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?
| Scenario | Home Sold | New Home | Cash Released | Annual 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
| Expense | 4-Bedroom Detached | 2-Bedroom Condo | Annual 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 fees | N/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
| Situation | Tax 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 owned | Tax-free — designate on Schedule 3 + Form T2091 |
| Selling a home that was rented out for some years | Partial exemption — capital gains may apply to non-PR years |
| Selling one of two properties | Must 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
| Account | Benefit | Limit |
|---|---|---|
| TFSA | Tax-free growth and withdrawals | $7,000/year (2026); cumulative room may be $95,000+ |
| Non-registered account | No contribution limit; flexible access | Investment income is taxable |
| RRSP | Tax-deductible contributions | Must be under 71; need contribution room |
| GICs | Safe, predictable income | Returns may not keep pace with inflation |
| Annuity | Guaranteed lifetime income | Irreversible; less flexibility |
Downsizing options
| Option | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Smaller house | Still own property; no condo fees; yard | Still have maintenance; less equity released |
| Condo / apartment | Low maintenance; amenities; lock-and-leave | Condo fees; less space; special levies possible |
| Bungalow | Single-floor living for aging; accessible | May be more expensive than expected in desirable areas |
| Retirement community | Social; services on-site; designed for seniors | Costs can be high; less independence |
| Rent | Maximum equity released; no maintenance | No equity building; rent increases; less stability |
| Move to smaller city | Much lower cost; more equity freed | Distance from family/friends; fewer services |
| Stay and renovate | No moving; familiar neighbourhood | Costs money; does not free up equity |
Buy vs rent after downsizing
| Factor | Buy Smaller | Rent |
|---|---|---|
| Capital freed | Partial (difference between old and new home) | Maximum (full sale proceeds minus costs) |
| Housing stability | High — own your home | Lower — subject to rent increases, renovictions |
| Ongoing costs | Property tax, maintenance, insurance, possibly condo fees | Rent only (utilities may be included) |
| Investment income | Lower (less capital invested) | Higher (more capital invested) |
| Principal residence exemption | Preserved for future appreciation | Lost (no property to exempt) |
| Estate value | Property passes to heirs | Only financial assets remain |
| Flexibility | Less — selling a property takes time | More — can move more easily |
The downsizing process
| Step | Details | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Financial assessment | Calculate equity, selling costs, LTT on new property, and net cash freed | 1–2 months before listing |
| 2. Tax planning | Confirm PR exemption eligibility; plan for investing proceeds | Concurrent with step 1 |
| 3. Declutter and prepare | Sort belongings; donate/sell; stage the home | 1–3 months |
| 4. List and sell | Work with a realtor; price competitively | 1–3 months |
| 5. Find a new home | Buy or rent; consider accessibility and future needs | 1–3 months |
| 6. Move | Hire movers; set up new home | 1–2 weeks |
| 7. Invest proceeds | Deploy cash into TFSA, non-reg, GICs, etc. | Within 1 month of receiving funds |
| 8. Update estate plan | Revise will, power of attorney, beneficiary designations | Within 3 months |
Selling costs to budget for
| Cost | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Real estate commission | 3%–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
| Concern | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Attachment to the family home | Acknowledge the emotions; focus on the new chapter you are creating |
| Neighbourhood and community | Consider staying in the same neighbourhood in a smaller unit |
| Memories and possessions | Photograph items with sentimental value; pass meaningful items to family |
| Loss of space | Think of it as right-sizing rather than downsizing |
| Family expectations | Communicate openly — it is your retirement and your decision |
| Fear of change | Visit the new area/building multiple times before committing |
When downsizing makes financial sense
| Situation | Downsize? |
|---|---|
| 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 |