What you need to know about giving away assets during your lifetime in Canada — tax rules, attribution, capital gains, and smart strategies.
Many Canadians consider giving away money or assets before death — to help family members now, reduce their estate, minimize probate fees, or simply enjoy seeing the benefit of their generosity while still alive. Canada has no gift tax, but that doesn't mean gifting is tax-free. The rules depend heavily on what you're giving and to whom.
No. Canada does not have a gift tax. You can give cash, investments, real estate, or other property to anyone at any time without the recipient paying tax on the gift itself. However, the donor (the person giving) may have tax consequences — particularly when gifting appreciated capital property.
Gifting cash is tax-free for both the donor and recipient. No income tax, no capital gains, no gift tax. The recipient can use the money however they wish. However, if the cash is then invested and generates income, the attribution rules (below) may apply.
When you give away capital property — stocks, mutual funds, a rental property, a cottage — it is treated as a deemed disposition at fair market value. You are considered to have sold it at FMV on the date of the gift. Any accrued capital gain is reported on your tax return for that year.
Example: You gift shares with an ACB of $100 and current FMV of $50,000 to your adult child. You have a $40,000 capital gain in the year of the gift — taxable at your marginal rate. Your child inherits the shares at a cost base of $50,000 (their new ACB).
Transfers to a spouse or CLP are deemed to occur at ACB (not FMV) — so no capital gains are triggered on the transfer. However, attribution rules mean any income or capital gains earned on the gifted property are attributed back to you (the donor) until the relationship ends or the property is sold.
Attribution rules prevent income splitting through gifts to spouses and minor children:
| Gift To | Attribution of Income | Attribution of Capital Gains |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse/CLP | Attributed back to you | Attributed back to you |
| Minor child (under 18) | Attributed back to you | NOT attributed (taxed in child's hands) |
| Adult child (18+) | Not attributed | Not attributed |
| Other adult family member | Not attributed | Not attributed |
Giving your principal residence to a family member triggers a deemed disposition. If the home qualifies for the full principal residence exemption, there may be no capital gains. However:
Gifting a home is complex — get legal and tax advice before proceeding.
If you gift publicly traded securities directly to a registered charity (rather than selling them and donating cash), the capital gains on those securities are eliminated entirely — and you receive a donation receipt for the full FMV. This is one of the most tax-efficient forms of charitable giving in Canada.
Part of good estate planning is keeping your financial accounts simple. KOHO's no-fee account is easy to manage and easy to include in your estate plan. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus.
Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYANo. Canada has no annual gift exclusion or lifetime gift limit like the US. You can give any amount to anyone. The tax consequences depend on what you give (cash vs. capital property) and to whom (spouse, minor child, adult).
Canada has no estate tax, so there's no "estate tax" to reduce. Gifting can reduce probate fees (Ontario, BC) by removing assets from your estate. It can also trigger capital gains in the year of the gift, so the tax may be paid sooner rather than at death — not necessarily a saving.
Yes. If a gift appears to have been made under undue influence, or if it leaves dependants without adequate support, the gift can potentially be challenged in court. Large gifts made close to death may attract scrutiny.
Related guides: Deemed Disposition | Probate Fees | Joint Tenancy vs Tenants in Common | Estate Planning Guide