Alberta charges $0 provincial land transfer tax — a major financial win for Peace Country buyers
When buying a home in Grande Prairie, you pay zero provincial land transfer tax. Alberta eliminated its land transfer tax in 1977 and has never reinstated it. This gives Grande Prairie buyers a significant financial advantage over buyers in provinces that still charge LTT.
The only registration-related cost is the Alberta Land Title Transfer Registration Fee — a small administrative charge (approximately $440 on a $360,000 home) paid to the provincial land titles office to register the title transfer. This is a service fee, not a tax.
| Home Price | Alberta (fee only) | Ontario LTT | Savings vs Ontario |
|---|---|---|---|
| $360,000 (median) | ~$440 | ~$4,600 | ~$4,160 |
| $450,000 | ~$460 | ~$5,975 | ~$5,515 |
| $550,000 | ~$490 | ~$7,725 | ~$7,235 |
| $700,000 | ~$520 | ~$10,475 | ~$9,955 |
Grande Prairie's oil patch economy produces high household incomes, allowing buyers to purchase premium homes in the $400K–$700K range. At these prices, the savings from Alberta's zero LTT are substantial — equivalent to furnishing your entire home or making a year of additional mortgage prepayments.
Compare this to buying a similar quality home in Ontario's oil/energy cities (like Sarnia or Fort Saskatchewan's comparable markets) where LTT would add $5,000–$100+ to closing costs.
When buying in Grande Prairie, your typical closing costs include:
Compare this to Ontario, where LTT alone would add $4,600–$100+ to these costs.
For the complete Grande Prairie buying guide, visit our Grande Prairie home buying guide. For Alberta mortgage rates: bremo.io/best-banks-alberta. Full Alberta LTT guide: bremo.io/alberta-land-transfer-tax.
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