Canadian Alternatives

Canadian alternatives to Asana

Asana is a solid product, but it stores your data in the US under American jurisdiction. For Canadian organizations dealing with PIPEDA or provincial privacy rules, that's a real compliance headache. These 13 Canadian project management companies solve it.

Browse by category: Project Management

All Other Canadian Alternatives

Ranked first by product fit, then by Eh Score - our rating of how Canadian each company is. ?

Only higher-confidence matches become Top Picks; the list below starts with the next best fits. 5 = fully Canadian-owned, hosted & supported. Lower scores may have foreign ownership or host data outside Canada.

FunctionFox
4.0
Victoria, BC
Victoria time tracking and project budgeting software built specifically for creative agencies
Verified Mar 2026
Bridgit
4.0
London, ON
London ON construction workforce planning and labor forecasting across projects
Verified Mar 2026
Riipen
5.0
Victoria, BC
Connects post-secondary students with real company projects — work-integrated learning at scale
Verified Mar 2026
Float
4.0
Toronto, ON
Toronto resource planning giving creative agencies visibility into team capacity and timelines
Verified Mar 2026
Corus360 (formerly Dovico)
5.0
Moncton, NB
Enterprise timesheet software that's been around since 1993 — big with government and defence contractors
Verified Mar 2026
OpsLevel
4.0
Toronto, ON
Developer portal and service ownership software for engineering organizations.
Verified Mar 2026
TrueContext
4.0
Ottawa, ON
Ottawa mobile forms and field workflow software — formerly ProntoForms
Verified Mar 2026
Veerum
4.0
Calgary, AB
Digital twin and asset visualization software for industrial operations.
Verified Mar 2026

Before you move projects out of Asana

Project tools get sticky because teams build their whole operating system around them. When you compare Asana to Avaza, Daylite, or Birdview PSA, test the workflow details first.

  • Check task import, custom fields, statuses, templates, and dependencies using one active project.
  • Verify notifications, comments, client or guest access, and recurring work before rollout.
  • Audit the integrations your team actually uses, especially chat, docs, support, and time tracking.
  • Choose a cutover point between projects or sprints so nobody is half-working in two systems.