The biggest one-time closing cost in Toronto. Calculate both your Ontario provincial LTT and your Toronto Municipal LTT (MLTT), with first-time buyer rebates and the new luxury surtax for homes over $3M.
Same brackets apply across Ontario:
Only applies inside the City of Toronto boundaries (not Mississauga, Vaughan, Markham, etc.):
To qualify you must be at least 18, a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, have never owned a home anywhere in the world (and neither has your spouse, while you were married), and occupy the home as your principal residence within nine months of closing.
If your property is inside the City of Toronto boundaries — yes, you pay both. The Toronto MLTT is on top of the Ontario LTT. If you're buying in Mississauga, Vaughan, Markham, Richmond Hill, Oakville, Brampton, etc., you only pay the Ontario LTT.
At closing. Your real estate lawyer collects it and remits to the province (and the city, in Toronto). It's not financeable — you need to have the cash available on closing day, along with the balance of your down payment and other closing costs.
You must be at least 18, a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, have never owned a home anywhere in the world (and your spouse must not have owned one while you were married), and occupy the home as your principal residence within 9 months. If you only partially qualify (e.g. your spouse owned one), you get a proportional rebate.
Effective January 2024, Toronto introduced higher MLTT brackets for properties over $3M, scaling up to 7.5% for transactions over $20M. The change was a direct response to the city's budget shortfall and targeted high-end residential transactions.
No — LTT on a principal residence is not deductible. It does, however, get added to your adjusted cost base, which could reduce future capital gains if the property isn't your principal residence.
LTT is the biggest line, but legal, title insurance, adjustments, and CMHC all stack on top. I'll walk you through a full closing-cost estimate for your specific purchase. Free, 15 minutes.