Canada's Foreign Buyer Ban: What You Need to Know 2025

Updated March 2025 · bremo.io

Canada's Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act — commonly called the foreign buyer ban — came into force on January 1, 2023, and was extended in 2024. It's one of the most significant housing demand-side measures the federal government has implemented. Here is a complete, plain-language guide to how it works in 2025.

What Is the Foreign Buyer Ban?

The foreign buyer ban prohibits most non-Canadian individuals and foreign corporations from purchasing residential property in Canada. It was introduced as a two-year measure to reduce speculative foreign demand in the housing market, with the goal of making more homes available to Canadians. The ban was extended beyond its original end date and remains in effect as of 2025.

Who Is Prohibited from Buying?

The following are generally prohibited from purchasing residential property in Canada:

Key Exemptions: Who Can Still Buy

The ban has significant exceptions. The following non-Canadians may still purchase residential property:

Temporary Residents with Work Permits

International Students

Protected Persons and Refugees

Individuals who have been determined to be protected persons or convention refugees under Canadian immigration law are exempt.

Spouses of Canadian Citizens or Permanent Residents

Non-Canadian individuals purchasing jointly with a Canadian citizen, permanent resident, or registered Indian are generally exempt from the prohibition.

Diplomatic and Consular Staff

Accredited foreign diplomats and consular officers are exempt.

What Property Types Are Covered?

The ban covers residential property, specifically:

The ban does NOT apply to:

Geographic scope: The ban applies primarily in Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs) and Census Agglomerations (CAs) — essentially all significant urban centres in Canada. Rural areas and remote communities outside these designations are less affected.

Penalties for Violating the Ban

The consequences of violating the foreign buyer ban are significant:

Provincial Foreign Buyer Taxes (Separate from the Federal Ban)

In addition to the federal ban, Ontario and BC have their own foreign buyer taxes that apply even to transactions not caught by the federal prohibition:

ProvinceTaxRateApplies To
OntarioNon-Resident Speculation Tax (NRST)25%Foreign nationals buying in most of Ontario
BCAdditional Property Transfer Tax20%Foreign nationals buying in designated areas of BC

These taxes apply on top of the purchase price. On a $900,000 property in Ontario, the NRST alone is $225,000 — a massive disincentive for non-eligible foreign buyers.

Has the Foreign Buyer Ban Worked?

The evidence is mixed. Non-Canadian buyers represented a relatively small share of overall home purchases in Canada — most estimates put foreign buyers at 3–5% of transactions nationally before the ban, though higher in specific markets like Vancouver's luxury segment. The ban has removed those buyers from the market, but the fundamental supply-demand imbalance driving Canadian prices is driven overwhelmingly by domestic factors: immigration, local demand, insufficient supply, and interest rates.

The ban has been criticized for:

Supporters argue it sends an important signal, removes some speculative demand, and prioritizes Canadian buyers in a competitive market — even if its price impact is modest.

What This Means for Different People

Canadian Citizens and Permanent Residents

No impact. You can buy freely as always. The ban does not affect you.

Temporary Foreign Workers

You may qualify for an exemption if you meet the work permit, tax filing, and full-time employment criteria. Consult a real estate lawyer before proceeding to confirm your eligibility.

International Students

A narrow exemption exists but has strict criteria. Many students will not qualify. If you are planning to become a permanent resident, waiting until you have PR status avoids the complexity entirely.

Non-Residents Considering Investment

Commercial real estate, larger apartment buildings (4+ units), and rural recreational properties may still be accessible. Any residential purchase in a CMA requires careful legal review and likely falls under the prohibition. Consult a Canadian real estate lawyer before making any decisions.

Always get legal advice. The foreign buyer ban regulations are detailed and have been updated since introduction. What applies to your specific situation depends on your immigration status, intended use, property type, and location. A Canadian real estate lawyer can confirm your eligibility before you make an offer.

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