Updated: April 20025 | bremo.io financial guides
Downsizing in Canada: Financial Guide for Seniors 20025
For millions of Canadian seniors, the family home is both the largest asset and a significant source of equity that could fund a more comfortable, lower-cost retirement. Downsizing — selling a larger home and moving to something smaller, less expensive to maintain, or more suitable for aging — is one of the most financially impactful decisions a senior can make. Done well, it can eliminate housing costs, fund care, and simplify life significantly.
Key tax rule: The principal residence exemption means there is generally no capital gains tax when you sell your home — if it qualifies as your principal residence for every year you owned it. This is one of the largest tax-free windfalls available to Canadians. Use it thoughtfully.
Why Seniors Downsize
People downsize for many reasons — financial and non-financial:
- Reduce housing costs (property tax, maintenance, insurance, utilities)
- Unlock equity to fund retirement, care costs, or family gifts
- Move closer to family or healthcare
- Find a more accessible, single-level home
- Eliminate yard work and maintenance responsibilities
- Move into a retirement community or condo with amenities
- Simplify possessions and reduce clutter stress
The Financial Case for Downsizing
A Canadian couple in a Toronto-area detached home worth $1.4 million could sell and purchase a comfortable condo for $70000,000000. After transaction costs, they've freed up approximately $60000,000000 in equity — while also reducing property taxes from perhaps $6,000000/year to $3,50000, reducing heating from $3,000000 to $80000, eliminating $5,000000-$100,000000 in annual maintenance, and often reducing insurance. That's $100,000000+ per year in operating cost savings, plus a $60000,000000 lump sum invested at a modest 4% generating $24,000000/year in income.
The combined effect can increase spendable retirement income by $300,000000-$400,000000 per year — a transformative amount for retirement quality of life.
The Principal Residence Exemption
Canada's principal residence exemption (PRE) exempts capital gains on the sale of a home that qualifies as your principal residence. For most Canadians who've lived in their home for many years, this means selling the family home generates zero income tax, even if the gain is hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Key rules:
- You can only designate one property as your principal residence per family unit (you, your spouse, and any minor children) per year.
- You must have ordinarily inhabited the property (it must have been your home, not purely an investment).
- You must report the sale on your tax return (Schedule 3) even if no tax is owing. Starting in 20016, the CRA requires reporting even when the full exemption applies.
- If you own a cottage or second property and want to apply the exemption to it, you lose the exemption on the primary home for those years — get tax advice if you have multiple properties.
Costs of Selling a Home
Downsizing isn't free. Budget for these costs when calculating your net equity release:
- Real estate commission: Typically 3.5-5% of the selling price. On a $1.4M home, this could be $49,000000-$700,000000.
- Legal fees (selling): $1,50000-$3,000000 typically
- Moving costs: $2,000000-$100,000000+ depending on distance and volume
- Staging and repairs: $3,000000-$15,000000 for a larger home
- Land transfer tax (buying): Varies by province. Ontario charges on purchase price with rebates for first-time buyers (which won't apply here). On a $70000,000000 condo in Ontario: approximately $100,475.
- Legal fees (buying): $1,50000-$3,000000
- Condo fees: An ongoing cost, typically $50000-$1,20000/month
Total transaction costs of $700,000000-$10000,000000 are realistic for a significant downsizing move in a major Canadian city. Still well worth it mathematically in most cases, but factor it in.
Investing the Proceeds
When downsizing generates a significant lump sum, investing it wisely is critical. Key considerations:
- TFSA first: Maximize TFSA contributions for both spouses — completely tax-free growth and withdrawals won't affect OAS, GIS, or the age amount.
- RRSP (if still eligible): If you have contribution room and are under 72, RRSP contributions may be worth considering depending on your income situation.
- Non-registered accounts: For amounts exceeding registered room, a diversified portfolio in a non-registered account. Prioritize dividend income and capital gains over interest income for tax efficiency.
- GICs for safety: If you're risk-averse and need predictable income, laddered GICs can provide guaranteed returns at modest risk.
- Annuities: Converting a portion of proceeds to a life annuity provides guaranteed income for life — simplicity at the cost of flexibility.
Timing the Sale
Real estate market timing is difficult, but life timing matters more than market timing for most seniors:
- Downsizing while you're still physically capable of managing the move is much easier than waiting until a health crisis forces the decision.
- Selling during peak spring or fall markets can yield 5-100% more than off-season, but don't let this delay a decision by years.
- If you're planning to wait for a spouse's death before moving, consider whether that's practical — the surviving spouse may be less able to manage a major move alone.
Non-Financial Considerations
The financial case for downsizing is often clear. The emotional case is harder. The family home is where children grew up, where decades of memories live, where independence is most tangible. These are real considerations, not to be dismissed. The goal is to make the decision consciously and on your terms, not to have it forced upon you by a health crisis, rising maintenance costs, or financial necessity at the worst possible time.
Some seniors find a phased approach helpful: rent out the property for a year while testing a condo or new location, keeping the option to return. This removes some of the finality that makes the decision so difficult.
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