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Downsizing Your Home for Retirement in Canada: Financial Guide (2026)

Updated

Downsizing is one of the most impactful financial moves a Canadian retiree can make — freeing up hundreds of thousands of dollars while reducing ongoing housing costs.

The financial case for downsizing

How much equity can you unlock?

ScenarioHome SoldNew HomeCash ReleasedAnnual Investment Income (4%)
Detached → condo$900,000$500,000~$360,000$14,400
Large detached → small detached$1,200,000$750,000~$400,000$16,000
GTA detached → small-town detached$1,100,000$400,000~$650,000$26,000
Detached → rental apartment$800,000$0 (renting)~$755,000$30,200

Cash released is after approximately 5% selling costs. Investment income assumes a conservative 4% withdrawal rate.

Ongoing cost savings

Expense4-Bedroom Detached2-Bedroom CondoAnnual Savings
Property tax$5,500$3,000$2,500
Utilities$4,800$2,000$2,800
Home insurance$2,200$800$1,400
Maintenance / repairs$8,000 (1% of value)$1,000$7,000
Condo feesN/A$5,400−$5,400
Landscaping / snow removal$2,000$0$2,000
Total$22,500$12,200$10,300

Even after condo fees, the smaller property costs roughly $10,000 less per year.

Tax implications

Principal residence exemption

SituationTax Treatment
Selling your only home (always your principal residence)100% tax-free — principal residence exemption applies
Selling a home that was your PR for all years ownedTax-free — designate on Schedule 3 + Form T2091
Selling a home that was rented out for some yearsPartial exemption — capital gains may apply to non-PR years
Selling one of two propertiesMust allocate the PR exemption — one property will have taxable gains
Selling a cottage (not your PR)Capital gains tax applies on the appreciation

What you must report

Even though the sale may be tax-free, you must report the disposition of your principal residence on your tax return:

  • File Schedule 3 (Capital Gains) — report the sale
  • File Form T2091 — designate the property as your principal residence
  • Failure to report can result in penalties — even if no tax is owed

Investing the proceeds

AccountBenefitLimit
TFSATax-free growth and withdrawals$7,000/year (2026); cumulative room may be $95,000+
Non-registered accountNo contribution limit; flexible accessInvestment income is taxable
RRSPTax-deductible contributionsMust be under 71; need contribution room
GICsSafe, predictable incomeReturns may not keep pace with inflation
AnnuityGuaranteed lifetime incomeIrreversible; less flexibility

Downsizing options

OptionProsCons
Smaller houseStill own property; no condo fees; yardStill have maintenance; less equity released
Condo / apartmentLow maintenance; amenities; lock-and-leaveCondo fees; less space; special levies possible
BungalowSingle-floor living for aging; accessibleMay be more expensive than expected in desirable areas
Retirement communitySocial; services on-site; designed for seniorsCosts can be high; less independence
RentMaximum equity released; no maintenanceNo equity building; rent increases; less stability
Move to smaller cityMuch lower cost; more equity freedDistance from family/friends; fewer services
Stay and renovateNo moving; familiar neighbourhoodCosts money; does not free up equity

Buy vs rent after downsizing

FactorBuy SmallerRent
Capital freedPartial (difference between old and new home)Maximum (full sale proceeds minus costs)
Housing stabilityHigh — own your homeLower — subject to rent increases, renovictions
Ongoing costsProperty tax, maintenance, insurance, possibly condo feesRent only (utilities may be included)
Investment incomeLower (less capital invested)Higher (more capital invested)
Principal residence exemptionPreserved for future appreciationLost (no property to exempt)
Estate valueProperty passes to heirsOnly financial assets remain
FlexibilityLess — selling a property takes timeMore — can move more easily

The downsizing process

StepDetailsTimeline
1. Financial assessmentCalculate equity, selling costs, LTT on new property, and net cash freed1–2 months before listing
2. Tax planningConfirm PR exemption eligibility; plan for investing proceedsConcurrent with step 1
3. Declutter and prepareSort belongings; donate/sell; stage the home1–3 months
4. List and sellWork with a realtor; price competitively1–3 months
5. Find a new homeBuy or rent; consider accessibility and future needs1–3 months
6. MoveHire movers; set up new home1–2 weeks
7. Invest proceedsDeploy cash into TFSA, non-reg, GICs, etc.Within 1 month of receiving funds
8. Update estate planRevise will, power of attorney, beneficiary designationsWithin 3 months

Selling costs to budget for

CostTypical Range
Real estate commission3%–5% of sale price
Legal fees (sale)$800–$1,500
Staging$2,000–$5,000
Minor repairs / touch-ups$1,000–$5,000
Moving$1,500–$5,000
Land transfer tax (on new purchase)Varies by province (Ontario: ~$6,475 on $500K)
Legal fees (purchase)$1,000–$2,000
Home inspection (new property)$400–$600
Total on a $900K sale → $500K purchase~$40,000–$55,000

Emotional considerations

ConcernStrategy
Attachment to the family homeAcknowledge the emotions; focus on the new chapter you are creating
Neighbourhood and communityConsider staying in the same neighbourhood in a smaller unit
Memories and possessionsPhotograph items with sentimental value; pass meaningful items to family
Loss of spaceThink of it as right-sizing rather than downsizing
Family expectationsCommunicate openly — it is your retirement and your decision
Fear of changeVisit the new area/building multiple times before committing

When downsizing makes financial sense

SituationDownsize?
Sitting on $500K+ in home equity, need retirement income✅ Strong candidate
Spending $15K+/year on home maintenance and property tax✅ Significant cost reduction
House is too large — unused rooms, stairs are difficult✅ Practical and financial benefits
Want to relocate to a lower-cost region✅ Maximizes equity extraction
Home is paid off and you have ample retirement savings⚠️ Financial need is low — decide based on lifestyle
Housing market is depressed in your area⚠️ Timing may reduce proceeds; consider waiting
Still using the full house (multigenerational living)❌ Not the right time
Mortgage still has a significant balance⚠️ Net proceeds may be limited
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