Farm succession is one of the most financially and emotionally complex processes a farm family can navigate. With farmland values in the millions and multiple family members potentially involved, planning a proper transfer requires tax expertise, legal documentation, and careful family communication. This guide covers the key financial and tax aspects of farm succession in Canada.
The average Canadian farmer is over 55, and a significant wave of farm transfers will occur over the next decade as the baby boom generation retires. Finding successors, establishing fair valuations, and structuring the transfer to minimize tax are central challenges. Without planning, estate and capital gains taxes can force liquidation of otherwise viable operations.
The Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE) is one of the most powerful tax tools available to Canadian farm families. For 2025, the exemption for qualified farm property exceeds $1 million per eligible individual. This means a farmer can shelter significant capital gains on the sale or transfer of qualifying farmland, farm buildings, and farm quotas without paying tax.
Specific rules govern farm transfers to children or grandchildren. Section 73 of the Income Tax Act allows qualifying farm property to be transferred to a child at the farm's adjusted cost base (ACB) — deferring capital gains tax until the next generation eventually sells. Rules require the child to be actively involved in farming the property.
The farm rollover allows parents to transfer qualifying farm property to children at any value between ACB and fair market value. This enables families to control how much capital gain is triggered at the time of transfer — using the LCGE efficiently across multiple family members.
Many farms use a corporation structure. Farm shares can qualify for the LCGE if they meet specific criteria (active farming corporation, 90% assets used in farming business). Incorporating before a planned sale can allow multiple family members to hold shares and each claim the LCGE, multiplying the tax shelter.
Farm succession requires a team: an agricultural accountant who understands farm tax rules, a lawyer for estate planning and share structure documents, and often a mediator for family communication. FCC and provincial extension services also offer succession planning resources and workshops. Starting the planning process 5–10 years before the intended transfer date is strongly recommended.
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