Downsizing Your Home as a Senior in Canada — 2026 Guide

For many Canadian seniors, the family home is their single largest asset — often worth $600,000 to $1.5 million or more in major markets. Deciding whether to sell, downsize, or stay put is one of the most financially significant retirement decisions you can make. This guide breaks down the real financial math of downsizing in 2026.

The core question: If you sell a $1M home and move to a $500K condo, you free up $500K (minus transaction costs). Invested at 4%, that's $20,000/year in additional income. But emotional, lifestyle, and tax factors all matter too.

The Financial Case for Downsizing

The principal residence exemption (PRE) means selling your family home is completely tax-free in Canada — no capital gains tax on your primary residence. This makes downsizing an incredibly powerful wealth transfer tool.

Freed-up equity from downsizing can be:

The Full Cost of Downsizing — Don't Forget These

CostTypical Range
Real estate agent commissions (seller side)3–5% of sale price
Land Transfer Tax (buyer side)0.5–2.5%+ (varies by province)
Legal fees$1,500–$3,000
Moving costs$3,000–$15,000
Renovations/staging for sale$5,000–$30,000
New condo/home furnishings$100–$50,000
Condo maintenance fees (ongoing)$400–$1,200/month

Downsizing in Different Canadian Markets

Toronto / GTA

Selling a $1.2M semi-detached in Toronto and buying a $750K condo frees approximately $400K after costs (agent fees ~$60K, LTT ~$15K, legal/moving ~$20K). The monthly savings on property taxes and maintenance are real but condo fees can partially offset this.

Vancouver

Similar math, but BC PTT (Property Transfer Tax) adds costs for the purchase. First-time buyers get exemptions but downsizers do not. Budget for PTT of 1–3%+ on the new property.

Mid-Size Cities (Ottawa, Calgary, Halifax)

The downsizing gap is often smaller — say $200–$400K — but the freed capital is still meaningful. Homes in these markets have also appreciated significantly, making downsizing increasingly attractive.

Where to Live After Downsizing

Condominium

Condos offer reduced maintenance responsibilities but come with monthly condo fees ($400–$1,500+) and special assessments. Research the condo corporation's financial health before buying. Request the status certificate and reserve fund study.

Smaller House / Bungalow

Easier mobility (single floor), reduced yard work, but still all the maintenance responsibilities of homeownership. Popular choice for active seniors in their 60s.

Adult Lifestyle Community

Age-restricted (55+) communities offer social programs, maintenance-free living, and accessible design. Often freehold townhomes. Popular in BC's Okanagan, Ontario cottage country, and suburban areas.

Renting

Selling and renting frees 100% of your home equity for investment. Particularly powerful in high-cost cities where renting can be cheaper than condo fees + property taxes. Provides flexibility to move as health needs change.

Tax Implications of Downsizing

The sale itself is tax-free (principal residence exemption). However, investing the freed capital creates taxable income. Interest income from GICs is fully taxable. TFSA is the ideal first destination for proceeds (up to cumulative room). After TFSA, consider a mix of dividend stocks (preferential tax treatment) and GICs.

Placing proceeds in your TFSA does not affect OAS, GIS eligibility, or the OAS clawback — because TFSA withdrawals are tax-free and not counted as income.

Emotional and Practical Considerations

The family home carries decades of memories. Many seniors regret downsizing when they do it too soon, particularly if they move away from established social networks. The ideal time is when:

Don't downsize purely for financial reasons if you're not emotionally ready — the stress of an unwanted move can negatively impact health and wellbeing.

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