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How to Appeal Your Property Tax Assessment in Canada — Province-by-Province Guide

Updated

How property tax works in Canada

Property tax is calculated in two steps:

  1. Assessment: A provincial agency determines your property’s assessed (market) value.
  2. Tax rate: Your municipality applies a tax rate (mill rate) to the assessed value.

Property tax = Assessed value × Municipal tax rate

You cannot appeal the tax rate — that’s set by your municipal council. But you can appeal the assessed value if you believe it’s inaccurate.


Who assesses your property?

ProvinceAssessment bodyAssessment cycle
OntarioMunicipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC)Every 4 years (currently frozen at 2016 values, review pending)
British ColumbiaBC AssessmentAnnual (based on July 1 market value)
AlbertaMunicipal assessorsAnnual
QuebecMunicipal evaluation rollEvery 3 years
ManitobaProvincial Municipal AssessorEvery 2 years
SaskatchewanSaskatchewan Assessment Management Agency (SAMA)Every 4 years
Nova ScotiaProperty Valuation Services Corporation (PVSC)Annual
New BrunswickService New BrunswickAnnual
PEIProvincial Tax CommissionAnnual
Newfoundland & LabradorMunicipal Assessment AgencyVaries

When to appeal: the decision framework

Signs your assessment may be too high

Red flagWhat to check
Assessed value exceeds comparable sale pricesCompare 3–5 similar homes that sold in the past 12 months within 1 km
Factual errors on the assessmentCheck square footage, lot size, bedrooms, bathrooms, finished basement, garage, pool
Property condition not reflectedMajor defects (foundation issues, environmental contamination, flood damage) not captured
Neighbourhood factorsProximity to highways, commercial properties, or nuisances not accounted for
Recent decline in local marketIf market dropped since the assessment date, values may be overstated
Major renovation assumed but not doneAssessment may include upgrades you haven’t made

When NOT to appeal

SituationWhy
Your assessed value matches comparable salesYou’ll lose — the assessment is correct
You just want lower taxesIf the value is fair, the appeal will fail
Your neighbourhood is appreciatingRising values justify a higher assessment
The difference is minor ($5,000–$10,000)Tax savings may not justify the effort

Is it worth the effort?

Quick math: If your assessment is $50,000 too high and your municipal tax rate is 1.0%:

  • Annual tax savings: $500/year
  • Over a 4-year assessment cycle (Ontario): $2,000 total
  • Time investment: 5–15 hours of research and appeals

For larger discrepancies, the savings compound significantly:

Over-assessmentTax rate 0.8%Tax rate 1.0%Tax rate 1.2%
$25,000$200/year$250/year$300/year
$50,000$400/year$500/year$600/year
$100,000$800/year$1,000/year$1,200/year
$200,000$1,600/year$2,000/year$2,400/year

Province-by-province appeal process

Ontario (MPAC)

Step 1 — Request for Reconsideration (RfR)

  • Free — no cost to file.
  • Submit within the deadline shown on your Property Assessment Notice (typically March 31 of the tax year).
  • MPAC reviews your property record and comparable sales.
  • Decision within 180 days.
  • Approximately 50% of RfRs result in some adjustment.

Step 2 — Assessment Review Board (ARB)

  • File if the RfR doesn’t resolve the issue.
  • Filing fee: $125.50 for residential properties (under $1M assessed value).
  • Formal hearing — you present evidence, MPAC presents their case.
  • Success rate: approximately 25–30% of hearings result in a reduction.
  • You can hire a property tax consultant or lawyer to represent you.

Key evidence to prepare:

  • 3–5 comparable sales near the assessment date (January 1 of the assessment cycle year).
  • Document any factual errors in MPAC’s property record.
  • Photos showing condition issues that affect value.
  • Independent appraisal (optional but strengthens your case).

Ontario note: MPAC assessments are currently frozen at 2016 values. A province-wide reassessment has been delayed multiple times. When it occurs, expect significant value changes in many markets.

British Columbia

Step 1 — Complaint to Property Assessment Review Panel

  • Deadline: January 31 (31 days after assessment notice).
  • Filing fee: $30 for residential.
  • Panel hearing is relatively informal — present evidence of market value as of July 1 of the assessment year.
  • Success rate: 45–55% result in some change.

Step 2 — Appeal to Property Assessment Appeal Board (PAAB)

  • File within 21 days of the Panel decision.
  • Filing fee: $50 for residential.
  • More formal hearing.
  • Can hire a representative.

Key evidence:

  • Comparable sales close to July 1 valuation date.
  • Property errors (finished area, lot size, building age).
  • Recent MLS listing data if property was listed and received lower offers.

Alberta

Step 1 — Complaint to municipal Assessment Review Board (ARB)

  • Deadline: Varies by municipality — typically 60 days after assessment notice (often March–April).
  • Filing fee: $50–$100 (varies by municipality).
  • Hearings are relatively informal.
  • Success rate varies — larger discrepancies have better outcomes.

Key evidence:

  • Comparable sales for the assessment period.
  • Equity comparisons — if similar properties nearby are assessed lower.
  • Condition evidence (photos, inspection reports).

Quebec

Step 1 — Request for Review (Demande de révision)

  • File with the municipal assessor within May 1 of the first year of the new assessment roll (rolls are updated every 3 years).
  • No filing fee for the initial request.
  • Municipal assessor reviews and responds.

Step 2 — Tribunal administratif du Québec (TAQ)

  • File within 60 days of the assessor’s response if unsatisfied.
  • Filing fee: $105 for residential.
  • Formal tribunal hearing.

Nova Scotia

Step 1 — Appeal to Property Valuation Services Corporation (PVSC)

  • Deadline: Varies — check assessment notice (typically about 30 days).
  • Contact PVSC to discuss your concerns first (informal resolution may be possible).

Step 2 — Nova Scotia Utility and Review Board (NSUARB)

  • Formal appeal if PVSC informal resolution fails.
  • Filing fee applies.

Building your appeal case

Step 1 — Get your property record

Request your full property record from the assessment authority. This shows what information they used to assess your property.

Check for errors in:

DetailCommon errors
Lot sizeIncorrect dimensions — compare to your survey
Finished living areaIncludes unfinished space, or underestimates finished space
Number of bedrooms/bathroomsIncorrect count
Basement statusListed as finished when it’s not (or vice versa)
Building ageIncorrect construction year
GarageListed as attached when it’s detached, or wrong size
Pool / hot tubListed when removed
Property classListed as commercial/mixed when residential
RenovationsListed that don’t exist, or unlisted ones that reduce value (e.g., removed a bathroom)

Factual errors are the easiest wins — the assessment body will correct them without dispute.

Step 2 — Gather comparable sales

The strongest appeal evidence is comparable sales that prove your assessment is higher than fair market value.

Criteria for strong comparables:

  • Sold within 6–12 months of the assessment date.
  • Within 1 km of your property (closer is better).
  • Similar size, lot, age, and style.
  • 3–5 sales minimum — one outlier sale won’t be convincing.

Where to find comparable sales:

SourceAccess
HouseSigmaFree — Ontario sold prices
ZoloFree — sold prices in many provinces
Realtor.caLimited sold data
Your city’s property assessment websiteSome publish recent sales
Land registry / title searchPaid — $10–$30 per search
A REALTOR (or past agent)Can pull sold MLS data

Step 3 — Document property condition

If your property has issues that reduce market value, document them:

  • Dated photos of structural problems, water damage, needed repairs.
  • Inspection reports from a licensed home inspector.
  • Contractor quotes for required repairs.
  • Environmental reports (soil contamination, radon, UFFI).

Step 4 — Consider professional help

ProfessionalCostWhen to use
Property tax consultant$500–$2,500 (or contingency: 30–50% of first-year savings)Assessments over $50K above market
Appraisal$300–$500Strong evidence that’s hard to dismiss
Real estate lawyer$200–$500/hourComplex appeals or tribunal hearings

Contingency providers only charge if they win a reduction — no savings, no fee. This is a good option for larger discrepancies.


What to expect at a hearing

Assessment Review Board / Panel hearing

ElementWhat happens
FormatSemi-formal — you present, the assessor presents, panel asks questions
Length30–90 minutes typically
Who attendsYou (or your representative) + the assessment body’s representative
Your presentationState your case, present comparable sales, point out errors, show condition evidence
Cross-examinationThe assessor may question your evidence; you can question theirs
DecisionPanel issues a written decision (sometimes immediately, sometimes in 2–4 weeks)

Tips for a successful hearing

  1. Be prepared, not emotional. Stick to data — panels decide on evidence, not sympathy.
  2. Lead with factual errors — these are undeniable and often resolve the case immediately.
  3. Organize comparable sales in a clear table: address, sale date, sale price, and key features compared to your property.
  4. Bring extra copies of all evidence for the panel and the assessor.
  5. Know the assessment date — comparables must be relevant to that valuation date, not today’s market.
  6. Be realistic — asking for a 30% reduction when the evidence supports 8% undermines your credibility.

After a successful appeal

  • Your assessed value is reduced — this flows through to a lower property tax bill.
  • In some provinces, the reduction applies retroactively to the current tax year, resulting in a refund or credit.
  • The new value stands until the next assessment cycle, unless the assessment body initiates a new assessment.
  • Significant renovations or additions may trigger a supplementary assessment that increases your value mid-cycle.

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