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Land Transfer Tax Calculator Guide: Estimate Your LTT by Province (2026)

Updated

Land transfer tax is one of the largest closing costs when buying a home in Canada — and it varies enormously by province. In Toronto, you could pay over $30,000 on a $1,000,000 home. In Alberta, the same purchase costs under $500 in transfer fees. Knowing your province’s rates helps you budget accurately and avoid surprises at closing.

Land transfer tax by province

Quick comparison: LTT on common purchase prices

Purchase PriceOntarioToronto (ON + Municipal)British ColumbiaAlbertaQuebecNova ScotiaManitoba
$300,000$2,975$5,950$3,000$170$2,250$4,500$3,600
$400,000$4,475$8,950$6,000$210$3,000$6,000$4,800
$500,000$6,475$12,950$8,000$250$3,750$7,500$6,000
$600,000$8,475$16,950$10,000$290$4,500$9,000$7,200
$700,000$10,475$20,950$12,000$330$5,250$10,500$8,400
$800,000$12,475$24,950$14,000$370$6,000$12,000$9,600
$1,000,000$16,475$32,950$18,000$450$7,500$15,000$12,000
$1,500,000$26,475$52,450$28,000$650$11,250$22,500$18,000

Figures are approximate. Some provinces have additional surcharges for foreign buyers or luxury properties.

Provincial rate schedules

Ontario

Purchase Price BracketMarginal Rate
$0–$55,0000.5%
$55,001–$250,0001.0%
$250,001–$400,0001.5%
$400,001–$2,000,0002.0%
$2,000,001+2.5%

Ontario first-time buyer rebate: Up to $4,000 (full rebate on homes up to $368,333; partial rebate up to $500,000)

Toronto Municipal Land Transfer Tax (additional)

Purchase Price BracketMarginal Rate
$0–$55,0000.5%
$55,001–$250,0001.0%
$250,001–$400,0001.5%
$400,001–$2,000,0002.0%
$2,000,001+2.5%

Toronto first-time buyer rebate: Up to $4,475 (full rebate on homes up to $400,000)

Combined Toronto rebate for first-time buyers: Up to $8,475

Ontario calculation example: $700,000 home

BracketTaxable AmountRateTax
$0–$55,000$55,0000.5%$275
$55,001–$250,000$195,0001.0%$1,950
$250,001–$400,000$150,0001.5%$2,250
$400,001–$700,000$300,0002.0%$6,000
Total Ontario LTT$10,475
Toronto municipal (same brackets)$10,475
Total in Toronto$20,950

British Columbia

Purchase PriceRate (Residential)
$0–$200,0001.0%
$200,001–$2,000,0002.0%
$2,000,001–$3,000,0003.0%
$3,000,001+5.0%

Additional BC taxes:

  • Foreign buyer tax: 20% in designated areas (Metro Vancouver, Fraser Valley, etc.)
  • Speculation and Vacancy Tax: 0.5%–2.0% annually on vacant/underused properties

BC first-time buyer exemption: Full exemption on homes up to $500,000; partial exemption $500,001–$835,000 (thresholds increased in 2024)

BC calculation example: $800,000 home

BracketTaxable AmountRateTax
$0–$200,000$200,0001.0%$2,000
$200,001–$800,000$600,0002.0%$12,000
Total BC Property Transfer Tax$14,000

Alberta

Alberta does not have a land transfer tax. Instead:

FeeCalculationOn $500K Home with $400K Mortgage
Land title transfer fee$50 + $2 per $5,000 of property value$50 + $200 = $250
Mortgage registration fee$50 + $1.50 per $5,000 of mortgage amount$50 + $120 = $170
Total$420

Quebec

Quebec calls it “welcome tax” (droits de mutation immobilière):

Purchase Price BracketRate
$0–$58,9000.5%
$58,901–$294,6001.0%
$294,601–$500,0001.5%
$500,001+2.0% (some municipalities charge up to 3% above certain thresholds)

Note: Montreal charges a higher rate of 3.0% on the portion above $1,033,100 and 3.5% above $2,066,200.

No first-time buyer exemption at the provincial level (some municipalities may offer relief).

Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan charges flat land title fees, similar to Alberta:

FeeCalculationOn $400K home
Title transfer fee0.3% of property value$1,200
Mortgage registration fee0.3% of mortgage amount (if applicable)$960 (on $320K mortgage)
Total$2,160

Manitoba

Purchase Price BracketRate
$0–$30,0000%
$30,001–$90,0000.5%
$90,001–$150,0001.0%
$150,001–$200,0001.5%
$200,001+2.0%

No first-time buyer exemption (applies to all buyers).

Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia has a deed transfer tax of 1.5% of purchase price. This is set at the municipal level — Halifax charges 1.5%, and most municipalities follow suit.

No first-time buyer exemption for deed transfer tax.

New Brunswick

New Brunswick charges a land transfer tax of 1.0% of the greater of purchase price or assessed value.

No first-time buyer exemption.

Prince Edward Island

PEI charges a real property transfer tax of 1.0% of the greater of purchase price or assessed value.

First-time buyer exemption: Full exemption available for qualifying first-time buyers.

Newfoundland and Labrador

Newfoundland charges a registration fee of $100 + $0.40 per $100 of property value (approximately 0.4%).

No first-time buyer exemption.

First-time buyer rebates and exemptions summary

ProvinceRebate/ExemptionMaximum SavingsThreshold
Ontario (provincial)Rebate up to $4,000$4,000Full rebate ≤$368,333; partial to $500K
Toronto (municipal)Rebate up to $4,475$4,475Full rebate ≤$400K
British ColumbiaFull exemption to $500K; partial to $835K$8,000 (on $500K)Phase-out $500K–$835K
PEIFull exemption~$3,000–$4,000First-time buyers
AlbertaN/A (no LTT)Fees are minimal anyway
SaskatchewanN/A (flat fees)
QuebecNone (provincial)$0
ManitobaNone$0
Nova ScotiaNone$0
New BrunswickNone$0
NewfoundlandNone$0

LTT as part of total closing costs

Land transfer tax is just one of several closing costs:

Complete closing cost estimate

CostTypical RangeNotes
Land transfer tax$0–$33,000+Depends on province and purchase price
Legal fees$1,500–$2,500Lawyer or notary
Title insurance$250–$500Required by most lenders
Home inspection$400–$600Recommended but not required
Appraisal$300–$500Sometimes paid by lender
Property tax adjustment$500–$3,000Depends on closing date
Mortgage insurance premium$0–$20,000+Only if <20% down (added to mortgage)
Moving costs$500–$5,000Depends on distance and volume
Utility hookup/deposits$100–$500New account setup
Home insurance$100–$300 (first month)Required before closing

Total closing costs by province (on $600,000 home)

ProvinceLTTOther Closing CostsTotal
Toronto$16,950$3,500–$5,000$20,450–$21,950
Ontario (non-Toronto)$8,475$3,500–$5,000$11,975–$13,475
British Columbia$10,000$3,500–$5,000$13,500–$15,000
Quebec$4,500$3,500–$5,000$8,000–$9,500
Manitoba$7,200$3,500–$5,000$10,700–$12,200
Nova Scotia$9,000$3,500–$5,000$12,500–$14,000
Alberta$290$3,500–$5,000$3,790–$5,290
Saskatchewan$1,800$3,500–$5,000$5,300–$6,800

Alberta buyers save $7,000–$17,000+ on closing costs compared to Ontario or BC — a significant advantage that makes Alberta even more affordable.

Strategies to reduce your land transfer tax

StrategySavingsDetails
Claim first-time buyer rebateUp to $4,000 (ON) or $8,000 (BC)Ensure you qualify — must never have owned property anywhere worldwide
Buy just below thresholdVariesIn BC, buying at $500,000 vs $501,000 saves thousands in LTT
Buy outside TorontoUp to $16,475+The municipal LTT is Toronto-specific
Negotiate for seller to cover LTTFull LTT amountRare, but possible in buyer’s markets
Buy in Alberta or Saskatchewan$5,000–$15,000+Provincial move for huge savings
New construction assignmentVariesSome provinces have lower tax on assignment sales

How to pay your land transfer tax

MethodProvinceDetails
Through your lawyer at closingMost provincesLawyer collects and remits as part of closing
Added to closing fundsOntario, BC, etc.Must have cash available — cannot be financed
Property tax billQuebec“Welcome tax” is billed after closing by the municipality
Cannot be mortgagedAll provincesLTT must be paid in cash — it’s not added to your mortgage

The bottom line

  1. Land transfer tax varies from $170 to $33,000+ on the same home depending on your province
  2. Toronto is the most expensive — double the tax of the rest of Ontario due to the municipal LTT
  3. Alberta and Saskatchewan have minimal transfer costs — flat fees instead of percentage-based taxes
  4. First-time buyer rebates can save $4,000–$8,475 — don’t forget to apply
  5. Budget for LTT as part of your closing costs — you need this in cash at closing (not added to mortgage)
  6. LTT is non-negotiable — unlike other closing costs, you can’t shop around for a lower rate

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