TL;DR: 5 Things to Know About Capital Gains Tax
- Principal Residence Exemption: Most Canadian homeowners pay zero capital gains tax when they sell their primary home. The entire gain is tax-free.
- Investment Properties Are Different: Rental properties, vacation homes, and cottages don’t qualify for the exemption. You’ll owe tax on the gain when you sell.
- 50% Inclusion Rate: Only half of your capital gain is taxable income. The proposed increase to 66.67% was cancelled, so the current rate holds.
- Receipts Matter: Every dollar you spent on major home improvements reduces your taxable gain. Keep those receipts.
- Reporting Is Required: You must report the sale of your principal residence on your tax return, even though no tax is owed. Late filing can cost up to ,000 in penalties.
In This Article:
- What Is Capital Gains Tax?
- The Principal Residence Exemption (Your Best Friend)
- When DO You Pay Capital Gains Tax on a Home Sale?
- How to Calculate Capital Gains Tax on a Home Sale
- Special Situations and Exemptions
- How to Minimise or Avoid Capital Gains Tax (Legally)
- What About Brantford and Brant County Home Prices?
- Frequently Asked Questions
Here’s some good news if you’re selling your home in Brantford or anywhere else in Canada. Most homeowners won’t owe a cent in capital gains tax when they sell their primary residence.
But, and this is an important but, there are situations where capital gains tax does apply. If you’ve ever rented out your home, own an investment property, or have a cottage you’re thinking of selling, understanding these rules could save you thousands of dollars.
This guide breaks down everything you need to know about capital gains tax on home sales in Canada. We’ll explain the principal residence exemption (your tax-free ticket), when you actually do pay capital gains tax, how to calculate it, and strategies to minimise what you owe. Whether you’re a Brantford homeowner planning to sell your primary residence or an investor with rental properties, this information matters.
What Is Capital Gains Tax?
Capital gains tax applies when you sell an asset for more than you paid for it. The profit you make is called a capital gain, and in Canada, you pay tax on a portion of that gain.
Here’s a simple example. You bought your home for $400,000 and sold it for $650,000. Your capital gain is $250,000. But you don’t pay tax on the entire gain. Currently, only 50% of capital gains are included in your taxable income.
So in this example, $125,000 (50% of $250,000) would be added to your income for that year. Then you pay tax on that amount at your marginal tax rate.
Important Update on Inclusion Rates
The federal government originally proposed increasing the capital gains inclusion rate from 50% to 66.67% in Budget 2024, with an initial effective date of June 25, 2024. This proposal was then deferred to January 1, 2026. However, in March 2025, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced that the government would not proceed with this increase.
This means the capital gains inclusion rate remains at 50% for the foreseeable future. For all home sales, only half of your capital gain is included in your taxable income.
For most Brantford homeowners selling their primary residence, this doesn’t matter anyway because the principal residence exemption protects your entire gain. But if you’re selling investment properties, you can plan with confidence knowing the 50% inclusion rate is stable.
The Principal Residence Exemption (Capital Gains Exemption)
The principal residence exemption, also known as the capital gains exemption for your primary home, is one of the best tax breaks in Canada. If your home qualifies as your principal residence, the entire capital gain is completely tax-free. No limits. No caps. Whether you made $50,000 or $500,000 in profit, it’s all yours to keep.
This is why most Canadian homeowners, including those in Brantford and Brant County, don’t worry about capital gains tax when selling the home they live in.
Requirements to Qualify for the Principal Residence Exemption
To claim the exemption, your property needs to meet a few straightforward requirements. You must have owned the property, either alone or jointly with someone else. You or your family (spouse, common-law partner, or children) must have ordinarily inhabited it during the years you’re claiming.
The Canada Revenue Agency doesn’t specify exactly how long you need to live there each year. The test is whether you “ordinarily inhabited” it, which gives flexibility for seasonal stays, work relocations, or temporary absences. The land can’t exceed 0.5 hectares (about 1.2 acres) unless the extra land is necessary for the use and enjoyment of the home.
One critical rule: you can only designate one property as your principal residence per family per year. If your spouse owns a cottage and you own a city home, you’ll need to make strategic decisions about which property to designate for which years.
For complete details on what qualifies as a principal residence and how to claim the exemption, see the CRA’s official guidance on principal residence and other real estate.
The “Plus One” Rule
There’s a helpful provision called the “plus one” rule. The formula for calculating your exemption includes an extra year, which helps if you sell one home and buy another in the same calendar year. This prevents you from losing exemption coverage during the transition period.
You Must Report the Sale
Starting with the 2016 tax year, you must report the sale of your principal residence on your income tax return even if the entire gain is tax-free. You’ll need to complete Schedule 3 (Capital Gains) and Form T2091(IND) to claim the exemption.
Understanding Form T2091(IND)
Form T2091(IND), officially called “Designation of a Property as a Principal Residence by an Individual (Other Than a Personal Trust),” is the form you use to designate your property as your principal residence. If your home was your principal residence for every year you owned it, you only need to complete Section 1 of the form.
If your property wasn’t your principal residence for all years (for example, you owned a cottage for some of those years), you’ll need to complete the full form to calculate the partial exemption. The form walks you through the calculation to determine what portion of your gain is tax-free.
If you forget to report it, the Canada Revenue Agency can deny the exemption and assess you for capital gains tax. There’s also a late-filing penalty of $100 per month, up to a maximum of $8,000. So even though you won’t owe tax, you absolutely must report the sale.
When DO You Pay Capital Gains Tax on a Home Sale?
Now we get to the situations where capital gains tax actually applies. If any of these scenarios describe your situation, you’ll need to plan for a potential tax bill.
You Rented Out Part or All of Your Home
This is where things get more complicated. If you rented out your entire home for part of the time you owned it, you may owe capital gains tax for those rental years. The CRA has “change in use” rules that determine what portion of your gain is taxable.
For example, let’s say you lived in your Brantford home for five years, then moved away and rented it out for three years before selling. You’d owe capital gains tax on the appreciation that occurred during those three rental years. The five years you lived there would still be protected by the principal residence exemption.
If you only rented out part of your home, like a basement apartment, things work differently. You might still claim the principal residence exemption on the entire property if you didn’t claim capital cost allowance (CCA) on the rental portion and the rental space is small relative to the whole property.
Investment Properties and Second Homes
Investment properties don’t qualify for the principal residence exemption. Period. This includes rental properties, vacation homes, and cottages.
You can only designate one property as your principal residence for each year of ownership. If you own multiple properties, you’ll need to decide strategically which one to designate. Usually, it makes sense to designate the property with the larger gain per year of ownership.
Cottage owners face this choice all the time. If your cottage has appreciated significantly and you’re planning to sell, you might designate it as your principal residence for some years to reduce the tax hit. But remember, those years can’t also be used for your primary home.
You Claimed Business Use or CCA
If you claimed capital cost allowance (CCA) for a home office or business use, you might owe capital gains tax on that portion of your home. The CRA has recapture rules that can claw back those deductions when you sell.
This is why many accountants advise against claiming CCA on your principal residence, even if you’re technically eligible. The short-term tax savings aren’t usually worth the complications and potential capital gains tax when you sell.
Property Flipping
If you bought a property with the intention of fixing it up and selling it quickly for profit, the CRA might treat this as business income rather than a capital gain. Business income is taxed at 100%, not 50%, so this is a much worse outcome.
The CRA looks at your intent at the time of purchase and the circumstances of the sale. If you’re buying and selling homes frequently or holding them for very short periods, expect scrutiny.
How to Calculate Capital Gains Tax on a Home Sale
If you’re in a situation where capital gains tax applies, here’s how to calculate what you’ll owe.
Step 1: Determine Your Proceeds
Start with your sale price and subtract all your selling costs. This includes real estate commissions, legal fees, staging costs, and any home inspection or repair costs you paid to facilitate the sale.
Example: You sold your investment property for $650,000. You paid $30,000 in real estate fees and legal costs. Your net proceeds are $620,000.
Understanding your home’s accurate market value is essential for this calculation. If you’re planning to sell and want to know what your property could realistically sell for in today’s Brantford market, getting a professional evaluation helps you plan properly.
Step 2: Calculate Your Adjusted Cost Base
Your adjusted cost base (ACB) is your original purchase price plus certain costs you can add. This includes legal fees and land transfer tax you paid when you bought the property, plus the cost of major capital improvements you made over the years.
Capital improvements are things like a new roof, an addition, a new furnace, or a major kitchen renovation. These are different from regular repairs and maintenance, which you can’t add to your cost base. A new deck counts. Repainting doesn’t.
This is why keeping receipts for major home improvements is so important. Every dollar you can add to your cost base reduces your capital gain and saves you tax.
Step 3: Calculate the Gain
Subtract your adjusted cost base from your net proceeds. The result is your capital gain.
Example: Net proceeds of $620,000 minus adjusted cost base of $450,000 (original purchase of $400,000 plus $50,000 in improvements) equals a capital gain of $170,000.
Step 4: Apply the Inclusion Rate
The inclusion rate is 50%. This means you only pay tax on half of your capital gain. The taxable portion gets added to your income for the year.
Example: $170,000 capital gain × 50% inclusion rate = $85,000 taxable capital gain.
Step 5: Calculate Tax Owed
Your taxable capital gain gets added to your other income for the year. You then pay tax at your marginal tax rate, which depends on your total income and province of residence.
Example: If your taxable capital gain is $85,000 and your marginal tax rate is 35%, you’d owe approximately $29,750 in tax on the sale. ($85,000 × 35% = $29,750)
Real Brantford Example
Let’s use realistic Brantford numbers. You bought an investment property in 2015 for $400,000. You put in $50,000 over the years for a new roof and kitchen upgrades. You sold it in 2025 for $675,000 (around the current Brantford average). Your selling costs were $32,000.
Net proceeds: $643,000 ($675,000 – $32,000)
Adjusted cost base: $450,000 ($400,000 + $50,000)
Capital gain: $193,000 ($643,000 – $450,000)
Taxable amount (50%): $96,500
Tax owed at 35% marginal rate: $33,775
That’s a significant tax bill. But if this had been your principal residence for all those years, the entire $193,000 gain would be tax-free.
Special Situations and Exemptions
Inherited Property
When you inherit a home, special rules apply. If the property was the deceased person’s principal residence, it’s exempt from capital gains tax up to the date of death. You inherit the property at its fair market value as of that date.
If you sell the inherited home right away, you’ll have minimal or no capital gains because your cost base is the value at death. But if you hold onto the property and it appreciates, you’ll owe capital gains tax on the growth that occurs after you inherited it.
Separation and Divorce
Transfers of property between spouses or former spouses are generally tax-free if done under a court order or written separation agreement. This is called a rollover. The person receiving the property takes on the original owner’s cost base.
But once the separation is finalised and you’re no longer spouses, normal capital gains rules apply to any future sale.
Moving for Work
If you had to relocate for work and couldn’t sell your home right away, there are provisions that might help. You can sometimes maintain the principal residence designation for up to four years while it’s temporarily rented, provided you meet certain conditions.
How to Minimise or Avoid Capital Gains Tax (Legally)
Nobody wants to pay more tax than necessary. Here are legitimate strategies to reduce your capital gains tax bill.
Strategy 1: Designate Your Properties Strategically
If you own multiple properties, run the numbers on which one to designate as your principal residence for which years. The goal is to maximise the total exemption across all properties.
Generally, designate the property with the highest average capital gain per year of ownership. An accountant can help you model different scenarios.
Strategy 2: Track Your Cost Base Meticulously
Keep detailed records of every capital improvement you make. New roof? File the receipt. Major renovation? Document everything. These costs directly reduce your capital gain.
Create a home improvement file and keep it updated. When you sell years later, you’ll be glad you did.
Strategy 3: Avoid Claiming CCA
Even if you’re eligible to claim capital cost allowance for a home office, think twice before doing it on your principal residence. The tax savings now might cost you more later when you have to deal with partial capital gains tax on the sale.
Strategy 4: Time Your Sale Strategically
If you have flexibility on timing and expect to have lower income in a future year, selling then might save tax. Your taxable capital gain gets added to your income, so selling in a lower-income year means a lower marginal tax rate.
Strategy 5: Consult a Tax Professional
Capital gains tax can get complicated quickly, especially with multiple properties, partial rentals, or cross-border situations. A qualified accountant who specialises in real estate tax can run scenarios and find the optimal approach for your situation.
The cost of professional advice is usually far less than the tax you’ll save.
What About Brantford and Brant County Home Prices?
Brantford’s real estate market has seen substantial appreciation over the past decade. The average home price in the Brantford area is currently around $675,000, with the benchmark sitting at approximately $652,000.
A home purchased in Brantford five years ago for around $400,000 might now sell for $675,000 or more. That’s a capital gain of $275,000. For homeowners who lived in the property as their principal residence, that entire gain is tax-free thanks to the principal residence exemption.
But for investment property owners in Brantford, these rising values mean larger capital gains and potentially significant tax bills when selling. This makes strategic planning around timing, cost base tracking, and professional tax advice even more important.
Properties in Paris, Burford, and other Brant County communities have followed similar growth patterns. The same rules apply regardless of which municipality you’re in. The principal residence exemption works the same way across Canada.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do you pay capital gains on your primary residence in Canada?
No. If your home qualifies as your principal residence for all the years you owned it, the entire capital gain is tax-free under the principal residence exemption. Most Canadian homeowners selling the home they live in won’t owe any capital gains tax. You do need to report the sale on your tax return, but the gain is fully exempt.
How do you calculate capital gains tax on a home sale?
Start with your sale price minus selling costs (like real estate fees and legal costs) to get your net proceeds. Subtract your adjusted cost base, which is your original purchase price plus major capital improvements. The difference is your capital gain. Currently, 50% of that gain is taxable and gets added to your income. You then pay tax at your marginal rate. For a gain of $200,000 with a 35% marginal rate, you’d owe approximately $35,000 in tax ($200,000 × 50% × 35%).
Do you pay capital gains on a rental property?
Yes. Rental properties and investment properties don’t qualify for the principal residence exemption. You’ll pay capital gains tax on the profit when you sell, calculated the same way as above. You can deduct selling costs and add capital improvements to your cost base, but the gain is taxable. This is one of the key differences between owning your primary home versus investment properties.
How can you avoid capital gains tax on a second home?
You can’t completely avoid it, but you can minimise it through strategic planning. You can designate your second home as your principal residence for certain years to shelter some of the gain, though those years can’t also be used for your primary home. Keep detailed records of all capital improvements to increase your cost base and reduce the taxable gain. Consider the timing of your sale relative to your income in different years. Consulting with a tax professional can help you find the best approach for your situation.
What happens if you rented out your home for a few years?
If you rented out your primary residence temporarily, you may owe capital gains tax for the years it was rented. The CRA has a “change in use” rule that calculates what portion of the gain is taxable based on the rental period. However, you can elect under subsection 45(2) to continue treating it as your principal residence for up to four years while it’s rented, if you meet certain conditions. This preserves the exemption during temporary rental periods. Talk to an accountant if this applies to you.
The Bottom Line on Capital Gains Tax
Most Brantford homeowners selling their primary residence won’t face capital gains tax thanks to the principal residence exemption. That’s genuinely good news in a tax system that doesn’t offer many breaks this generous.
But if you own investment properties, have rented out your home, or own multiple properties including a cottage or vacation home, understanding these rules matters. The tax bills can be substantial, and proper planning makes a real difference in what you keep versus what goes to the CRA.
The key takeaways: keep receipts for major improvements, report your principal residence sale even though it’s tax-free, designate properties strategically if you own more than one, and get professional advice for complex situations.
Understanding the tax implications of selling is just one piece of the puzzle. When you’re ready to sell your home in Brantford or Brant County, having a strategic approach to pricing, marketing, and negotiation makes all the difference in maximising your proceeds and minimising your stress. Our team combines deep local market knowledge with proven selling strategies to help you achieve the best possible outcome.
Ready to explore your options? Get a free, no-pressure home evaluation to understand what your home could sell for in today’s market. Book your free evaluation or call us at (519) 755-1180.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Tax laws and regulations are subject to change, and individual circumstances vary. The information provided reflects our understanding of current rules as of the publication date. Always consult with a qualified accountant, tax professional, or legal advisor regarding your specific situation before making any decisions about selling property, claiming tax exemptions, or implementing tax strategies. Brolly Group Real Estate is a real estate brokerage and does not provide tax or legal advice.



