Title fraud is one of the most financially devastating crimes that can happen to a Canadian homeowner. A criminal steals your property’s title — on paper, you no longer own your home. They mortgage it, take the money, and vanish. You are left fighting to prove you own your own house. Here is how it works and exactly how to protect yourself.
How title fraud works
The typical scheme
| Step | What the Criminal Does |
|---|---|
| 1 | Identifies a target property — often mortgage-free, vacant, or owned by an elderly/absent owner |
| 2 | Steals the owner’s identity — through data breaches, stolen mail, social engineering, or dark web purchases |
| 3 | Creates forged documents — fake ID, forged transfer documents, or fraudulent power of attorney |
| 4 | Impersonates the owner — contacts a lawyer or notary, poses as the owner to initiate a title transfer |
| 5 | Transfers title to themselves (or an accomplice) — registered at the provincial land titles office |
| 6 | Takes out a mortgage against the property using their new (fraudulent) ownership |
| 7 | Collects the mortgage funds and disappears |
| 8 | Legitimate owner discovers the fraud — often months later when mortgage payments are missed and the lender contacts them |
Alternative schemes
| Scheme | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Fraudulent mortgage (no transfer) | Criminal forges documents to take out a second mortgage on your property without transferring title |
| Power of attorney fraud | Criminal obtains or forges a power of attorney to act on behalf of the homeowner |
| Refinancing fraud | Criminal impersonates the owner to refinance the existing mortgage and extract equity |
| Sale fraud | Criminal sells the property to an innocent buyer, collects the proceeds, and disappears |
Who is most at risk
| Risk Factor | Why | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage-free property | No lender monitoring the title; more equity to extract | Very high |
| Vacant property | No one present to notice signs of fraud | Very high |
| Rental property (absentee landlord) | Owner is not physically present; less likely to notice changes | High |
| Elderly homeowners | Targeted for identity theft; less likely to monitor title | High |
| Snowbirds / frequent travellers | Extended absences create opportunity | High |
| High-value property | More equity to steal | High |
| No title insurance | Owner must fund own legal defence | Financial risk is highest |
| Recently inherited property | New owner may not have monitoring set up | Moderate |
Warning signs of title fraud
| Warning Sign | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Property tax bills stop arriving | Someone may have changed the mailing address |
| Unexpected mail about a mortgage or loan on your property | A mortgage may have been fraudulently obtained |
| Utility service changes you did not request | New “owner” may be setting up their own accounts |
| Credit report shows inquiries you did not authorize | Someone may be using your identity |
| Strangers claiming to own your property | Title may have been transferred without your knowledge |
| New construction or renovation notices for your property | Someone may be using the property as if they own it |
| Notification from land titles office about a transfer | The fraud is already registered — act immediately |
Financial impact of title fraud
| Cost | Without Title Insurance | With Title Insurance |
|---|---|---|
| Legal fees to restore title | $20,000–$100,000+ (you pay) | Covered by insurer |
| Court costs | $5,000–$20,000 (you pay) | Covered by insurer |
| Mortgage payments on fraudulent mortgage | May be required during dispute | Insurer handles |
| Time to resolve | 6–24 months | 3–12 months (insurer manages) |
| Lost property value during dispute | Possible | Insurer compensates |
| Emotional cost | Extreme stress + full financial burden | Stress reduced — insurer handles legal process |
| Total out-of-pocket | $50,000–$200,000+ | $0 (covered by $250–$500 policy) |
How to protect yourself
Protection layer 1: Title insurance
| Action | Details |
|---|---|
| Purchase an owner title insurance policy | $250–$500 one-time at closing — covers fraud, forgery, and title defects |
| Ensure you have an owner policy, not just lender | Lender policy protects the bank — owner policy protects you |
| Keep your policy document | You need it to file a claim if fraud occurs |
Protection layer 2: Property title alerts
Several provinces offer notification services that alert you when a document is registered against your title:
| Province | Service | Cost | How It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Property Alert (Teranet/LRO) | Free | Email notification when any document is registered against your title |
| BC | Property Monitoring (LTSA) | Free | Email alerts for registrations on your title |
| Alberta | SPIN 2 (Land Titles) | Fee per search | Manual monitoring — can check title status |
| Manitoba | Property Registry | Fee per search | Manual checks |
| Saskatchewan | ISC | Fee per search | Manual checks |
If you live in Ontario or BC, sign up for the free alert service immediately. It is the single most effective early-warning system.
Protection layer 3: Identity protection
| Action | Why |
|---|---|
| Monitor your credit report | Fraudulent credit inquiries are often the first sign |
| Secure your personal documents | SIN card, passport, birth certificate locked away — not in your car or wallet |
| Shred sensitive mail | Utility bills, bank statements, and tax documents are identity gold |
| Use strong, unique passwords | For online banking and property accounts |
| Be cautious with power of attorney | Only grant POA to trusted family — and revoke when no longer needed |
| Freeze your credit (if available) | Prevents unauthorized credit applications |
Protection layer 4: Physical property monitoring
| Action | For Whom |
|---|---|
| Regular property visits | Rental and vacation property owners |
| Trusted neighbour or property manager | Snowbirds and absentee owners |
| Security cameras | Vacant properties |
| Mail forwarding alerts | If you receive mail at the property |
What to do if you suspect title fraud
| Step | Action | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Contact your title insurer immediately | Same day |
| 2 | Contact your real estate lawyer | Same day |
| 3 | File a police report | Same day |
| 4 | Contact the provincial land titles office | Same day — request they flag your title |
| 5 | Notify your mortgage lender (if you have one) | Same day |
| 6 | Contact the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre | 1-888-495-8501 |
| 7 | Check your credit report for unauthorized inquiries | Within 24 hours |
| 8 | Document everything in writing | Ongoing |
Provincial title registration systems
Different provinces offer different levels of protection against title fraud:
| Province | Registration System | Fraud Protection |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario (Land Titles) | Torrens system — government guarantee of title | Province may compensate (Land Titles Assurance Fund) |
| BC | Torrens system — indefeasible title | Strong government guarantee |
| Alberta | Torrens system | Government assurance fund available |
| Quebec | Registry Division system | Less strong — registration does not guarantee title |
| Saskatchewan | Torrens system | Government assurance fund |
| Manitoba | Torrens system | Government assurance fund |
| Atlantic provinces | Varies — mix of Registry and Land Titles | Varies by province |
The Torrens system advantage
In Torrens system provinces (ON, BC, AB, SK, MB), the registered owner shown on title is generally considered the legal owner. If fraud is registered, the province may compensate the legitimate owner through an assurance fund. However, this process is slow and complex — title insurance resolves claims much faster.
Title fraud vs other property fraud
| Fraud Type | What Happens | Primary Protection |
|---|---|---|
| Title fraud | Ownership transferred fraudulently | Title insurance + property alerts |
| Mortgage fraud | Fraudulent mortgage taken against your property | Title insurance + credit monitoring |
| Rental fraud | Someone rents out a property they don’t own | Tenant verification |
| Real estate agent fraud | Agent misrepresents or commits fraud in transaction | Regulatory body complaints |
| Identity-based fraud | Your identity stolen and used for any property transaction | Identity monitoring + credit freeze |
Cost-benefit analysis of protection
| Protection | One-Time Cost | Annual Cost | What It Prevents |
|---|---|---|---|
| Title insurance (owner policy) | $250–$500 | $0 | $50,000–$200,000+ in fraud losses |
| Property title alerts (ON/BC) | $0 | $0 | Early warning of unauthorized registrations |
| Credit monitoring | $0–$200 | $0–$200/year | Unauthorized credit inquiries |
| Secure document storage | $50–$200 (fireproof safe) | $0 | Identity theft via physical documents |
| Total protection cost | $300–$900 | $0–$200/year | $50,000–$200,000+ in potential losses |