Why Your Home Address Is a Bad Business Address (And What to Do About It)

Wooden desk in a sunlit Cochrane workspace with envelopes, parcels, a phone, and a small mailbox cubby — what a virtual mailbox looks like in practice

privacy, professionalism, and the rules in alberta

The moment most small business owners realize their home address has become their business address usually involves a search. Maybe a Google search for the business name. Maybe their own name on the Alberta Corporate Registry. Maybe a customer just emailed to say, “I drove by but… I think your address is a house?”

It’s not a crisis. But once you’ve seen it, you can’t unsee it. And once you’ve seen it, you start to wonder: where else is this address showing up?

This is a short guide to where it shows up, why that matters, and what to do about it — including the part that’s specifically about running an incorporated business in Alberta.

THREE REASONS THIS MATTERS

In rough order of how often we hear them at the front desk:

  • Privacy — your home address ends up in more places than you’d think.
  • Professionalism — clients and prospects read addresses, even when they say they don’t.
  • Compliance — if you’re incorporated in Alberta, the registry has specific requirements about your registered office.

Any one of those is reason enough. Most owners we talk to are running into two or three at once.

THE PRIVACY PROBLEM

Once you use your home as your business address, that address starts to travel. Some of the places it ends up are obvious. Some take years to notice.

  • Google Business Profile and Google Maps — if you set up a profile to attract local customers, your home pin sits on the map for anyone to see.
  • The Alberta Corporate Registry — if you incorporated, your registered office is public record. Search your business name on a registry agent site and there’s your kitchen.
  • Supplier and vendor accounts — every wholesale account, every payment processor, every drop-ship app keeps your address in a database somewhere. Databases leak.
  • Domain registrations — if you ever registered a website without WHOIS privacy turned on, that record may still be cached on lookup tools years later.
  • Shipping labels and invoices — every package you send and every paper invoice you mail carries your return address into someone else’s filing system.
  • Mailing lists — sign up for one industry directory and your home shows up in mailing-list rentals for the next decade.

Most of the time none of this matters. But the cases where it does matter are unfortunate ones: an unhappy customer, a former employee with a grievance, a process server, the occasional plain old creep. The point isn’t to be alarmist — it’s that addresses travel further than most people realize.

your home shouldn’t be a contact point for every business interaction you’ve ever had.

THE PROFESSIONALISM PROBLEM

Imagine two accountants in Cochrane. Same credentials, same prices, same friendly demeanor. One has “225 Railway St E” on the website footer. The other has “47 Birchwood Crescent.”

It isn’t fair. It’s also real. Prospects read addresses the same way they read everything else on your site — quickly, mostly subconsciously, and looking for a reason to either trust you or click away. A real street address in a known business district reads as “this is a business.” A residential street reads as “this is a side project.”

Sole proprietors feel this most. You’re pitching against bigger firms with bigger letterhead. The cheapest way to look like a real business is to have a real business address.

THE ALBERTA-SPECIFIC PART

If your business is incorporated as an Alberta corporation, the registry has specific rules about your registered office — the address where legal documents can be served. The short version, as we understand it:

  • It must be a physical street address in Alberta — a PO Box doesn’t count.
  • It must be a place where someone can actually receive documents during normal business hours.
  • Whatever you list, it becomes part of the public record on the Alberta Corporate Registry.

Your home address technically satisfies all three. The catch is the third point: by listing it, you’ve published your home address on the public registry, where anyone can look it up. A virtual mailbox at a real, staffed street address satisfies all three rules without putting your kitchen on display.

We’re not lawyers and this isn’t legal advice. The framing above reflects how the Alberta Business Corporations Act works in practice for most small corporations, but if you’re not sure whether your specific setup needs anything special, ask your accountant or a registry agent before you make changes.

WHAT A VIRTUAL MAILBOX ACTUALLY DOES

A virtual mailbox at The Corner is a real street address, staffed by people at a real front desk. Here’s the practical shape of it:

  • You get the address 225 Railway St E, Cochrane to use however a business address gets used — on supplier accounts, on the website, on invoices, on shipping labels, on the corporate registry. (Google Business Profile is the one exception worth a closer look — see below.)
  • Mail and parcels arrive at our front desk during business hours. Our team signs for them, photographs each piece, and notifies you it’s here.
  • You decide what happens next — pick up in person, ask us to open and scan it, forward it on, or shred it.
  • It works for every carrier — Canada Post, Amazon, FedEx, Purolator, UPS — not just one.
  • If you’re incorporated, the same address serves as your registered office.

WHAT IT DOESN’T DO

Worth being honest about the edges.

  • It’s not a workspace. If you also want a desk and Wi-Fi, that’s the coworking side of the building — available as an add-on.
  • Some banks ask questions. A handful of banks won’t let you open a new business account using a virtual mailbox address — their compliance policies vary. Call first if banking is the trigger for the switch.
  • “Business mail” is more of a label than a rule. Plenty of members route personal mail through this address — Amazon deliveries, driver’s licence paperwork, the magazines they don’t want piling up at home. We’ll sign for anything from a postcard to a pallet.
  • Google Business Profile is case-by-case. Google’s address guidelines say a business can list an address only if it actually meets customers there during stated hours. If you sometimes meet clients in our reception or a meeting room at The Corner, a virtual mailbox address often works. If you’re a pure service-area or online business, Google may flag the address during verification and ask you to switch to a service-area listing instead. Worth knowing — and worth reading other small-business owners’ experiences — before you change anything there.

A COST COMPARISON

How the common business-address options stack up. Numbers are illustrative for a small Alberta business as of mid-2026.

OptionMonthly costAccepts parcels?Real street address?Works as registered office?
Home address$0YesYes — but it’s your homeYes — published on the registry
Canada Post PO Box$20–$30Canada Post only — other couriers can’t deliverNo (it’s a box number)No
Virtual mailbox at The Cornerfrom $39Yes — every carrierYes — 225 Railway St EYes
Registered agent service (annual)~$15–$25 (paid annually)NoAddress only — no mail handlingYes
Illustrative for a small Alberta business as of mid-2026. Confirm current rates with each provider before you sign anything.

The math is rarely the main story for this decision — the privacy and professionalism reasons usually do more heavy lifting. But the cost is also not the barrier most people assume it is.

HOW TO SWITCH

Once you have a new business address, the work is mostly clerical — updating it everywhere it currently lives. A practical checklist, in the order most people find easiest:

  1. Update the Alberta Corporate Registry (your registry agent can file the change for you).
  2. Update your Google Business Profile (read the GBP caveat above first — it can be the trickiest step). Some businesses pass re-verification in minutes; others get bounced and end up switching to a service-area listing.
  3. Update your CRA business account address.
  4. Update supplier and vendor accounts — the ones that send invoices and the ones that ship physical product.
  5. Update your domain registration’s contact details (and turn on WHOIS privacy while you’re there).
  6. Update your shipping carrier accounts and any saved sender addresses.
  7. Update your invoice templates, email signatures, and website footer.
  8. Set up mail forwarding from your old address. Canada Post offers it for about a year. If you’re coming from a PO Box, many folks forward the box straight to their new virtual mailbox — the mail keeps showing up, just on your phone instead of in a drive across town.

It usually takes an hour or two of clicking. After that, your home is your home again.


COME SEE THE MAILBOXES

It’s worth seeing where your mail would actually live. Pop in for a tour, look at the front desk, and ask the questions that don’t show up on a website.

See virtual mailbox plans →


Virtual Mailbox 101

Same destination, different starting point. If you’ve been weighing a Canada Post PO Box instead of a home-address fix, here’s the sister piece.

Why I Gave Up My Canada Post PO Box →