Not in Canada. Single piston engine, four seats max, fixed gear and prop with a very few exceptions to the last two.
CAR Standard 507:
- (e) An aircraft type and model may be included in Appendix H of this Standard, Aircraft eligible for a Special Certificate of Airworthiness - Owner-maintenance”, where:
(amended 2002/03/01)
- (i) the aircraft is of a type certified in accordance with Chapters 522 or 523 of the Airworthiness Manual, or an equivalent foreign standard;
- (ii) the aircraft type certificate does not authorize more than four occupants;
- (iii) the maximum certificated take-off weight (MCTOW) of the aircraft does not exceed 1,814 kg (4,000 pounds);
- (iv) the aircraft is of a type and model that has not been manufactured during the 60 months preceding the date of application;
- (v) fewer than 10% of Canadian aircraft of the type and model concerned are operating in Canadian commercial air service at the time of application;
- (vi) the aircraft type and model is powered by a single, normally aspirated, piston engine, and is unpressurized; and
- (vii) except for gliders, powered gliders or aircraft with airframes of wooden construction, the aircraft type and model has a fixed landing gear and a fixed pitch propeller.
That covers an awful lot of the GA singles here. As far as "fewer than 10% of the type and model in commercial service," that means that "later" model Cessna 172s might not be eligible, but older models would. The list in Appendix H lists up to the 172H as being eligible. 150s up to the K model are eligible. The list includes a lot of old, obscure airplanes, too.
https://tc.canada.ca/en/corporate-s...l-certificate-airworthiness-owner-maintenance