If you love Canadian food and the people who grow it, you’ll love IIF. In AU/NZ, members backed everything from oysters to beef.
In Canada, you’ll be able to build a seasonal mix—like Alberta grass-fed beef, Saskatchewan pulse crops, Manitoba canola, BC cherries, Quebec greenhouse veg, PEI spuds, and Atlantic shellfish—one accessible holding at a time.
Profit with a purpose.
Member-first: We’ll surface opportunities; you choose what to back.
Seasonal & limited: Real farm production is seasonal—offers open and close with the calendar and weather.
Transparent updates: Follow along as crops and herds progress, from seeding to harvest, calving to sale.
Diversify wisely: Mix regions and commodities to spread risk (just like in AU/NZ).
A dozen oysters, peaches, beef, beans. This isn’t a shopping list. It’s an investment portfolio.
This platform was built in Australia and is now expanding to Canada. We’ve already partnered with farmers around the Australia and New Zealand to bring unique livestock, broadacre, horticulture and aquaculture deals to IIF members. It’s a win-win partnership that reduces financial risk for farmers and delivers ‘profit with purpose’ for investors.
Canadians will invest in Canadian farmers.
“What an amazing initiative, I actually feel like a farmer.
There’s a bit of an adrenaline rush when something new comes on the marketplace. We currently have 22 holdings. Over 12 months, nine have come to maturity and we’ve received some really great returns! We’ve also had one loss, but that’s ok. There’s something exciting about going on the journey with the farmer, helping them out when times are tough, and sharing the reward when there’s a good return from their crops.”
Pamela – IIF member from Australia
Seasonality is part of the fun, and the reality, of farming. You’re not investing in stocks or bonds, you’re growing real agricultural assets, with real farmers. That means supply is limited and availability is seasonal.
The reason you don’t see peaches in the grocery store in winter is simple, different produce is grown in different seasons. Indoor crops are typically grown between September and May, and livestock farmers tend to make stocking decisions in the Fall and Spring. So if the marketplace looks a little quiet sometimes, don’t worry, it’s just the natural rhythm of farming.
Think of your IIF membership as a year-long harvest pass. You’ve got 12 months to build your dream pocket farm, it might not look like much on day one, but like any good crop, it takes time to grow.
Share-farming have been around for ages.
IIF Canada is building a community. As a member, you will get the chance to participate in our regular share farming opportunities.
We’ll let members know when a farmer has a new crop or product available. You choose if you want to purchase that offer or not.
There’s a modest annual fee. And that’s it. Once you’re in, you’re ready to go.
There are a few need-to-knows before you jump in and start growing your farm. Share your details below and we’ll fill you in.