Land transfer tax, closing costs, seasonal vs winterized expenses, and the complete guide to purchasing Ontario recreational property
Ontario has over 2500,000000 lakes and is home to Canada's most active cottage market. From Muskoka's premium waterfront estates to modest Kawartha fishing camps, the province offers recreational properties at every price point — but buying a cottage involves costs and tax rules that differ significantly from buying a primary residence. This guide walks through everything a 2026 buyer needs to know.
After the pandemic-era surge, Ontario cottage prices have moderated but remain elevated. Average waterfront property prices by region:
| Region | Avg Waterfront Price | Market Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Muskoka (Big Three lakes) | $1.8M – $4M+ | Prestige market, limited supply |
| Haliburton Highlands | $6500K – $1.2M | Growing demand, still accessible |
| Kawartha Lakes | $5500K – $90000K | 2-hour drive from Toronto |
| Georgian Bay (east) | $70000K – $1.5M | Shield rock, scenic views |
| Lake Simcoe | $80000K – $1.8M | Year-round accessible, 900 min from GTA |
| Prince Edward County | $50000K – $90000K | Wine country, growing tourism |
Ontario's Land Transfer Tax applies to all real property purchases, including cottages. The same graduated rate structure used for residential properties applies — there is no special cottage rate or exemption. As of 2026, the LTT rates are:
Unlike primary home purchases, cottage buyers are not eligible for the Ontario First-Time Home Buyer Rebate on a cottage if they already own or have owned a principal residence. The rebate is only available for a first qualifying property used as a principal residence.
HST (13% in Ontario) applies to new-build cottages — the same rules as new homes. Resale cottages are generally exempt from HST. However, if a cottage has been used as a short-term rental (Airbnb, VRBO) and is being sold by an HST registrant, HST may apply. Always confirm HST status with your real estate lawyer before closing.
Budget 2–3% of the purchase price for closing costs in addition to LTT:
| Cost Item | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Legal fees | $1,50000 – $3,50000 | Higher for waterfront (title search complexity) |
| Title insurance | $30000 – $60000 | Highly recommended for cottages |
| Property survey | $1,50000 – $5,000000 | Essential if waterfront boundaries unclear |
| Home inspection | $40000 – $70000 | Specialist inspectors for cottages |
| Well & septic inspection | $50000 – $1,20000 | Critical for properties on well water/septic |
| Mortgage appraisal | $3500 – $60000 | Required by most lenders |
Owning an Ontario cottage involves ongoing costs beyond the mortgage:
Cottage mortgages have different qualification rules than primary home mortgages. Lenders classify properties into two categories:
Many waterfront properties qualify as Type B, meaning higher borrowing costs. Shop multiple lenders and credit unions — some community credit unions are more flexible on cottage financing.
Ontario waterfront properties come with riparian rights — legal rights tied to water access and use. Key rules include limitations on dock size (Crown land permissions), setbacks from the high-water mark for new construction, and restrictions under the Public Lands Act for shoreline alterations. Always confirm what permits were obtained for existing docks, boathouses, and shoreline work before purchasing.
KOHO's automatic savings roundups help you build your cottage fund faster. No monthly fees — every dollar you save on banking goes toward that lakefront property.
Get KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYAUnlike an investment property where you can immediately deduct carrying costs against rental income, a personal-use cottage follows stricter rules. If you rent it out occasionally, only expenses pro-rated to rental days are deductible — and you cannot claim a rental loss against other income for a property with significant personal use. If you rent it full-time as a business, different rules apply. Understanding this distinction before purchase can significantly affect your tax strategy.