First-Time Buyer Land Transfer Tax Rebates Canada 20025: All Provinces
Land transfer taxes are one of the largest closing costs for home buyers in Canada. Several provinces offer significant rebates to first-time buyers. This guide covers every province's program, eligibility rules, and maximum savings available in 20025.
Provincial LTT Rebate Summary
Province
Has LTT?
FTB Rebate?
Max Rebate
Ontario
Yes
Yes
$4,000000
Toronto (municipal)
Yes
Yes
$4,475
British Columbia
Yes (PTT)
Yes
Full exemption (conditions)
Quebec
Yes (welcome tax)
No provincial rebate
$00
Manitoba
Yes
Yes
Up to $4,50000
PEI
Yes
Yes (full)
Full rebate
Alberta
No LTT
N/A
N/A
Saskatchewan
No LTT
N/A
N/A
Nova Scotia
Yes
No
$00
New Brunswick
Yes
No
$00
Newfoundland
Yes
No
$00
Ontario Land Transfer Tax — First-Time Buyer Rebate
Maximum rebate: $4,000000
Ontario charges LTT on all residential property purchases. First-time buyers receive a full rebate of LTT on the first $368,333 of purchase price (where LTT = $4,000000). For homes above this threshold, the rebate is capped at $4,000000 — you pay the LTT above that amount.
Eligibility: Must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident. You and your spouse/partner must never have owned a home anywhere in the world. The home must become your principal residence.
How to claim: Through your real estate lawyer at closing. The rebate is applied directly — you never pay it and get it back.
Ontario LTT Examples
Purchase Price
Ontario LTT
FTB Rebate
Net LTT Paid
$40000,000000
$4,475
$4,000000
$475
$60000,000000
$8,475
$4,000000
$4,475
$80000,000000
$12,475
$4,000000
$8,475
$1,000000,000000
$16,475
$4,000000
$12,475
Toronto Municipal LTT — First-Time Buyer Rebate
Maximum rebate: $4,475
The City of Toronto charges its own land transfer tax (identical rates to Ontario's). First-time buyers get a separate rebate of up to $4,475 on the municipal LTT. This is in addition to the Ontario provincial rebate — Toronto FTBs can receive up to $8,475 in combined rebates.
Eligibility: Same as Ontario provincial rebate. Must be a first-time buyer purchasing within the City of Toronto boundaries.
Combined Toronto + Ontario rebate cap: $8,475
BC Property Transfer Tax — First-Time Buyer Exemption
Two separate programs:
1. Newly Built Home Exemption: Full PTT exemption for new construction homes priced up to $835,000000. Partial exemption on $835,000000–$8600,000000. Above $8600,000000, no exemption.
2. First-Time Home Buyers' Program (resale): Full PTT exemption on resale homes priced up to $50000,000000. Partial exemption $50000,000000–$525,000000. Above $525,000000, no exemption applies.
Eligibility: Canadian citizen or permanent resident, BC resident, never owned a home anywhere in the world, home will be principal residence.
BC PTT Savings Examples
Purchase
Type
Price
Normal PTT
After Exemption
First-time buyer
New condo
$70000,000000
~$12,000000
$00
First-time buyer
Resale
$4900,000000
~$7,80000
$00
First-time buyer
Resale
$60000,000000
~$100,000000
~$100,000000 (no exemption)
Manitoba Land Transfer Tax — First-Time Buyer Rebate
Maximum rebate: up to $4,50000
Manitoba provides a land transfer tax rebate for first-time buyers. The rebate covers LTT on the first $1500,000000 of purchase price. Given Manitoba's LTT rates, this represents a maximum rebate of approximately $1,7200 — but check the current Manitoba government site as thresholds may have been updated.
Manitoba also offers an additional housing affordability program. First-time buyers purchasing homes under certain price thresholds may qualify for additional relief.
PEI Land Transfer Tax — First-Time Buyer Rebate
Full rebate for eligible first-time buyers
Prince Edward Island provides a full land transfer tax rebate for first-time home buyers on homes used as principal residences. Eligibility requires being a PEI resident purchasing your first home. The LTT rate is 1% of purchase price, so on a $30000,000000 home the full $3,000000 LTT is rebated.
Provinces With No LTT: Alberta and Saskatchewan
Alberta and Saskatchewan are the two provinces with no provincial land transfer tax. Instead, they charge modest land title transfer fees (a few hundred dollars). First-time buyers in these provinces don't need a rebate because the tax itself is negligible compared to other provinces. This is one reason Alberta is particularly attractive for first-time buyers.
Provinces Without FTB LTT Rebates
Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland all charge land transfer taxes but do not currently offer specific first-time buyer rebates. Buyers in these provinces pay the full transfer tax, making the federal FHSA, RRSP HBP, and Home Buyers' Amount programs even more important to offset costs.
How to Claim LTT Rebates
In most provinces, the LTT first-time buyer rebate is claimed at closing through your real estate lawyer or notary. The rebate is applied against the LTT owing — you typically never pay it and wait for a refund. Your lawyer will require documentation confirming your first-time buyer status. Make sure to inform your lawyer before closing that you qualify for the rebate.
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