Property taxes are a significant ongoing cost of homeownership and vary considerably across Northern Ontario municipalities. Understanding what you'll pay in property tax — and how it differs from city to city — is important for comparing total homeownership costs across the region.
Property tax in Ontario is calculated as: Assessed Value × Tax Rate = Annual Tax
The Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC) assesses all Ontario properties. Assessments reflect market value at the last reassessment date (currently phased in from 2016 values — note that MPAC reassessments have been deferred; check current status). The municipality then sets a tax rate (mill rate) to fund local services.
Northern Ontario municipalities tend to have higher tax rates than Southern Ontario cities — reflecting smaller tax bases spread over large geographic areas with expensive infrastructure to maintain. However, lower home prices mean total tax bills are often comparable or lower in absolute dollar terms.
| Municipality | Approx. Tax Rate (residential) | Tax on $300K Home | Tax on $400K Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thunder Bay | ~1.6% | ~$4,800 | ~$6,400 |
| Greater Sudbury | ~1.4% | ~$4,200 | ~$5,600 |
| Timmins | ~1.7% | ~$5,100 | ~$6,800 |
| North Bay | ~1.5% | ~$4,500 | ~$6,000 |
| Sault Ste. Marie | ~1.5% | ~$4,500 | ~$6,000 |
| Cochrane | ~1.8% | ~$5,400 | ~$7,200 |
| Kapuskasing | ~1.9% | ~$5,700 | ~$7,600 |
| Kirkland Lake | ~2.0% | ~$6,000 | ~$8,000 |
Rates are approximate and change annually. Verify with each municipality for current rates.
Southern Ontario municipalities like Toronto (~0.63%), Mississauga (~0.8%), and Ottawa (~1.0%) have much lower tax rates — but on dramatically higher assessed values. Actual tax bills end up similar or higher than in Northern Ontario because the rate is applied to a much larger base.
| City | Tax Rate | Avg. Home Value | Typical Annual Tax Bill |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | ~0.63% | ~$1,100,000 | ~$6,930 |
| Ottawa | ~1.0% | ~$580,000 | ~$5,800 |
| Sudbury | ~1.4% | ~$390,000 | ~$5,460 |
| Thunder Bay | ~1.6% | ~$310,000 | ~$4,960 |
| Timmins | ~1.7% | ~$260,000 | ~$4,420 |
Despite higher rates, Northern Ontario property tax bills in absolute dollar terms are often lower than Southern Ontario — because lower home values more than offset the higher rate.
Property taxes fund municipal services including:
Northern municipalities face particular challenges: vast geographic areas with sparse population, high winter maintenance costs, and aging infrastructure without the tax base density of Southern Ontario cities.
The Ontario Energy and Property Tax Credit (OEPTC) — part of the Trillium Benefit — provides relief for low to moderate income earners paying property tax. For 2025, the maximum credit is approximately $1,194 for non-seniors and $1,360 for seniors. Northern Ontario residents receive a higher base amount due to the Northern Ontario Energy Credit being bundled into the Trillium Benefit calculation.
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