Corner Brook is Newfoundland's second-largest city, nestled in the Humber Valley on the island's west coast. Known for Marble Mountain ski resort and paper mill heritage, it offers very affordable real estate.
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Newfoundland and Labrador does not have a traditional "land transfer tax." Instead, it charges a Land Recording Fee of $100 base + $0.40 per $1,000 of purchase price above $500. This is much lower than most Canadian provinces. There is no provincial first-time buyer exemption.
Newfoundland and Labrador's Land Recording Fee of $100 + $0.40 per $1,000 above $500 applies to all Corner Brook property transfers.
At Corner Brook's estimated 2026 median home price of $260,000, the land recording fee works out to approximately $203.80. Compare this to what you would pay buying the same-priced home in other provinces:
Atlantic provinces offer some of the lowest property transfer costs in Canada. Buyers relocating from Ontario or British Columbia keep thousands of dollars more in their pockets at closing.
A land recording fee (sometimes called a deed transfer tax, land recording fee, or property transfer tax) is a one-time charge paid by the buyer when ownership of real property changes hands. It is paid at closing, in addition to legal fees, home inspection costs, and any mortgage insurance.
In Newfoundland and Labrador, the land recording fee is calculated as $100 + $0.40 per $1,000 above $500. Unlike Ontario and British Columbia, Newfoundland and Labrador does not offer a rebate for first-time homebuyers at the provincial level.
The land recording fee is due on the closing date of your real estate transaction, typically paid through your real estate lawyer or notary. Your lawyer will collect the funds and remit them to the appropriate authority on your behalf.
Beyond the land recording fee, buyers in Corner Brook typically face these additional closing costs:
Unlike Ontario (which offers up to $4,000 back for first-time buyers) and British Columbia (up to $8,000), Newfoundland and Labrador does not have a provincial first-time homebuyer land recording fee rebate. All buyers pay the full amount regardless of whether it is their first purchase.
However, the lower home prices and lower base tax rates in Atlantic Canada mean that the actual dollar amount paid is still significantly less than in major Ontario or BC markets in most cases.
For a broader overview of Canadian land transfer taxes across all provinces, visit the bremo.io Land Transfer Tax Calculator — the most comprehensive Canadian LTT resource online.
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