Selling your home is one of the largest financial transactions most Canadians ever undertake. Understanding the tax rules, costs, and what to do with the proceeds can significantly affect your financial outcome.
If the home you are selling has been your principal residence for every year you owned it, the gain is fully exempt from capital gains tax — one of the most valuable tax shelters in Canada.
To qualify as your principal residence for a given year, the property must be:
You can only designate one property as your principal residence per year (one per family unit). Selling a cottage where you've lived full-time counts; a rental property where you never lived does not.
Since 2016, you must report the sale of your principal residence on your tax return even if the full gain is exempt. Use Schedule 3 and Form T2091. Failure to report can result in the CRA denying the exemption and assessing the full capital gain as taxable income.
If you didn't live in the home every year (e.g., you rented it out for some years, or it was an investment property), only a portion of the gain is exempt. The formula:
Exempted portion = Gain × (1 + number of years designated as principal residence) ÷ total years owned
The "+1" in the formula is a transitional rule that helps bridge gaps when you move.
Capital gains are included in income at 50% for gains up to $250,000 per year (for individuals); gains above $250,000 in a year are included at 66.67% (this change was proposed for 2024 — confirm current rules with a tax advisor at time of sale).
Selling a home involves significant costs that reduce your net proceeds:
If you are selling a newly built or substantially renovated home, HST may apply to the sale price. The buyer typically pays HST; in some market arrangements it is included in the listing price. If you built a new home and lived in it, you may qualify for the GST/HST New Housing Rebate on a portion of the tax paid during construction.
The order of operations after receiving home sale proceeds:
Selling a property that was entirely an investment (never your principal residence) triggers a full capital gain. Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) previously claimed is "recaptured" as income. Non-residents must comply with Section 116 of the Income Tax Act, which requires CRA clearance certificates before sale proceeds can be released.
If you have a capital gain that is taxable (partial principal residence exemption), consider timing the sale to fall in a lower-income year. Also, capital gains can be offset against capital losses from other sources. A tax advisor can model the optimal year to sell.
Many Canadian seniors sell a large family home and downsize. The freed-up equity can be significant. Key decisions: purchase or rent next? Move to a condo, retirement community, or different region? TFSA and RRSP maximization, GIC ladders, and annuity products can all be used to generate reliable income from freed home equity.
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