Assignment sales, HST rules, deposit structures, and how to evaluate pre-con condos and homes as Canadian investments
Pre-construction investing — buying a property before it's built by paying a deposit and signing a purchase agreement — was one of the dominant investment strategies in Toronto, Vancouver, and Calgary through the 2010s. The model was simple: buy early at today's price, wait 3–5 years for the building to complete, and either sell via assignment or close and rent at the now-higher market value. The landscape has shifted significantly in 2024–2026. This guide explains what still works and what doesn't.
When a developer launches a new condo or home project, they sell units before construction begins. Buyers pay a deposit (typically 15–25% of the purchase price paid in installments over 12–24 months) and receive a purchase agreement promising delivery on a future date — usually 3–5 years out. During construction, you're not a property owner; you hold a contract.
The potential profit comes from appreciation during the construction period. If you buy a unit for $700,000 today and the building completes in 4 years when market value has risen to $850,000, you've made $150,000 on a $140,000–$175,000 deposit outlay — a compelling return, on paper.
| Milestone | Typical Deposit % | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| First deposit | 5% | At signing |
| Second deposit | 5% | 30–90 days after signing |
| Third deposit | 5% | 90–180 days |
| Fourth deposit | 5–10% | On occupancy/closing |
| Total deposit | 20–25% | Spread over 1–2 years |
New construction properties in Canada are subject to HST (13% in Ontario; 5% GST + provincial component elsewhere). For investors, this creates a significant obligation that surprises many first-time pre-con buyers.
If you're buying a new build to rent it out long-term, you can claim the New Residential Rental Property Rebate, which refunds a portion of the HST. In Ontario, the rebate is up to $24,000 on the provincial component + up to $6,300 federal = ~$30,000 total. To qualify, you must rent the unit as a long-term residential tenancy and apply for the rebate within 2 years of closing.
An assignment sale is when you sell your purchase agreement (your "contract right" to buy the unit) to another buyer before the building closes. This is a popular exit strategy for pre-con investors who want to capture appreciation without actually closing the purchase.
Assignment sale tax treatment: the CRA treats profits on assignment sales as business income (not capital gains), taxed at your full marginal rate. HST also applies to assignments if you're considered to be in the business of flipping. Assignment sales require developer consent (check your contract) and typically trigger a fee to the developer.
A sound pre-construction analysis compares the locked-in purchase price against projected completion-date value and rental income. Key inputs to model:
| Market | Pre-Con Opportunity | Risk Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calgary, AB | Moderate | Medium-Low | No LTT, rising population |
| Ottawa, ON | Moderate | Medium | Government employment stability |
| Halifax, NS | Good | Medium-Low | Supply shortage, strong demand |
| Toronto, ON | Cautious | High | Oversupply risk; select submarkets only |
| Vancouver, BC | Cautious | High | High HST exposure, regulatory risk |
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