for BC (OIPC BC). Frequently joins federal OPC investigations (Facebook 2019, Tim Hortons 2022, TikTok 2023+). |
| 🇨🇦 Ontario CA-ON | PHIPA (health) — general private-sector law under consideration | Aligned | Personal Health Information Protection Act 2004 covers health-information custodians. For commercial activity outside health, PIPEDA applies as Ontario has no general substantially-similar private-sector law (as of 2026). Ontario consulted on a provincial law in 2021 but has not enacted. |
Compared to other laws
Side-by-side rule comparison with the same field on each side.