Understanding GST and HST on home renovations in Canada can save you money and prevent legal headaches. Whether you're hiring a contractor, buying materials at a hardware store, or undertaking a substantial renovation that qualifies for a rebate, knowing the rules helps you budget accurately and comply with tax law.
Yes — GST or HST applies to most home renovation services and materials in Canada. When you hire a contractor to renovate your home, their labour and materials are subject to GST/HST. When you buy building materials at a hardware store, you pay GST/HST at the point of sale.
There are no general exemptions for home renovation services for personal residences. This is different from some other countries where renovation work on primary residences carries reduced tax rates — in Canada, the full GST/HST rate applies.
Any contractor registered for GST/HST (which is required for businesses with annual revenues over $30,000) must charge and remit GST/HST on their services. This applies to:
The contractor's invoice should clearly show the GST/HST amount charged and their GST/HST registration number. If a contractor cannot provide a registration number, they may be unregistered (under the $30,000 threshold) — or, more concerning, may be committing tax fraud.
When you purchase building materials, fixtures, appliances, and tools at retail stores (Home Depot, Rona, local suppliers), you pay GST/HST at the standard provincial rate. There is no exemption for materials purchased for personal home renovation.
If you are acting as your own general contractor (buying materials and hiring subcontractors separately), you pay GST/HST on all materials purchased and on all subcontractor invoices.
The most significant GST/HST relief available to Canadian homeowners is the New Housing Rebate, which applies in two situations:
When buying a newly built home, the purchase price includes GST/HST. The New Housing Rebate provides a partial refund:
If you undertake a "substantial renovation" of an existing home — defined by CRA as replacing 90% or more of the interior of the building (excluding foundation, external walls, roof, and floors) — you may qualify for the New Housing Rebate on the GST/HST paid on the renovation.
This is a high bar — a kitchen and bathroom update does not qualify. It applies to near-complete gut renovations where the home is essentially rebuilt. The same purchase price thresholds apply: based on fair market value after renovation under $350,000 for full rebate, phasing out to $450,000.
If you build your own home (acting as your own general contractor on land you own), you may qualify for the Owner-Built Homes New Housing Rebate. The same 36%/phase-out rules apply, based on the fair market value of the completed home. You must apply within two years of the home being first occupied.
In HST provinces (Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, PEI), additional provincial HST rebates may apply on top of the federal rebate:
Quebec does not participate in the HST framework. Quebec charges the federal GST (5%) plus its own Quebec Sales Tax (QST) at 9.975% — effectively a combined rate of 14.975% on taxable renovation services and materials in Quebec. The federal New Housing Rebate applies in Quebec; Quebec also has its own QST new housing rebate (TVQ rebate) administered by Revenu Québec.
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