Short Answer
Selling a rental property triggers capital gains on appreciation and recapture of CCA previously claimed — both taxed in the year of sale. The combined tax impact can be significant, which is why pre-sale planning (maximizing ACB, timing, using exemptions) is worth understanding well before you list.
The Two Tax Events on Sale
| Tax event | What it is | Tax rate |
|---|---|---|
| Capital gain | Sale price minus ACB minus selling costs | 50%–66.67% of gain included in income at marginal rate |
| CCA recapture | UCC recovered when sale price > undepreciated capital cost | 100% included in income at marginal rate |
These are calculated separately and can occur in different amounts. A property can have both a capital gain and CCA recapture, just CCA recapture, or just a capital gain.
Step-by-Step Sale Tax Calculation
Step 1: Calculate Adjusted Cost Base
| ACB component | Your property |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $________ |
| Legal fees and land transfer tax | $________ |
| Capital improvements | $________ |
| Other acquisition costs | $________ |
| Total ACB | $________ |
Step 2: Calculate Capital Gain
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Sale price | $________ |
| Less: selling costs (realtor commission, legal fees, mortgage penalty) | ($________) |
| = Net proceeds | $________ |
| Less: ACB | ($________) |
| = Capital gain | $________ |
Step 3: Apply Inclusion Rate (2024 Rules)
| Gain portion | Inclusion rate | Taxable amount |
|---|---|---|
| First $250,000 | 50% | $________ |
| Above $250,000 | 66.67% | $________ |
| Total included in income | $________ |
Step 4: Calculate CCA Recapture (if CCA was claimed)
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| UCC at start of year of sale | $________ |
| Any CCA claimed in year of sale | ($________) |
| Adjusted UCC | $________ |
| Proceeds allocated to building portion | $________ |
| Recapture (proceeds in excess of UCC) | $________ |
CCA recapture is fully included in income — no partial inclusion rate.
Example: Full Calculation
| Property details | |
|---|---|
| Purchase price | $400,000 |
| Capital improvements | $50,000 |
| ACB | $450,000 |
| CCA claimed (Class 1, over 10 years) | $36,000 |
| UCC at sale | $284,000 (of $320,000 building value at purchase) |
| Sale price | $720,000 |
| Selling costs | $28,000 |
| Net proceeds | $692,000 |
| Tax event | Calculation | Amount taxable |
|---|---|---|
| Capital gain | $692,000 − $450,000 | $242,000 |
| Inclusion rate (first $250K at 50%) | $242,000 × 50% | $121,000 included |
| Building proceeds allocated | $580,000 (assume $140,000 for land) | — |
| CCA recapture | $580,000 − $284,000 | $296,000 fully included |
| Total added to income | $417,000 | |
| Tax at 43.41% (sample rate) | $417,000 × 43.41% | ~$181,000 |
Selling Costs That Reduce Your Capital Gain
| Selling cost | Reduce capital gain? |
|---|---|
| Real estate commissions | Yes |
| Legal fees for the sale | Yes |
| Mortgage prepayment penalty | Yes |
| Staging and repairs to get property ready for sale (capital in nature) | Yes, if capital in nature |
| HST/GST on commissions | Yes |
| Moving costs | No |
| Landscaping or cosmetic repairs before sale | Only if capital — not if expensed as maintenance |
Using the Principal Residence Exemption
If you lived in the property for some years as a principal residence:
| Formula | (1 + Designated PRE years) ÷ Total years owned × Capital gain = PRE-sheltered amount |
|---|
CCA recapture cannot be sheltered by the PRE — only the capital gain.
Property Held in Joint Names
Each co-owner reports their proportionate share of the capital gain and recapture on their own return. If you and a spouse each own 50%, you each report 50% of the gain and 50% of the recapture independently.
Filing Requirements
| Form | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Schedule 3 | Report capital gain on the sale |
| T776 (final year) | Report rental income, CCA recapture, and terminal CCA adjustment |
| T1 General | Capital gain and recapture included in total income |
Bottom Line
Selling a rental property is one of the largest tax events most Canadians will ever face. The capital gain and CCA recapture together can mean a tax bill of $100,000 or more on a property held for 10+ years. Tracking your ACB from day one, understanding the CCA recapture implications, and planning the sale year carefully are the three most important things a rental property owner can do to manage this tax event.
Partial principal residence exemption
If the property you are selling was your principal residence for some of the years you owned it, you may claim a partial principal residence exemption (PRE) to shelter the capital gain from those years. The formula is:
Exempt gain = Capital gain × (1 + years as principal residence) ÷ total years owned
For example, if you bought a home in 2015, lived in it until 2019, then rented it out until you sold in 2026 (11 years total, 4 as principal residence):
- Years as principal residence = 4 (plus the +1 in the formula = 5)
- Total years = 11
- Exempt fraction = 5/11 ≈ 45.5%
The remaining 54.5% of the gain is taxable. CRA requires you to designate the years on Schedule 3 and Form T2091 when filing.
Related Reading
- Rental Income Tax Calculator Canada | Landlord Tax Guide
- Capital Gains on Rental Property Canada: 2026 Guide
- Complete Canadian Tax Guide for Beginners 2026 | How Taxes Work
→ Back to: Complete Canadian Tax Guide