Tax planning is one of the most powerful levers available to Canadian real estate investors. Done well, it can legally reduce your tax burden by tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars over an investing career. This guide covers the key strategies — and the important 2025 changes that affect capital gains.
Under the 1/2 inclusion rate: A $600,000 capital gain results in $300,000 added to income. At a 50% marginal rate, you owe $150,000 in tax. Under 2/3 inclusion: $400,000 added to income = $200,000 in tax. That's a $50,000 difference on a single sale.
CCA (depreciation) allows you to deduct a percentage of the building's value each year as a non-cash expense, reducing taxable rental income. Class 1 (most residential/commercial buildings): 4% declining balance. Class 6 (certain buildings): 10% declining balance.
Many investors leave money on the table by not claiming all eligible deductions:
A common CRA audit issue. Repairs and maintenance (fixing a broken window, repainting) are immediately deductible. Capital improvements (new roof, adding a suite) must be added to your adjusted cost base — not immediately deducted. This increases your ACB, reducing future capital gains, but doesn't provide an immediate deduction.
The LCGE (approximately $1 million for qualified small business corporation shares in 2025) does not apply to rental property. It applies to qualifying small business shares and qualifying farm/fishing property. Real estate investors cannot use the LCGE to shelter real estate gains.
Your principal residence can be sold tax-free under the PRE. One property per family unit can be designated as a principal residence per year. Strategic use of the PRE is a cornerstone of many Canadian investors' exit strategies — living in a property for a period to qualify it for the exemption before selling. CRA scrutiny of PRE claims has increased; ensure genuine occupancy can be documented.
Holding rental properties in a corporation can provide tax benefits:
Putting a lower-income spouse or family member on title or as a partner in a real estate investment can split income between tax brackets. The Tax on Split Income (TOSI) rules restrict income splitting with family members in many situations — consult a tax professional before implementing income-splitting strategies.
You cannot hold a direct ownership interest in rental property inside a RRSP or TFSA. You can hold: REITs (both), Mortgage Investment Corporations (both), and real estate-focused mutual funds or ETFs. For leveraged real estate investment, these accounts don't apply directly.
New residential construction and substantially renovated properties are subject to HST. If you sell new construction or are in the business of renovation and sale, HST registration and remittance may be required. The new housing rebate reduces HST for qualifying purchasers. Rental of residential property is exempt from HST (you don't charge tenants HST on rent). Commercial property rentals may be taxable supplies — different rules apply.
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