Canada has introduced two major rules that fundamentally changed real estate transactions: the foreign buyer ban and the anti-flipping tax. Both took effect in 2023, and both remain in force in 2026. Here is exactly how they work, who they affect, and how to stay compliant.
Part 1: The foreign buyer ban
Overview
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Official name | Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act |
| Effective date | January 1, 2023 |
| Extended through | December 31, 2026 |
| Applies to | Non-Canadian citizens and non-permanent residents |
| Property type | Residential property (3 or fewer dwelling units) |
| Penalty | Up to $10,000 fine + court-ordered sale |
Who is banned from purchasing
| Buyer Status | Can Purchase Residential Property? |
|---|---|
| Canadian citizen | Yes |
| Permanent resident | Yes |
| Person registered under the Indian Act | Yes |
| Temporary resident (work permit — meets conditions) | Yes — exemption |
| International student (meets conditions) | Yes — exemption |
| Refugee/protected person | Yes — exemption |
| Foreign national (no immigration status) | No |
| Foreign-controlled corporation | No |
| Foreign national on tourist visa | No |
Key exemptions (expanded March 2023)
Work permit holders
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Must hold a valid work permit | Or be authorized to work under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act |
| Must have 183+ days of validity remaining | On their work permit at the time of purchase |
| No requirement for | Specific length of time already worked in Canada |
| Can purchase | One residential property for personal use |
International students
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Must have been enrolled | At a designated learning institution for at least 244 days in each of the 5 years preceding purchase |
| Must have filed income tax | In Canada for at least 3 of the 5 preceding years |
| Purchase price | Must not exceed $500,000 |
| Purpose | Personal use |
Spousal exemption
| Scenario | Allowed? |
|---|---|
| Non-Canadian purchasing jointly with Canadian spouse or common-law partner | Yes — exempt |
| Non-Canadian purchasing alone (spouse is Canadian) | No — must purchase jointly |
Other exemptions
| Exemption | Details |
|---|---|
| Diplomatic and consular staff | Exempt under Vienna conventions |
| Refugees and protected persons | Exempt |
| Properties outside census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations | Generally exempt (rural/small town properties) |
| Recreational/vacation properties outside CMAs | Exempt (added March 2023) |
| Properties with 4+ dwelling units | Exempt (the ban covers 3 units or fewer) |
Penalties
| Violation | Penalty |
|---|---|
| Non-Canadian purchases residential property | Fine up to $10,000 |
| Real estate agent assists in prohibited purchase | Fine up to $10,000 |
| Lawyer assists in prohibited purchase | Fine up to $10,000 |
| Any person who knowingly assists | Fine up to $10,000 |
| Court-ordered sale | Buyer receives no more than original purchase price — forfeits any appreciation |
What happens to properties purchased before the ban
Properties purchased before January 1, 2023 are not affected. The ban only applies to new purchases made during the ban period. Foreign owners who already held property can continue to own and sell it.
Part 2: The federal anti-flipping tax
Overview
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Official name | Residential Property Flipping Rule (Income Tax Act amendment) |
| Effective date | January 1, 2023 |
| Applies to | All taxpayers (Canadian and non-resident) |
| Trigger | Sale of residential property owned less than 365 consecutive days |
| Tax treatment | Profit taxed as business income (100% taxable) instead of capital gain (50% taxable) |
| Principal residence exemption | Cannot be used for properties held less than 365 days (unless exemption applies) |
How it changes taxation
| Scenario | Ownership Period | Tax Treatment | Tax on $100,000 Profit (50% marginal rate) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard capital gain | 366+ days | 50% of gain taxable | $25,000 |
| Anti-flipping rule | Under 365 days | 100% of gain taxable as business income | $50,000 |
| Difference | — | — | $25,000 more tax |
Detailed tax comparison
| Profit from Sale | Capital Gain Tax (367+ days, 50% marginal rate) | Anti-Flipping Tax (under 365 days, 50% marginal rate) | Extra Tax Paid |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $12,500 | $25,000 | $12,500 |
| $100,000 | $25,000 | $50,000 | $25,000 |
| $200,000 | $50,000 | $100,000 | $50,000 |
| $500,000 | $125,000 | $250,000 | $125,000 |
Life event exemptions
The anti-flipping rule does not apply if you sell within 365 days due to certain qualifying life events:
| Exemption | Details |
|---|---|
| Death | Death of the taxpayer or a related person |
| Serious disability or illness | Taxpayer, spouse, or child diagnosed with serious disability or illness |
| Separation or divorce | Breakdown of marriage or common-law partnership |
| Personal safety | Threat to personal safety (e.g., domestic violence) |
| Job relocation | New employment requiring move 40+ km closer to new workplace |
| Involuntary job loss | Termination of employment (not voluntary resignation) |
| Insolvency | Taxpayer becomes insolvent |
| Involuntary disposition | Expropriation, natural disaster, etc. |
| New addition to household | Birth of a child, adoption, new person moving in requiring larger home |
Important: You must be able to demonstrate the qualifying event. CRA can audit and request documentation.
How the 365-day period is calculated
| Start Date | End Date | Count |
|---|---|---|
| Closing date of purchase | Closing date of sale | Must be 365+ days |
Not the listing date, not the offer date — the closing date to closing date.
| Purchase Closing | Sale Closing | Days Held | Anti-Flipping Applies? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan 15, 2025 | Jan 10, 2026 | 360 | Yes — under 365 |
| Jan 15, 2025 | Jan 16, 2026 | 366 | No — over 365 |
| Mar 1, 2025 | Feb 28, 2026 | 365 | No — exactly 365 |
Part 3: BC and Ontario provincial measures
BC Speculation and Vacancy Tax
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Applies to | Designated taxable regions in BC (Greater Vancouver, Victoria, Kelowna, Nanaimo, etc.) |
| Rates for Canadians | 0.5% of assessed value (if vacant) |
| Rates for foreign owners/satellite families | 2% of assessed value |
| Exemption | Principal residence exemption (must file declaration annually) |
| Filing | Annual declaration — all owners must file |
Ontario Non-Resident Speculation Tax (NRST)
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Rate | 25% of purchase price |
| Applies to | Foreign nationals, foreign corporations, taxable trustees |
| Area | Province-wide (expanded from Greater Golden Horseshoe in 2022) |
| Rebate | Available for those who become permanent residents within 4 years |
| Stacking | In addition to regular land transfer tax |
BC Foreign Buyer Tax
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Rate | 20% of purchase price |
| Applies to | Foreign nationals purchasing in designated areas |
| Area | Greater Vancouver, Fraser Valley, Victoria, Nanaimo, Kelowna |
| Rebate | Available for those who become PR/citizen within 1 year |
| Combined impact | 20% tax + 2% speculation tax + federal ban |
Complete tax layering for foreign buyers
| Tax/Rule | Rate/Impact | When It Applies |
|---|---|---|
| Federal foreign buyer ban | Cannot purchase (up to $10K fine) | Non-citizens/non-PRs (with exemptions) |
| Ontario NRST | 25% of purchase price | Non-residents buying in Ontario |
| BC Foreign Buyer Tax | 20% of purchase price | Non-residents buying in designated BC areas |
| BC Speculation and Vacancy Tax | 2% of assessed value annually | Foreign/satellite family — vacant property |
| Toronto Vacant Home Tax | 3% of CVA annually | Any vacant property in Toronto |
| Federal Underused Housing Tax | 1% of value annually | Non-citizen/non-PR owned vacant property |
| Anti-flipping tax | Full income tax on profit | Sale within 365 days |
Example: Foreign national buys $1,000,000 property in Toronto
| Cost | Amount |
|---|---|
| Ontario NRST (25%) | $250,000 |
| Ontario land transfer tax | $16,475 |
| Toronto municipal land transfer tax | $16,475 |
| Federal Underused Housing Tax (if vacant, annual) | $10,000 |
| Toronto VHT (if vacant, annual) | $30,000 |
| One-time costs | $282,950 |
| Annual vacancy taxes | $40,000 |
Impact on the housing market
Foreign buyer ban effects
| Metric | Pre-Ban (2022) | Post-Ban (2023–2025) |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign buyer share of purchases | 3–5% (estimated, varies by city) | Near 0% in covered areas |
| Vancouver luxury market | Significant foreign demand | Reduced foreign activity |
| Toronto condo market | Foreign investor presence | Shift to domestic buyers |
Anti-flipping tax effects
| Metric | Observation |
|---|---|
| Short-term flipping activity | Reduced significantly — less profitable |
| Average holding period | Increased (many flippers now hold 12+ months) |
| Renovation flips | Still viable but must hold 365+ days |
| Assignment sales | Treated as business income regardless of holding period |
What Canadian buyers need to know
| Situation | Key Rule |
|---|---|
| Buying primary residence, holding 1+ year | No impact from either rule |
| Buying and selling within 12 months | Anti-flipping tax — profit taxed as business income |
| Buying with non-citizen spouse | Spouse must purchase jointly with you for foreign buyer ban exemption |
| Buying rental property, holding 1+ year | Standard capital gains treatment on sale |
| Buying new build as assignment | May be treated as business income even without anti-flipping rule |