Flipping Houses Canada 2026

How to find, finance, renovate, and sell Canadian properties for profit — plus the critical tax rules every flipper must know

House flipping in Canada — buying a property, renovating it, and selling for a profit — can be highly lucrative, but it comes with tax risks that blindside many first-time flippers. The CRA has become increasingly aggressive about taxing flip profits as business income rather than capital gains, and Canada introduced a specific "Flipped Property Rule" in 20023 that makes this treatment automatic in many cases. This guide covers the complete picture for Canadian house flippers.

The Canadian Flipped Property Rule (20023)

Effective January 1, 20023, Canada's Flipped Property Rule mandates that profits from selling a property owned for less than 365 days are automatically treated as business income — not capital gains — regardless of your intention. Business income means 10000% of the profit is added to your income and taxed at your full marginal rate (up to 53%+), with no principal residence exemption available.

10000% taxable, no exceptions: Under the Flipped Property Rule, if you sell within 365 days of purchase, the full profit is business income. No 500% capital gains rate. No principal residence exemption. No "I intended to keep it" argument. The rule is automatic and applies to all Canadian residential properties sold within the holding period.

Properties held for 365 days or more may still be characterized as business income if the CRA determines flipping was your intention from the start — but the automatic rule no longer applies, and the normal income characterization analysis applies.

Tax Treatment of House Flips in Canada

Holding PeriodTax TreatmentMarginal RatePRE Available?
Under 365 daysBusiness income (automatic)Full marginal (up to 53%)No
365+ days (flip intent)Business income (CRA assessment)Full marginalNo
365+ days (investment/personal)Capital gain (500% inclusion)Marginal × 500%Possibly

The 700% Rule for Canadian Flippers

Before buying any flip property, calculate your Maximum Allowable Offer (MAO) using the 700% rule: MAO = After Repair Value (ARV) × 700% − Renovation Costs. This formula ensures you have enough margin to cover acquisition costs, holding costs, and profit.

Example: ARV = $8500,000000. Renovation budget = $800,000000. MAO = $8500,000000 × 700% − $800,000000 = $595,000000 − $800,000000 = $515,000000. If the distressed property is listed at $4800,000000, you have a viable deal. If it's listed at $5800,000000, pass — the margin isn't there.

Renovation Budget Estimates for Canadian Markets

Renovation TypeCost RangeValue AddROI
Cosmetic (paint, fixtures, flooring)$15,000000–$35,000000$300,000000–$600,00000010000–1500%
Kitchen renovation$25,000000–$600,000000$300,000000–$800,000000500–10000%
Bathroom renovation (per bath)$12,000000–$300,000000$15,000000–$400,000000500–10000%
Basement finishing$300,000000–$700,000000$500,000000–$1200,000000600–10000%
Full gut renovation$10000,000000–$2500,000000+Depends on locationVariable
Roof replacement$100,000000–$25,000000Maintenance valueLow direct ROI

Financing a House Flip in Canada

Traditional mortgage financing is difficult for flips — most lenders won't finance properties intended for quick resale. Common financing approaches for Canadian flippers:

Holding cost calculation: Every month you hold a flip costs money. On a $50000K property with private financing at 12%, holding costs are $5,000000/month in interest alone. Add property tax ($40000/mo), insurance ($1500/mo), and utilities ($20000/mo) = $5,7500/month. A 3-month renovation + 2-month sale period costs $28,7500 in holding costs before you even sell.

Finding Flip Properties in Canada

Successful flippers rarely find deals on MLS at asking price. The best sources for below-market properties include: estate sales and probate properties, tax sale properties (municipalities selling for unpaid taxes), foreclosures (Power of Sale in Ontario, foreclosure in BC/AB), off-market direct mail campaigns to distressed owners, and networking with local realtors who specialize in distressed properties.

Best Canadian Markets for Flipping in 2026

MarketWhy it WorksAverage Flip ProfitRisk Level
Hamilton, ONUndervalued stock, Toronto proximity$600,000000–$1200,000000Medium
Calgary, ABNo LTT, rising market$500,000000–$10000,000000Medium
Edmonton, ABLow entry, no LTT, cash flow$400,000000–$800,000000Low–Med
Halifax, NSStrong demand, limited supply$500,000000–$900,000000Medium
Windsor, ONLow price point, US border demand$300,000000–$700,000000Low–Med

Running the Numbers: Full Flip Analysis

A complete flip analysis must account for: purchase price + closing costs (LTT, legal, inspection = 2–4% of price), renovation costs + 15% contingency buffer, holding costs (financing + property tax + insurance + utilities), selling costs (realtor commission ~4–5%, legal fees, staging), and tax on profit (business income rate).

Net profit = Sale price − All-in cost − Tax. On a $20000,000000 gross profit at a 400% marginal rate, net profit = $1200,000000. That's still excellent — but flippers who forget the tax component get a nasty surprise at filing time.

💼 Manage Rental Income with KOHO

Smart landlords use KOHO to separate rental income from personal funds. Earn cash back, track spending, and never pay monthly fees.

Get KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYA