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Capital Gains Tax When Selling Your Home in Canada

Updated

When you sell your home in Canada, the capital gain is usually tax-free — but not always, and never automatically. Here is how the rules work, when you owe tax, and what you need to report.

The principal residence exemption (PRE)

The PRE is the rule that makes your home sale tax-free. It applies when:

ConditionRequirement
You or your family ordinarily inhabited the propertyMust have lived in it — not just owned it
You designate it as your principal residenceMust file the designation on your tax return
You owned the property as an individualTrusts and corporations have different rules
Only one property per family unit per yearYou and your spouse/common-law partner can only designate one property per year between you

The PRE formula

If you lived in the home for the entire period of ownership, the full gain is exempt. If the property was your principal residence for only some years, the exempt portion is calculated as:

Exempt gain = Total gain × (1 + years designated) ÷ years owned

The “+1” in the formula provides a buffer year — useful when buying and selling properties in the same year.

Example: You owned a property for 10 years and designated it as your principal residence for 7 of those years.

Total capital gain$200,000
Exempt portion$200,000 × (1 + 7) ÷ 10 = $160,000
Taxable gain$40,000
Tax owing (50% inclusion, 40% marginal rate)$40,000 × 50% × 40% = $8,000

When you DO owe capital gains tax on your home

SituationWhy You Owe Tax
You rented out the property (without 45(2) election)Rental period is not covered by PRE
You own multiple propertiesCan only designate one per year — the other may have a taxable gain
You flipped the propertyCRA may classify the gain as business income (100% taxable) rather than a capital gain
Property held in a corporationPRE is not available to corporations
You are a non-residentDifferent rules apply; withholding tax on disposition
Partial business useIf you used part of the home exclusively for business and claimed CCA, that portion is not exempt
Assignment sales (pre-construction)Assigning a purchase contract before taking possession is generally taxed as business income

Reporting requirements (even when tax-free)

Since 2016, you MUST report the sale on your tax return:

FormPurpose
Schedule 3 (Capital Gains)Report the disposition
Form T2091 (Designation of a Property as a Principal Residence)Designate the property and claim the exemption

Penalty for not reporting: $100 per month, up to $8,000, even if the gain is fully exempt. The CRA can also reassess and deny the exemption for unreported sales, though they often grant relief if you file late voluntarily.

Capital gains inclusion rates (2024 rules)

Gain AmountInclusion RateHow It’s Taxed
First $250,000 of capital gains50%Added to income at your marginal rate
Capital gains above $250,00066.67%Added to income at your marginal rate

Example: $400,000 taxable capital gain (not covered by PRE):

  • First $250,000 × 50% = $125,000 included in income
  • Remaining $150,000 × 66.67% = $100,005 included in income
  • Total included: $225,005, taxed at your marginal rate

Renting out your home: the 45(2) election

If you move out and rent your home, it triggers a change of use — deemed to have sold and reacquired at fair market value. But you can defer this by filing a 45(2) election:

Without 45(2) ElectionWith 45(2) Election
Deemed disposition on date you start rentingNo deemed disposition — continues as principal residence
Capital gain realized on appreciation to that dateCapital gain deferred until actual sale
Rental years not covered by PREUp to 4 additional years covered by PRE while renting
CCA can be claimed on rental incomeMust NOT claim CCA to maintain the election

Requirements for the 45(2) election:

  • File a letter with your tax return for the year the change of use occurs
  • Do not claim capital cost allowance (CCA) on the property
  • Do not designate another property as your principal residence during the election period
  • Maximum 4 years (can be extended if employer-required relocation)

Owning multiple properties

If you own two properties and sell one, you need to decide which years to designate as principal residence for each:

StrategyWhen It Makes Sense
Designate the property with the largest per-year gainMaximizes your total exemption across both properties
Calculate the per-year gain for each propertyCapital gain ÷ years owned = per-year gain
Assign remaining years to the other propertyUse the +1 bonus strategically

Example: You own a house (10 years, $300,000 gain = $30,000/year) and a cottage (10 years, $150,000 gain = $15,000/year). Designate the house as principal residence for 9 years (covers full gain with the +1 formula) and the cottage for the remaining years.

Property flipping and the anti-flipping rule

Since January 1, 2023, the residential property flipping rule treats profits from selling a home owned for less than 365 days as business income (100% taxable), not a capital gain:

Owned Less Than 365 DaysOwned 365+ Days
Profit is business income (100% taxable)Profit can be a capital gain (50% taxable) or exempt via PRE
PRE does not applyPRE applies if conditions are met
No 50% inclusion rate benefitStandard capital gains rules apply

Exceptions to the flipping rule: Death, disability, separation/divorce, threat to personal safety, involuntary job relocation (40+ km), and insolvency. In these cases, the taxpayer can still claim capital gains treatment even if they owned the property for less than a year.

Calculating your capital gain

ComponentHow to Determine
Proceeds of dispositionSale price minus real estate commission and legal fees
Adjusted cost base (ACB)Purchase price + land transfer tax + legal fees on purchase + capital improvements (renovations that add value, not repairs)
Capital gainProceeds minus ACB

What counts as a capital improvement (increases ACB):

  • New roof, addition, finished basement, major renovation
  • Legal fees for purchase and sale
  • Land transfer tax on purchase

What does NOT increase ACB:

  • Regular maintenance and repairs
  • Property insurance, utilities, property tax (unless rental)
  • Mortgage interest
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