B.C. tech companies once again dominated Deloitte Canada’s annual Technology Fast 50 list, underscoring the province’s strength as a national innovation hub. Now in its 28th year, the program recognizes Canada’s fastest-growing technology firms based on three-year revenue growth, celebrating entrepreneurship, resilience, and innovation across the country.
Vancouver-based UniUni led the province’s showing, placing #5 nationally with a remarkable 6,829% three-year revenue growth rate. Founded in 2019, the logistics startup has built one of North America’s fastest-growing last-mile delivery networks, using technology to power efficient, low-cost parcel delivery.
“This year’s Technology Fast 50 winners exemplify how Canada’s tech leaders are rising above external headwinds,” said Brendan Cooper, partner and national co-leader for Deloitte’s program. “They’re fuelling a new wave of growth that will position Canada as a global force in technology and innovation.”
B.C. was strongly represented across the rankings, with several Vancouver-area companies placing in the top tier. Veritree (#7, 6,565%) and Apera AI (#10, 5,264%) joined UniUni in the top 10, reflecting the province’s growing strength in sustainability and AI technology. Other high performers included Oxygen8 (#20, 1,566%, Burnaby), Corinex (#23, 1,303%, Vancouver), Hydreight (#25, 1,238%, Vancouver), CyberQP (#27, 1,114%, Vancouver), Ideon (#33, 938%, Richmond), Saltworks (#35, 811%, Richmond), MineSense (#48, 527%, Vancouver), and OWL.CO (#50, 499%, Vancouver).
In the Enterprise Industry Leader category, Vancouver’s KOHO ranked #2 nationally, posting 559% growth over three years. The company continues to expand its reach in the digital banking sector through its prepaid card and financial wellness products. Jane, a North Vancouver standout, was also recognized in this category, ranking #15 with 245% growth for its health practice management platform.
Meanwhile, Gearlay, a Vancouver-based developer of specialized financial software, claimed the top spot in Deloitte’s Companies-to-Watch category. With an astounding 86,394% two-year revenue growth, Gearlay is one of Canada’s fastest-emerging innovators in financial infrastructure—developing tools for transaction system optimization, real-world asset tokenization, and blockchain exchange technology.
Other B.C. Companies-to-Watch included Burnaby’s SimplyAsk.ai (5,556%), Kelowna’s Minga (1,122%), Quandri (664%), and Orchestry Software (255%) of Vancouver, highlighting the diversity of the province’s early-stage innovation ecosystem.
With ten B.C. companies ranking among Canada’s top 50 and five more in the Companies-to-Watch list, the province continues to punch above its weight in national innovation metrics. From AI to fintech to clean technology, B.C. startups are scaling rapidly and capturing investor and customer attention on the global stage.
Winner selection for the Deloitte Technology Fast 50 is based solely on revenue growth. Each participating company must submit audited or reviewed financial statements to qualify.
The program runs alongside Deloitte’s broader North American Technology Fast 500, with all Canadian winners automatically eligible for inclusion. This year, 114 Canadian companies made the continental list, which will be officially released on November 19.
The 2025 Technology Fast 50 Celebration event will take place in Toronto, followed by regional gatherings in Vancouver and Montreal recognizing local winners and industry leaders.
As Canada’s tech ecosystem continues to evolve amid global uncertainty, this year’s results affirm the resilience and innovation of the country’s homegrown companies—many of which call British Columbia home.
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