Venque Corporate · Client Gifting
For the firms where relationships are the product — law, wealth management, consulting, agencies — a practical guide to gifts that strengthen the relationship instead of checking a box.
Here's an uncomfortable truth about client appreciation gifts: your client can tell, within seconds, which category yours falls into. Category one is the gift basket ordered by an assistant from a catalogue — appreciated politely, forgotten by Friday. Category two is the gift that shows someone actually thought about them.
For relationship businesses in Canada — law firms, wealth managers, consultancies, agencies — the gap between those two categories is the whole game. The gift is a proxy for the relationship. This guide covers client appreciation gift ideas Canadian companies are actually using in 2026, plus the gift-policy and tax details that trip people up.
01The gift with their logo on it — not yours
Most corporate gifts carry the giver's logo. Think about that from the client's side: you've handed them your marketing.
The stronger move — the one clients talk about — is a premium item customized with the client's own branding. An executive-grade backpack with their company's mark engraved on the plate, or placed discreetly inside, says: this is about you, not us. It works especially well for deal closings, renewals, and project completions, where the gift marks their milestone.
If you do want your firm remembered, there's a quiet compromise: their logo where it shows, a small note from you inside the box. Custom programs in Canada now start around 30 units — enough for your top client tier without an enterprise commitment. See how logo placement works in our custom branded backpacks guide.


02The test: would they buy it themselves?
A client gift only works if it clears the bar of things the client already owns. These are people who buy their own Tumi luggage and their own good wine. A $30 promo item doesn't insult them — it just vanishes. The math that matters isn't the gift's price; it's uses per year. An object they carry weekly beats an object they admire once.
03Time it to their milestone, not to December
Every vendor your client works with sends something in December. The gifts blur together, and half arrive while the office is empty. The gifts that get remembered arrive at their moments: the deal closing, the renewal anniversary, their company's funding announcement, the end of a hard project. Same budget, triple the impact — because yours arrives alone.
04Know their gift policy before you ship
The fastest way to turn appreciation into awkwardness is a gift the client must decline. Many Canadian corporations cap acceptable gifts (often $100–$150); public-sector and Crown-corporation clients are stricter still, sometimes limited to nominal items. Two rules: ask the relationship owner to quietly confirm the policy, and when in doubt, gift the team rather than the individual — a shared gift for the client's whole project team usually clears policies that a personal gift would trip.
05Local and Canadian-made, when the story matters
A gift with a hometown story — something designed or made in Canada — carries a second layer: it says you chose deliberately rather than defaulting to a catalogue. For US or overseas clients, a distinctly Canadian gift becomes a talking point in itself.
06Personalize the person, not just the company
A monogram, their name debossed inside a bag or on a leather good, a note referencing the actual work you did together. Personalization signals attention; branding signals budget. The best client gifts have more of the former than the latter.
07The handwritten note from the partner
Not from "the team." From the senior person on the relationship, in their own handwriting, with one specific sentence about the year's work. Attached to even a modest gift, it outperforms an expensive one delivered cold. This is the highest-ROI line item in all of client gifting and it costs four minutes.
08Presentation: the unboxing is part of the gift
A premium item in a courier poly bag undoes itself. Custom-branded gift boxes — kraft, one-colour mark, tissue — turn delivery into a small event, and they photograph well when the client's team opens them together. In Canada, custom boxes are available from surprisingly low minimums (ours start at 30 units).

09Deliver in person when the relationship warrants it
For your top five relationships, the gift is the excuse; the visit is the gift. A fifteen-minute drop-in to hand something over does more for the renewal than the object itself. Ship to the rest; hand-deliver to the few.
10Build a tiered program instead of one-off scrambles
The firms that gift well don't decide in November. They run a simple tier system set in advance: top-tier clients (premium custom item, hand-delivered), mid-tier (quality item, shipped in branded packaging), broad tier (considered consumable with a note). Decide the tiers once a year, and every milestone becomes a two-email exercise instead of a scramble.
Under CRA rules, most physical client gifts are generally deductible as a marketing/promotion expense — while food, drink, and entertainment gifts (the wine basket, the restaurant card) typically fall under the 50% entertainment limitation. In plain terms: the backpack is usually a better deduction than the Bordeaux. Confirm specifics with your accountant.
What should you spend?
Working ranges from Canadian programs we've quoted: broad-tier client gifts land at $40–$80; the relationship tier — where premium custom items live — runs $100–$180 per client; marquee relationships justify $200+. The discipline that matters more than the number: spend unevenly. Five clients drive most firms' revenue; the gifting budget should look like the revenue, not like a flat list.

Frequently asked questions
What is an appropriate client appreciation gift in Canada?
Something the client would buy themselves, timed to their milestone rather than the holidays, within their company's gift policy. Premium practical items — quality bags, leather goods, fine notebooks — consistently outperform consumables and branded trinkets.
Should client gifts have our company logo?
Sparingly, if at all. The strongest programs either use the client's own branding, subtle personalization (a name or monogram), or a discreet mark hidden inside the item. Loud giver-branding turns a gift into marketing.
How much should we spend on client gifts?
Tier it: $40–$80 broadly, $100–$180 for key relationships, $200+ for marquee clients. Match spend to relationship value, and always check the client's gift-acceptance policy first.
Are client gifts tax deductible in Canada?
Physical gifts are generally deductible as promotion expenses, while food, drink, and entertainment gifts are typically subject to the 50% limitation. Confirm your situation with your accountant.
Building a client gifting program?
The Venque Envoy executive backpack — customized with your client's logo, yours, or none at all. Custom gift boxes included, minimums from 30 units, designed in Toronto. Free mockup within 48 hours.
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