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Real Estate Cashback & Buyer Rebates in Canada: How They Work (2026)

Updated

Commission rebates are becoming more common as buyers seek ways to reduce the cost of buying a home. Here is how rebate programs work, their limitations, and when they make sense.

How buyer rebates work

The commission flow

StepTraditionalWith Rebate
Seller lists homeOffers 2.5% to buyer agentSame
Buyer agent commissionAgent keeps full 2.5%Agent keeps 1.5%, rebates 1.0%
Buyer receivesNothing1.0% rebate after closing
On $700,000 homeAgent earns $17,500Agent earns $10,500, buyer gets $7,000

Types of rebate structures

StructureHow It WorksExample on $700,000
Percentage rebateAgent rebates a set % of commission1% back = $7,000
Flat-dollar rebateFixed amount regardless of price$5,000 cashback
Closing cost creditRebate applied to closing costs$5,000 toward legal fees, land transfer tax
Price reductionAgent’s rebate reduces the purchase pricePurchase price reduced by $7,000
Tiered rebateHigher rebate for pricier properties0.5% under $500K, 1.0% over $500K

Rebate amounts by home price

Home Price2.5% Buyer CommissionTypical Rebate (0.5%–1.0%)Net Agent Commission
$400,000$10,000$2,000–$4,000$6,000–$8,000
$600,000$15,000$3,000–$6,000$9,000–$12,000
$800,000$20,000$4,000–$8,000$12,000–$16,000
$1,000,000$25,000$5,000–$10,000$15,000–$20,000
$1,500,000$37,500$7,500–$15,000$22,500–$30,000

Legality by province

ProvinceRebates Legal?Notes
Ontario✅ YesMust be disclosed; cannot be used to qualify for a mortgage
British Columbia✅ YesMust be disclosed to all parties
Alberta✅ YesCommission structures are negotiable
Quebec⚠️ RestrictedOACIQ has specific rules; consult your courtier
Manitoba✅ YesMust be disclosed
Saskatchewan✅ YesMust be disclosed
New Brunswick✅ YesCheck with NBREA for current rules
Nova Scotia✅ YesMust be disclosed
PEI⚠️ CheckConsult provincial regulator
Newfoundland⚠️ CheckConsult provincial regulator

Important rules about rebates

Mortgage qualification

Rebates cannot be used to increase your down payment or improve your mortgage qualification. Lenders and mortgage insurers are aware of rebate programs and treat them as follows:

Lender TreatmentDetails
CMHC / insurer rulesCashbacks from agents cannot count toward the minimum down payment
Disclosure requirementRebates must be disclosed on the purchase agreement or as a separate document
Impact on mortgage amountSome lenders treat the rebate as a price reduction, which may reduce the insured mortgage amount
Post-closing cashIf received after closing, it is essentially free cash — but it did not help you qualify

Disclosure requirements

In most provinces, any commission rebate must be:

  • Disclosed in writing to all parties (buyer, seller, and their agents)
  • Documented in the purchase agreement or a separate disclosure form
  • Reported to the brokerage
  • Disclosed to the mortgage lender

Full-service rebate agents vs reduced-service

FeatureFull-Service Rebate AgentReduced-Service Rebate Agent
Rebate amountSmaller (0.25%–0.5%)Larger (0.5%–1.5%)
Property showingsFull (agent accompanies all showings)Limited (self-showing or virtual showings)
Offer negotiationFull hands-on negotiationMay be more limited
Market analysisDetailed CMA providedBasic or self-serve
CommunicationRegular, personalized updatesMay be less responsive
Who it suitsFirst-time buyers, complex dealsExperienced buyers, straightforward purchases

Cashback companies in Canada

CompanyModelRebate RangeNotes
ProperlyFull-service + cashbackVaries (up to 1%)Buy/sell combined model
JustoDiscount brokerageCommission savings (not cashback model)Lower commission structure
WahiDigital-first brokerageCashback programs availableTechnology-driven
RedfinDiscount brokerageVaries by marketLimited Canadian markets
Local agentsNegotiated individually0.25%–1.0%Ask during agent interviews

Tax implications

Primary residence

For a primary residence, a commission rebate is generally treated as a reduction in the acquisition cost:

  • Not considered taxable income
  • No T4A or reporting slip issued
  • Treated as a discount on the purchase price

Investment / rental property

For a rental or investment property, the rebate may:

  • Reduce your adjusted cost base (ACB) for capital gains purposes
  • Affect your capital gains calculation when you sell
  • Not be considered rental income

HST on rebates

If the agent charges HST on their commission (which they do), the rebate amount may be net of HST or may attract HST implications. Consult a tax professional.

How to negotiate a rebate

Step-by-step approach

  1. Interview multiple agents — mention you are considering agents who offer rebates
  2. Ask directly — “Would you consider offering a commission rebate?”
  3. Start with full service and negotiate down — “I’d prefer full service with a 0.5% rebate over reduced service with a larger rebate”
  4. Leverage your situation — higher-priced purchases, repeat business, or referrals give you negotiating leverage
  5. Get it in writing — any rebate agreement should be documented in the Buyer Representation Agreement
  6. Disclose to your lender — required and avoids issues at closing

Negotiation leverage

FactorLeverage Level
Higher purchase price ($800K+)Strong — agent earns more, can share more
Pre-approved buyerModerate — less risk for the agent
Buying and selling with same agentStrong — dual commission opportunity
Referral from existing clientModerate — agent saves on marketing
Quick decision-makerModerate — less time investment for the agent
Off-peak season (winter)Moderate — agents may be less busy

When a rebate may NOT be worth it

  1. You are a first-time buyer — the guidance an experienced full-service agent provides may be worth more than a $5,000 rebate
  2. The deal is complex — multiple offers, conditional sales, inspections — you want a fully invested agent
  3. You sacrifice negotiation power — if the agent is less motivated to fight for the best price, a $7,000 rebate could cost you $20,000 in a weak negotiation
  4. The agent has no track record — a new agent offering large rebates to win business may lack the experience to protect your interests

Key takeaways

  1. Buyer rebates are legal in most Canadian provinces — always confirm with your provincial regulator
  2. Rebates typically range from 0.25% to 1.0% of the purchase price
  3. Rebates cannot be used to increase your down payment or improve mortgage qualification
  4. Full-service agents with modest rebates often provide better overall value than bare-bones agents with large rebates
  5. All rebates must be disclosed to the lender and other parties
  6. On investment properties, rebates affect your adjusted cost base — consult a tax professional
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