Advertisement
Advertisement

Retailers Across Canada Embracing BarterPay Platform Amid COVID-19

Date:

Share post:

BarterPay is a unique platform which retailers and other businesses are using at an increasing pace to meet the cash flow challenges brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic.

John Porter, Founder and CEO of BarterPay, based in Hamilton, Ontario, said the unique concept helps business owners barter their sunk-cost, idle inventory (or spare capacity) for what they need instead of having to dip into precious cash.

“We’re a social impact enterprise that helps any business (or charity) in Canada get the things they need without using money. Instead, they can just trade their own goods and services to acquire what they need,” said Porter.

“Barter is the oldest form of commerce, it’s how business was invented. But, for two parties to enter into a fair trade, each side has to want what the other person has to offer, and here’s the catch, at the same time and at the same value. It’s actually called the double coincidence of wants.

John Porter

So, to solve the problem, BarterPay has created a platform that allows a business to open an account. They can then offer up their goods in exchange for a Barter Credit. One Barter Credit equals one Canadian dollar for valuation, accounting, and tax purposes. So now, a business can offer up their idle inventory or spare capacity, earn Barter Credits at retail value and, regardless of who’s acquired their goods or services, they can take this newly earned Barter Credit (that doesn’t expire) and use it to barter and trade with any other member in the BarterPay community locally, regionally, provincially or across Canada.

“No longer are businesses having to find direct one-to-one barter relationships, they can simply join BarterPay where it’s a one-to-many bartering ecosystem”, says Porter. “Cash is still king, it’s the oxygen of any business, you can’t run your business on barter, but barter is a tool that must be utilized when goods and services are sitting idle and cash is scarce”.

The concept is now in over 20 cities across Canada from Victoria to Moncton and growing quickly. There are close to 4000 businesses already on the platform. Businesses are joining daily and Porter said the network effect is starting to kick in. “The bigger the BarterPay community gets, the bigger it gets”, says Porter.

They now have signed partnerships with numerous associations including Restaurants Canada, Retail Council of Canada, Imagine Canada, the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, and many more in the works. These large groups are starting to understand the power of organized bartering and they want to educate their members about how to incorporate this innovative solution into their business, especially at a time where all SME’s across Canada need support.

Typical service-based businesses are attracted to the system for a number of reasons. What’s the value of an unsold hotel room? An empty seat at a sporting event? What’s the value of an unbilled hour for an architect, dentist or massage therapist?

“Service-based businesses like to use BarterPay because they can take what would be expiring time with no value, and monetize it at full value into Barter Credits. Then, they can use the Barter Credits to offset regular cash expenditures,” said Porter. “This improves their bottom line tremendously and also brings in brand new, unsolicited clients and customers, people who were not spending with them before”.

For the retail system, they’re attracted to barter because of idle inventory that normally would be sold for heavy discounts. Now, they can take all this paid-up inventory, that’s not selling, and barter it to get back what they need all while realizing their full margin on the goods.

“Right now there are thousands of retailers sitting on idle inventory, they simply couldn’t react fast enough to the pandemic shutting things down”, said Porter. “We’ve had lots of retailers, big and small, utilizing BarterPay to convert their extra slow-moving goods into Barter Credits so they can further their business during this difficult time”.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

More From Retail Insider

RECENT RETAIL INSIDER VIDEOS

Advertisment

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Subscribe

* indicates required

RECENT articles

Governments suffer big decline in alcohol earnings: Statistics Canada

Overall, liquor authorities and other retail outlets sold $25.8 billion worth of alcoholic beverages in the fiscal year ending March 31, 2025, down 1.6% from fiscal year 2023/2024.

Vivo Avanti Expands with Restaurant in King City

Vivo Avanti has opened in King City, introducing an elevated Italian dining concept from the team behind Vivo Pizza + Pasta.

The Reset Team Leads Retail Merchandising in Canada

Canadian firm The Reset Team helps retailers nationwide with scalable merchandising, fixture installation and precise execution for complex rollouts.

Why Retailers Can’t Afford a Bad Delivery Experience in 2026

Rising consumer expectations make delivery performance critical for brand reputation and revenue. Learn how retailers can take control of the last mile with proactive strategies and shipping protection.

Happy Belly Food Group’s iQ Food Co. secures 1st Western Canada location in Calgary

iQ is a flagship brand in Canada's premium healthy eating market and is strategically located in urban and central business districts.

A&W reports Q4 and 2025 financial results, with annual sales increasing to $1.92 billion

System Sales in 2025 increased by $51.8 million (2.8%) to $1.92 billion

Joe Fresh becomes 1st pure apparel retailer on DoorDash in Canada

Over 220 Joe Fresh stores are now shoppable on DoorDash across all provinces and one territory.

Daily Synopsis: Mar 4, 2026

SSENSE lays off more than 200, Joe Fresh 1st apparel retailer on DoorDash, Save-on-Foods opening in new Langley retail project, Brampton charging retailers $100 for every abandoned shopping cart in city, and other news.

Kits Eyecare reports Q4 and 2025 financial results with record annual revenue

Gross profit increased by 34.4% to $72.1 million or 35.6% of revenue, , compared to $53.7million, or 33.7% of revenue; an expansion of 190 basis points.

Eau Claire Distillery Unveils Flagship Single Malt as Inventory Growth Fuels Expansion

The Pedro Ximénez-finished single malt, made with 100 per cent Alberta malted barley, marks a milestone for the distillery, which says it now has sufficient aged inventory to support larger, sustained releases after more than a decade in operation.

Teen Founder Builds Chic & Charmed Jewellery Brand

Chanelle Chalazan, 16, started Chic & Charmed at 13 and is scaling the Canadian jewellery brand nationally through trade shows and pricing discipline.

Tariff uncertainty and affordability pressures causing Canadians to put brakes on car ownership: Turo

Three in four Canadians (75%) are concerned tariffs will push vehicle prices higher in 2026.

Quebec’s New Weekend Store Hours Win Support and Criticism

Quebec allows stores to stay open until 9 PM on weekends under a new pilot, drawing support from some retailers and criticism from others.

One year into the trade war, half of Canadian small businesses no longer feel the U.S. is a reliable trading partner: CFIB

Three-quarters (75%) of small businesses say the tariff fight has strained their relationships with U.S. partners or clients, up sharply from 49% in March 2025.

Iran Tensions Could Push Canadian Grocery Prices Higher

Rising tensions with Iran and risks to the Strait of Hormuz could push energy costs higher, adding pressure to Canadian grocery prices.

Sephora Expands Footprint in Canada’s Beauty War

Sephora prepares to open its 144th Canadian store as competition intensifies in Canada’s evolving beauty market following Hudson’s Bay’s exit.

Pet Valu Shares Drop as Growth Outlook Softens

Pet Valu shares fell after a muted 2026 growth outlook, as analysts cite promotional pressure and slower same-store sales in Canada’s pet retail sector.

Daily Synopsis: Mar 3, 2026

Roots launches review that could lead to sale, Canadians shop local with impact, Winnipeg security guard charged with using brass knuckles on shoplifter, cottage cheese shortage in Montreal, and other news.

Roots Launches Strategic Review, Sale Explored

Roots strategic review explores a potential sale as investors weigh valuation gap and growth prospects.

Eddie Bauer Store Leases Marketed in Canada

RCS markets Eddie Bauer store leases in Canada and U.S. amid Chapter 11 proceedings and liquidation sales.