Is There an Estate Tax in Canada? 2025 Guide

Canada has no estate tax — but significant taxes still apply at death. Here's exactly what your estate will owe and how to minimize it.

The short answer: Canada has no estate tax and no inheritance tax. Beneficiaries do not pay tax on amounts they receive from an estate. However, that does not mean death is tax-free in Canada. The deceased's estate — or more precisely, their final tax return — is often subject to significant income tax and capital gains tax.

No Estate Tax in Canada

Unlike the United States, which has a federal estate tax on estates over approximately US$13 million, Canada eliminated its estate tax in 1971. There is no federal estate tax, no provincial estate tax, and no inheritance tax paid by beneficiaries in any Canadian province.

Probate fees exist (see our Probate Fees guide) but these are administrative fees, not taxes. They range from zero (Alberta, Quebec notarial wills) to approximately 1.5% in Ontario.

What Taxes Do Apply at Death in Canada?

While there's no estate tax, the following taxes can arise at death:

1. Capital Gains Tax via Deemed Disposition

At death, the Income Tax Act deems all capital property to have been sold at fair market value (FMV) immediately before death. Any accrued capital gains are realized and reported on the deceased's terminal (final) tax return.

Capital gains are included at 50% (the inclusion rate for personal property; note: the 2024 budget proposed increasing the inclusion rate to 2/3 for gains over $250,000, pending legislation). These gains are taxed at the deceased's marginal rate.

2. RRSP/RRIF Inclusion

The full fair market value of RRSPs and RRIFs is included as income on the terminal return (unless rolled over to a surviving spouse or qualifying dependent). For large RRSP balances, this can result in hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional income — taxed at the top marginal rate (~53% in Ontario).

3. Recaptured CCA (Depreciation)

For investment or business properties that have been depreciated, there may be recaptured capital cost allowance (CCA) on the terminal return in addition to capital gains.

Key Exemptions and Rollovers

AssetTax Treatment at Death
Principal residenceExempt — no capital gains (principal residence exemption)
Capital property to spouse/CLPSpousal rollover — deemed disposition at ACB, tax deferred
RRSP/RRIF to spouse/CLPRollover to spouse's RRSP/RRIF — tax deferred
RRSP/RRIF to minor dependent childPartial deferral — can buy annuity to age 18
RRSP/RRIF to financially dependent disabled childCan roll over to RDSP or RRSP of beneficiary
Qualifying small business shares (QSBC)Lifetime capital gains exemption (~$1.25M in 2024)
Qualified farm/fishing propertyLifetime capital gains exemption (~$1.25M in 2024)
Life insuranceTax-free to named beneficiaries
TFSAFMV at death tax-free; post-death growth may be taxable

The Terminal Return

The executor is responsible for filing the deceased's final T1 tax return — called the terminal return — for the year of death. This return reports:

The terminal return is due April 30 of the following year (or 6 months after the date of death if death occurs after October 31).

Multiple returns possible: In the year of death, the executor can sometimes file up to 3 separate returns (terminal return, rights or things return, return for income from a testamentary trust) — each claiming basic personal credits. This can reduce the overall tax burden.

Strategies to Minimize Tax at Death

Spousal Rollover

Transfer all capital property and RRSPs/RRIFs to a surviving spouse or common-law partner. This defers all tax until the surviving spouse's death. The most powerful single strategy for married Canadians.

Maximize Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption

Business owners with qualifying small business corporation shares or qualified farm/fishing property can shelter up to ~$1.25M in capital gains with the lifetime capital gains exemption (LCGE). Proper tax planning before death is essential to maximize this.

Life Insurance

Life insurance proceeds are received tax-free by named beneficiaries. Corporate-owned life insurance can fund tax liabilities arising at a business owner's death without liquidating business assets.

RRSP Meltdown Strategy

Drawing down RRSP/RRIF balances gradually during retirement (rather than leaving a large balance to be taxed at the top rate on the terminal return) can significantly reduce the tax hit at death. Offset withdrawals with income-splitting and credits.

Charitable Giving

A bequest to a registered charity generates a donation tax credit on the terminal return. Donating appreciated securities to charity eliminates capital gains on those securities while generating a charitable donation receipt.

US citizens in Canada: US citizens living in Canada are subject to both Canadian and US tax rules at death — including the potential US estate tax. Cross-border tax planning is essential for US citizens resident in Canada.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do beneficiaries pay tax on inheritance in Canada?

No. Beneficiaries do not pay income tax or capital gains tax on amounts received from an estate. The tax is paid by the deceased's estate on the terminal return — not by the people who receive the inheritance.

Is there an inheritance tax in any Canadian province?

No. As of 2025, no Canadian province has an inheritance tax. All provinces eliminated succession duties decades ago. Probate fees exist but are administrative fees, not inheritance taxes.

Can the estate owe more tax than it has cash to pay?

Yes — this is a real risk, especially when the estate holds illiquid assets like real estate or a private business. Life insurance is often used specifically to provide liquidity to pay the tax bill without forcing a fire sale of assets.

Related guides: Deemed Disposition | RRSP at Death | Life Insurance in Estate Planning | Estate Freeze