Canada's deemed disposition rules mean your estate is treated as if you sold everything at death. Here's what that means for your tax bill.
Deemed disposition is the mechanism Canada uses instead of an estate tax. When you die, the Income Tax Act treats you as having sold all your capital property at fair market value immediately before death. Any accrued capital gains are triggered and taxed on your final (terminal) tax return — even though nothing was actually sold.
Under Section 70(5) of the Income Tax Act, a taxpayer is deemed to have disposed of all capital property immediately before death for proceeds equal to fair market value (FMV). The difference between FMV and the adjusted cost base (ACB) is a capital gain (or loss) reported on the terminal return.
This applies to:
It does NOT apply to (these have separate rules):
For individuals, capital gains have historically been included at 50% — meaning only half the gain is taxable. The 2024 federal budget proposed increasing the inclusion rate to 2/3 for capital gains over $250,000 annually (for individuals). As of early 2025, this remains subject to legislative development. Consult a tax professional for the current rate.
The most powerful tool to defer deemed disposition is the spousal rollover under Section 70(6). When capital property passes to a surviving spouse or common-law partner (either directly or through a spousal trust), deemed disposition occurs at the property's ACB — not FMV. This means:
The spousal rollover applies automatically unless the deceased's will or tax return specifically elects otherwise. It requires the property to actually pass to the spouse — either outright or to a qualifying spousal trust.
Your principal residence is exempt from deemed disposition capital gains. If the home qualifies as your principal residence for every year you owned it, the entire gain is sheltered. Only one property per family unit can be designated as a principal residence per year.
Certain types of capital property qualify for the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption:
This exemption can shelter substantial capital gains at death. Proper corporate structure and tax planning are required to ensure shares qualify for the LCGE.
If the deceased has capital losses on deemed disposition, these can offset capital gains on the terminal return. Any net capital losses that cannot be used can be carried back 3 years or, to a limited extent, treated as terminal losses.
| Strategy | How It Helps |
|---|---|
| Spousal rollover | Defers all capital gains to surviving spouse's death |
| Principal residence designation | Shelters home from capital gains entirely |
| LCGE planning for business owners | Shelters up to ~$1.25M in business share gains |
| Life insurance | Provides tax-free liquidity to pay capital gains tax |
| Charitable bequests | Donating appreciated property eliminates capital gains on donated portion |
| Estate freeze | Locks in current FMV for capital gains; future growth taxed in next generation |
| Gradual realization | Harvest capital gains during life to reduce terminal return exposure |
The executor files the deceased's terminal T1 return for the period from January 1 to date of death. Deemed disposition gains are reported on Schedule 3 (capital gains). The return is due April 30 of the year following death (or 6 months after death if death occurs after October 31).
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Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYARelated guides: Estate Tax in Canada | Estate Freeze | Life Insurance in Estate Planning | Gifting Before Death