2025 Guide

REITs in Canada 2025: Best Canadian REITs

Own real estate without owning property. Canadian REITs offer income, diversification, and TSX liquidity.

What Is a REIT?

A Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) is a publicly traded company that owns, operates, or finances income-producing real estate. Canadian REITs trade on the TSX and allow ordinary investors to gain exposure to commercial real estate — apartments, office towers, industrial warehouses, retail centres, healthcare facilities — without the capital required to buy property directly.

REITs are required to distribute the majority of their taxable income to unitholders as distributions, making them high-yield investments. Most Canadian REITs pay monthly distributions, providing regular income.

How Canadian REITs Work

Most Canadian REITs are structured as trusts (income trusts) rather than corporations. They collect rent from tenants, pay operating expenses, and distribute the remainder to investors. By distributing most income, REITs avoid paying corporate income tax — passing the tax obligation to investors directly.

Types of Canadian REITs

REIT TypePropertiesExamples
ResidentialApartments, condosCanadian Apartment Properties (CAR.UN), Killam Apartment REIT (KMP.UN)
IndustrialWarehouses, logisticsDream Industrial (DIR.UN), Granite REIT (GRT.UN)
RetailMalls, plazasChoice Properties (CHP.UN), SmartCentres (SRU.UN)
OfficeOffice towersAllied Properties (AP.UN), Slate Office (SOT.UN)
HealthcareSenior living, medicalChartwell (CSH.UN), Sienna Senior Living (SIA)
DiversifiedMultiple property typesH&R REIT (HR.UN), Cominar REIT

REIT Distribution Tax Treatment

REIT distributions are taxed differently from stock dividends — and this is important to understand:

REIT Distributions ≠ Canadian Dividends: REIT distributions do not qualify for the dividend tax credit in most cases. Unlike Canadian stock dividends that receive preferential tax treatment, most REIT "other income" distributions are taxed at your full marginal rate. Inside a TFSA or RRSP, this distinction disappears.

Best Place to Hold REITs: RRSP or TFSA

Because the "other income" portion of REIT distributions is taxed at full marginal rates, REITs are best held inside registered accounts:

Industrial REITs Outperformed: The rise of e-commerce has made industrial and logistics REITs among the strongest performers over the past decade. Dream Industrial (DIR.UN) and Granite REIT (GRT.UN) benefited massively from demand for warehouse and distribution space.

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REIT Risks

How to Buy Canadian REITs

Canadian REITs trade on the TSX like stocks. Purchase them through any discount brokerage — Questrade, Wealthsimple Trade, TD Direct Investing, etc. Look for the ".UN" suffix, which indicates a trust unit rather than a corporate share.

Bottom Line

Canadian REITs offer accessible real estate investing with monthly income, TSX liquidity, and no direct property management. They are best held inside TFSAs or RRSPs to minimize the tax drag on distributions. Industrial and residential REITs have shown strong long-term performance — diversifying across sectors reduces single-property-type risk.