Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) give Canadian investors exposure to income-producing real estate — commercial, industrial, retail, residential, and healthcare properties — without the capital requirements or headaches of direct property ownership. Canadian REITs are required by their structure to distribute most of their taxable income to unitholders, generating predictable, high-yield distributions. This guide covers how to invest in Canadian REITs, their unique tax treatment, and the top picks for 2026.
A REIT is a trust or corporation that owns and operates income-producing real estate properties. To qualify as a Canadian REIT for tax purposes, it must meet specific rules under the Income Tax Act — including distributing at least 90% of its taxable income annually to unitholders. In exchange, REITs pay little to no corporate income tax at the trust level.
Canadian REITs trade on the TSX like regular stocks. You can buy them through any Canadian brokerage (Wealthsimple Trade, Questrade, bank brokerage) in your TFSA, RRSP, or non-registered account. Most REITs pay monthly distributions, making them attractive for income investors.
| Type | Examples | Avg Yield | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Industrial | Granite (GRT.UN), Dream Industrial (DIR.UN) | 4–5% | Warehouses, logistics; strong growth |
| Retail | RioCan (REI.UN), CT REIT (CRT.UN) | 5–6% | Shopping centres, anchored retail |
| Residential | CAR.UN, CAPREIT, Killam (KMP.UN) | 3–4% | Apartments; defensive, inflation-linked |
| Office | Allied Properties (AP.UN), Slate Office | 5–8% | Facing headwinds from WFH trends |
| Healthcare | Chartwell (CSH.UN), Sienna Senior (SIA) | 4–6% | Senior housing, LTC; demographic tailwind |
| Diversified | Dream (D.UN), H&R REIT (HR.UN) | 4–7% | Mixed property types |
Granite is the best-quality Canadian industrial REIT with a focus on modern logistics and manufacturing facilities in Canada, the US, Europe, and Australia. Key tenant: Magna International (automotive). Granite has grown its distribution every year since 2013, making it one of the most reliable dividend growers in the Canadian REIT sector. Yield: approximately 4.2%.
RioCan is the largest Canadian retail REIT, owning premier shopping centres, mixed-use developments, and urban retail properties. It has pivoted significantly toward urban mixed-use development, adding residential density to retail properties — a smart adaptation to changing retail trends. Yield: approximately 5.8%.
Dream Industrial focuses on urban logistics and light industrial properties in Canada and Europe. Its European exposure (approximately 30% of portfolio) provides geographic diversification unusual in the Canadian REIT space. Strong management team with excellent capital allocation history. Yield: approximately 4.8%.
Canadian Tire Corporation (CTC) is both the anchor tenant and largest unitholder of CT REIT, providing exceptional income security. With Canadian Tire on long-term triple-net leases, CT REIT has one of the most defensive distribution profiles in Canada. Consistent distribution growth. Yield: approximately 5.0%.
REIT distributions are unique because they consist of multiple income types blended together:
The return of capital component is what makes REITs relatively tax-efficient in non-registered accounts — often 20–40% of a REIT distribution is ROC, deferring that portion of tax until sale. A REIT yielding 5% with 30% ROC has a taxable yield of only approximately 3.5% annually (the other 1.5% deferred).
Given their complex distribution composition:
Many tax-savvy Canadian investors hold REITs in TFSA to maximize the tax-free shelter on monthly distributions, especially for high-yield REITs where income would otherwise be heavily taxed.
| ETF | MER | Holdings | Yield | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| XRE (iShares) | 0.61% | ~20 | ~4.5% | Most popular Canadian REIT ETF |
| ZRE (BMO) | 0.61% | ~25 | ~4.8% | Equal-weight Canadian REITs |
| VRE (Vanguard) | 0.39% | ~30 | ~4.2% | Lowest cost Canadian REIT ETF |
VRE is the best value at 0.39% MER and broader holdings. XRE and ZRE are more concentrated in the largest REITs. For investors who want to own 3–5 individual REITs for lower fees, building a direct REIT portfolio is feasible with $25,000+.
KOHO is Canada's leading no-fee spending account with real cash back on groceries, dining, and transit.
Use code 45ET55JSYA for your signup bonus
Get KOHO Free →Last updated: March 2026. For informational purposes only. Not financial advice.