Property tax is not optional. Unlike income tax, which is collected by the CRA at the federal and provincial level, property tax is collected by your municipality and is secured directly against your home. This means unpaid property tax gives the municipality a legal claim on your property that ranks ahead of your mortgage — and if left unpaid long enough, the municipality can sell your home to recover the debt.
The good news is that tax sales are slow and avoidable if you act early. Here is exactly what happens at each stage, how fast penalties add up, and what to do if you are behind.
Timeline: what happens when you miss property tax payments
| Stage | What Happens | Typical Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Missed installment | Late penalty charged immediately (1.25%–1.5% of outstanding amount). Interest begins accruing | Day 1 |
| Ongoing arrears | Monthly penalty charges continue compounding. Municipality sends reminder notices | 1–6 months |
| Formal demand | Municipality sends formal arrears notice by registered mail. May place a tax lien (tax arrears certificate) against the property title | 6–12 months |
| Tax lien registration | Municipality registers the arrears on your property title. This is public record and visible to lenders, buyers, and anyone searching the title | 1–2 years |
| Tax sale proceedings | Municipality begins the legal process to sell your property to recover unpaid taxes, penalties, interest, and costs | 2–3+ years |
| Tax sale | Property is listed and sold. Proceeds cover the tax debt first, then any remaining mortgage | 3+ years |
The exact timeline depends on your province and municipality. Some are slower than others, but no municipality forgives unpaid property tax indefinitely.
How penalties compound: worked example
Assume you owe $6,000 in annual property tax in a municipality that charges 1.25% per month on overdue amounts.
| Time Overdue | Accumulated Penalty | Total Owed |
|---|---|---|
| 1 month | $75 | $6,075 |
| 3 months | $228 | $6,228 |
| 6 months | $463 | $6,463 |
| 12 months | $951 | $6,951 |
| 24 months | $2,056 | $8,056 |
| 36 months | $3,339 | $9,339 |
After three years, your original $6,000 tax bill has grown to over $9,300 — a 55% increase from penalties alone. The municipality will also add administrative and legal costs once tax sale proceedings begin, which can add several thousand dollars more.
Provincial tax sale timelines
Each province has different rules for how quickly a municipality can move to tax sale.
| Province | Time Before Tax Sale Can Begin | Process |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | 3 years of arrears (after 1 year, municipality can register a tax arrears certificate) | Tax sale or vesting — municipality can take ownership if no buyer at auction |
| British Columbia | Properties with taxes delinquent on December 31 of the previous year go to annual tax sale in September | Annual municipal tax sale. Redemption period of 1 year after sale |
| Alberta | Taxes unpaid for more than 1 year. Municipality can start process after the second year of arrears | Public auction. Surplus above tax debt returned to homeowner |
| Quebec | 3+ years of arrears | Sale by municipal authority. Prior notice required |
| Manitoba | 2 years of arrears | Tax sale. Redemption period available |
| Saskatchewan | 2 years of arrears | Tax enforcement proceedings. Property listed for sale |
| Nova Scotia | 2 years of arrears (varies by municipality) | Tax deed sale |
| New Brunswick | Varies by municipality | Tax sale with notice requirements |
| PEI | Established arrears period | Tax sale by provincial or municipal authority |
| Newfoundland | Set by municipal authority | Tax sale with notice |
Key point: In no province does the tax sale happen overnight. You will receive multiple notices and have months to years to address the arrears. But once the process reaches the tax sale stage, reversing it becomes expensive and difficult.
How property tax arrears affect your mortgage
Property tax arrears create problems with your mortgage in several ways:
Tax payment clause. Almost every mortgage contract in Canada includes a clause requiring you to keep property taxes current. Failing to do so is technically a breach of your mortgage agreement, which gives the lender the right to take action.
Lender pays on your behalf. If your lender discovers you have unpaid property taxes, they may pay the municipality directly and add the amount to your mortgage balance or demand immediate repayment. Lenders do this because a municipal tax lien ranks ahead of the mortgage — if the property is sold for unpaid taxes, the municipality gets paid first and the mortgage lender may lose money.
Mortgage default risk. Persistent tax arrears can trigger a formal mortgage default. Your lender could demand full repayment of the mortgage or begin power of sale proceedings independently of the tax sale process.
Renewal complications. If you have tax arrears when your mortgage comes up for renewal, your current lender may impose less favourable terms. If you try to switch lenders, the new lender will discover the arrears during their title search and may decline to take you on.
Property tax deferral programs
Several provinces offer deferral programs for homeowners who qualify, typically based on age or income:
| Program | Province | Who Qualifies | How It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| BC Property Tax Deferment | British Columbia | Homeowners 55+, surviving spouses, persons with disabilities, or families with children | Taxes deferred at low interest rate. Repaid when home is sold or transferred |
| Ontario Senior Homeowners’ Property Tax Grant | Ontario | Seniors with low to moderate income | Up to $500 annual grant. Not a deferral but reduces the burden |
| Alberta Seniors Property Tax Deferral | Alberta | Seniors 65+ | Taxes deferred until home is sold. Low interest rate applies |
| Municipal payment plans | All provinces | Any homeowner with arrears (at the municipality’s discretion) | Installment plans to catch up over time. Usually stops further collection action |
Check with your municipal tax office for specific programs available in your area. Programs change and new ones are introduced regularly.
What to do if you are behind on property taxes
- Contact your municipality immediately. Call the tax department, explain your situation, and ask about payment plans or hardship programs. Municipalities prefer to collect taxes over running a tax sale — they will usually work with you.
- Check if your lender is escrowing taxes. If your property tax is included in your mortgage payment and you are still behind, the issue is between you and your lender. Contact them to clarify.
- Ask about pre-authorized payments. Most municipalities offer monthly or bi-monthly pre-authorized installment plans that make it easier to stay current. Some offer discounts for enrolling.
- Apply for tax deferral programs. If you are a senior, have a disability, or meet income thresholds, you may qualify for a provincial deferral program that lets you delay payment until you sell your home.
- Prioritize property tax over unsecured debt. Property tax is secured against your home and ranks ahead of your mortgage. If you are choosing which bills to pay, property tax should be near the top — ahead of credit card debt, personal loans, and other unsecured obligations.
- Get professional advice. If your arrears are substantial and you are facing multiple debts, speak with a licensed insolvency trustee or credit counsellor about your options. A consumer proposal can address unsecured debts and free up cash flow for property tax.
Related pages
- Property Tax Calculator — estimate your annual property tax by city
- Property Taxes in Canada by Province — provincial tax rate comparison
- What Happens If You Miss a Mortgage Payment — mortgage-specific consequences
- Mortgage Renewal Guide — how arrears can affect your renewal
- Monthly Carrying Costs of Homeownership — budgeting for all housing expenses
- Credit Counselling Canada — free help managing debt