Property Tax Rates by Major Canadian City
| Rank | City | Province | Residential Tax Rate | Tax on $500K Home | Tax on $1M Home |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Winnipeg | MB | ~2.70% | $13,500 | $27,000 |
| 2 | Brandon | MB | ~2.50% | $12,500 | $25,000 |
| 3 | Saint John | NB | ~2.30% | $11,500 | $23,000 |
| 4 | Thunder Bay | ON | ~2.10% | $10,500 | $21,000 |
| 5 | Windsor | ON | ~1.80% | $9,000 | $18,000 |
| 6 | Fredericton | NB | ~1.75% | $8,750 | $17,500 |
| 7 | Sudbury | ON | ~1.70% | $8,500 | $17,000 |
| 8 | London | ON | ~1.55% | $7,750 | $15,500 |
| 9 | Hamilton | ON | ~1.40% | $7,000 | $14,000 |
| 10 | Regina | SK | ~1.30% | $6,500 | $13,000 |
| 11 | Edmonton | AB | ~1.10% | $5,500 | $11,000 |
| 12 | Halifax | NS | ~1.10% | $5,500 | $11,000 |
| 13 | Saskatoon | SK | ~1.20% | $6,000 | $12,000 |
| 14 | Calgary | AB | ~0.85% | $4,250 | $8,500 |
| 15 | Ottawa | ON | ~1.10% | $5,500 | $11,000 |
| 16 | Montreal | QC | ~0.90% | $4,500 | $9,000 |
| 17 | Toronto | ON | ~0.65% | $3,250 | $6,500 |
| 18 | Vancouver | BC | ~0.30% | $1,500 | $3,000 |
Rates are approximate and change annually. Includes municipal + education levies where applicable.
Why Low-Rate Cities Aren’t Always Cheaper
| City | Tax Rate | Avg Home Price | Annual Property Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver | 0.30% | $1,200,000 | ~$3,600 |
| Toronto | 0.65% | $1,100,000 | ~$7,150 |
| Calgary | 0.85% | $550,000 | ~$4,675 |
| Ottawa | 1.10% | $650,000 | ~$7,150 |
| Winnipeg | 2.70% | $350,000 | ~$9,450 |
| Thunder Bay | 2.10% | $280,000 | ~$5,880 |
| Saint John | 2.30% | $250,000 | ~$5,750 |
Cities with high home values tend to set lower tax rates because they have a larger tax base. The actual dollar amount you pay depends on assessed value × rate.
How Property Tax Works
The Formula
$$\text{Property Tax} = \text{Assessed Value} \times \text{Mill Rate}$$
Components
| Component | What It Is | Who Sets It |
|---|---|---|
| Assessed value | Estimated market value of your property | Provincial assessment authority |
| Mill rate | Tax rate per $1,000 of assessed value | Municipal council (annual budget) |
| Education levy | Additional rate for school funding | Province or municipality |
| Special levies | Transit, BIA, local improvement charges | Municipality |
Example Calculation
| Step | Detail |
|---|---|
| Assessed value | $500,000 |
| Municipal mill rate | 8.5 mills (or 0.85%) |
| Education levy | 1.5 mills (or 0.15%) |
| Total rate | 10.0 mills (or 1.00%) |
| Annual property tax | $5,000 |
Mill Rates Explained
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1 mill | $1 of tax per $1,000 of assessed value |
| 10 mills | $10 per $1,000 = 1.00% tax rate |
| 25 mills | $25 per $1,000 = 2.50% tax rate |
| Residential rate | Applies to owner-occupied homes |
| Commercial rate | Typically 2–4x the residential rate |
| Multi-residential rate | Rate for apartment buildings (higher than residential) |
Property Assessment Authorities by Province
| Province | Assessment Authority | Assessment Cycle |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | MPAC (Municipal Property Assessment Corp.) | Every 4 years (currently based on 2016 values) |
| BC | BC Assessment | Annual |
| Alberta | Municipal assessors | Annual |
| Quebec | Municipal evaluators | Every 3 years |
| Manitoba | Municipal assessors | Every 2 years |
| Saskatchewan | SAMA (Saskatchewan Assessment Management Agency) | Every 4 years |
| New Brunswick | Service New Brunswick | Annual |
| Nova Scotia | PVSC (Property Valuation Services Corp.) | Annual |
| PEI | Provincial assessors | Annual |
| Newfoundland | Municipal Assessment Agency | Variable |
How to Appeal Your Property Tax Assessment
Step-by-Step Process
| Step | Action | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Review your assessment notice — check property details (sqft, lot size, bedrooms, year built) | Upon receipt |
| 2 | Compare with neighbours — check comparable assessments online | Within 1 week |
| 3 | Gather evidence — recent sales of similar homes, independent appraisal, photos of defects | 2–4 weeks |
| 4 | File a Request for Reconsideration with the assessment authority | Deadline varies (30–90 days from notice) |
| 5 | Informal review — discuss with assessor, provide evidence | 2–6 weeks |
| 6 | Formal appeal to Assessment Review Board (if informal review fails) | Varies by province |
| 7 | Hearing — present your case, assessor presents theirs | Scheduled by board |
| 8 | Decision — board may lower, maintain, or (rarely) increase assessment | 4–12 weeks after hearing |
Grounds for Appeal
| Reason | Evidence Needed |
|---|---|
| Over-assessed | Comparable sale data showing lower values |
| Factual errors | Wrong square footage, lot size, bedroom count, or year built |
| Property defects | Structural issues, flood damage, environmental contamination |
| Comparable inequity | Similar neighbouring properties assessed significantly lower |
| Market decline | Area-wide price drops not reflected in assessment |
Provincial Appeal Deadlines
| Province | Deadline to File |
|---|---|
| Ontario | 90 days from assessment notice (Request for Reconsideration) |
| BC | January 31 (for current year assessment) |
| Alberta | Varies by municipality (typically 30–60 days) |
| Quebec | 30 days from receipt of evaluation roll |
| Manitoba | 20 days from assessment notice |
| New Brunswick | February 1 (for current year) |
| Nova Scotia | Within period stated on assessment notice |
| Saskatchewan | 30 days from assessment notice |
Property Tax Rebates and Credits
| Program | Province | Benefit | Eligibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario Senior Homeowners’ Property Tax Grant | Ontario | Up to $500/year | Seniors 64+ with low-moderate income |
| Property Tax Deferment | BC | Defer property taxes until sale of home | Seniors 55+, families with children, people with disabilities |
| Homeowner Grant | BC | Reduces tax by up to $570 ($845 for seniors/disabled) | Owner-occupied homes under $2.15M assessed value |
| Property Tax Credit | Manitoba | Up to $700/year | All homeowners ($350 renters) |
| Senior Property Tax Deferral | Alberta | Defer taxes until home sold | Seniors 65+ |
| QST Property Tax Credit | Quebec | Through Solidarity Tax Credit | Low-income homeowners and renters |
Property Tax by Property Type
| Property Type | Typical Tax Rate vs Residential |
|---|---|
| Single-family residential | 1.0x (base rate) |
| Multi-residential (apartment buildings) | 1.5–3.0x residential rate |
| Commercial | 2.0–4.0x residential rate |
| Industrial | 2.5–5.0x residential rate |
| Farmland | 0.1–0.25x residential rate |
| Vacant land | 1.0–3.0x residential rate |
How to Reduce Your Property Tax
| Strategy | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Appeal your assessment | Get it reduced if over-assessed |
| Apply for rebates | Seniors, disabled, low-income programs |
| Check for errors | Verify square footage, lot size, features |
| Defer taxes | Some provinces allow deferral for seniors |
| Tax-adjust before closing | When buying, ensure property taxes are prorated fairly |
| Don’t over-improve | Major renovations increase assessed value |
| Compare assessment to sale price | If you recently bought below assessed value, appeal |