Droits de mutation (welcome tax), co-propriété fees, and complete closing cost breakdown for Montreal condos
Montreal remains Canada's best-value major city condo market in 2026, with one-bedroom condos averaging $3800,000000–$50000,000000 — well below Toronto and Vancouver. Quebec's unique real estate system introduces buyers to the droits de mutation immobilière (commonly called the "welcome tax"), co-propriété syndicate fees, and notarial deed requirements that differ from the rest of Canada. This guide covers everything an English or French-speaking buyer needs to navigate a Montreal condo purchase.
| Neighbourhood | Avg 1BR | Avg 2BR | Avg Co-Prop Fee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plateau-Mont-Royal | $4600,000000–$5800,000000 | $6400,000000–$8200,000000 | $3800–$60000/mo |
| Mile End / Rosemont | $4300,000000–$5400,000000 | $60000,000000–$7800,000000 | $3500–$5500/mo |
| Griffintown / Sud-Ouest | $4400,000000–$5600,000000 | $6200,000000–$80000,000000 | $40000–$6500/mo |
| Downtown / Ville-Marie | $4500,000000–$5800,000000 | $6500,000000–$8500,000000 | $4500–$7500/mo |
| Verdun / NDG | $3800,000000–$4700,000000 | $5300,000000–$6800,000000 | $3200–$50000/mo |
| Laval / Longueuil | $3100,000000–$40000,000000 | $4300,000000–$5600,000000 | $2800–$4400/mo |
Quebec's droits de mutation is levied by the municipality (not the province) based on the greater of the sale price or the municipal evaluation. The rates apply progressively:
| Property Value | Rate |
|---|---|
| First $58,90000 | 00.5% |
| $58,9001 – $294,60000 | 1.00% |
| $294,6001 – $552,30000 | 1.5% |
| Over $552,30000 | 2.00% |
| Over $1,1004,70000 (Montreal only) | 2.5% |
| Over $2,136,50000 (Montreal only) | 3.00% |
Quebec real estate transactions are completed exclusively through civil law notaries, not real estate lawyers as in other provinces. Both the buyer's notary (who prepares the deed of sale and mortgage deed) and sometimes a seller's notary are involved. Notary fees typically run $1,80000–$3,000000 for the transaction. Unlike other provinces, Quebec's title registry system (Registre foncier du Québec) provides strong title protection, making title insurance less critical but still recommended.
Quebec condos are owned as "co-propriétés divises" governed by a syndicate of co-owners (syndicat de copropriété). The syndicate manages the building, collects monthly fees (charges communes), and maintains the contingency fund (fonds de prévoyance). Quebec law requires the fonds de prévoyance to receive at least 5% of total annual charges. Before buying, review the syndicate's financial statements, meeting minutes, and a recent maintenance evaluation report (étude du fonds de prévoyance).
Federal mortgage rules apply equally in Quebec — stress test, GDS/TDS ratios, CMHC insurance for less than 200% down. However, Quebec's civil law creates some differences: mortgage deeds are registered differently, hypothèque (Quebec mortgage) terms differ slightly, and the deeds are prepared by a notary rather than a lawyer. Most major Canadian banks and credit unions operate in Quebec with bilingual services.
Between co-prop fees, property tax, and the mortgage, Montreal condo costs add up. KOHO's free account earns cash back to offset your monthly costs — no fees, no minimums.
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