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Land Transfer Tax (LTT)

Land transfer tax is a provincial tax paid by the buyer at closing on the purchase of real estate. Rates and brackets vary by province. Toronto adds a municipal LTT on top.

Land transfer tax (LTT) is a provincial tax payable by the buyer when real estate is transferred. The tax is calculated as a percentage of the property’s value of consideration (purchase price). Rates differ significantly by province; some provinces have minimal or no LTT.

Provinces with significant LTT

  • Ontario: graduated 0.5% to 2.5% (with 2.5% only on residential above $2M)
  • British Columbia: graduated 1.0% to 5.0% (Property Transfer Tax)
  • Quebec: municipal “welcome tax” calculated by city, typically 0.5% to 3% in tiers
  • Manitoba: graduated 0.5% to 2.0%
  • New Brunswick: 1.0% real property transfer tax
  • Nova Scotia: deed transfer tax varies by municipality (typically 1.5%)
  • Toronto: additional municipal LTT mirroring Ontario brackets, with extra tiers above $2M up to 7.5% above $20M

First-time buyer rebates

Several provinces offer LTT rebates for first-time home buyers: Ontario up to $4,000, BC up to $8,000 (for properties up to $500K), Toronto MLTT up to $4,475. Combined Ontario + Toronto first-time buyer rebate can be $8,475.

Payment

LTT is due at closing when the title transfer is registered. The buyer’s lawyer collects it from closing funds and remits it through the provincial land registration system.