First โ which path applies to you?
The closing tax most Toronto buyers forget about until two weeks before closing.
Ontario LTT plus Toronto MLTT plus first-time buyer rebates โ calculated against the actual 5-bracket schedule. Estimates only.
Eligible: never owned a home anywhere in the world, at least 18, Canadian citizen or PR.
Want this rolled into your full closing-cost picture?
Book a 20-minute walkthrough. We’ll integrate LTT with your downpayment, mortgage qualification, and net-sheet projections so nothing surprises you at closing.
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How Ontario land transfer tax actually works
Ontario Land Transfer Tax (LTT) is a marginal tax โ meaning each slice of the purchase price gets taxed at a different rate, not the whole purchase at one rate. The 2026 schedule has five brackets: 0.5% on the first $55,000, 1.0% on the next $195,000 (to $250K), 1.5% on the next $150,000 (to $400K), 2.0% on the next $1,600,000 (to $2M), and 2.5% on any portion above $2M. The result: a $1.1M Ontario home outside Toronto generates $18,475 in provincial LTT, due in cash at closing, collected by your lawyer and remitted to the province. This tax cannot be rolled into your mortgage. It is not the same as Toronto MLTT (which stacks on top for City of Toronto purchases). It is not the same as the federal GST/HST that applies only on new construction. Most buyers underestimate it by a factor of 2-3, planning for “a few thousand” when the actual bill is five figures.
The Toronto double-tax trap (and the rebate that softens it)
The City of Toronto layers its own Municipal Land Transfer Tax (MLTT) on top of Ontario LTT, using the same five-bracket schedule. A $1.1M City of Toronto home generates $18,475 Ontario LTT plus $18,475 Toronto MLTT โ $36,950 total at closing. This is unique to the City of Toronto; the rest of the GTA (Mississauga, Brampton, Vaughan, Markham, Richmond Hill, etc.) pays only the Ontario LTT. The softening mechanism is the first-time buyer rebate: Ontario forgives up to $4,000 of provincial LTT (effectively covering homes up to $368,000), and the City of Toronto adds another $4,475 rebate for first-time buyers on MLTT. The combined rebate for first-time buyers in Toronto: up to $8,475, which covers the entire LTT bill on a $400K home and substantially reduces it on properties up to $500-600K. Eligibility requirements for both rebates: never owned a home anywhere in the world, at least 18 years old, Canadian citizen or PR, occupying the home as principal residence within nine months. Couples where both meet the criteria still share one rebate per home, not double โ the rebate attaches to the property, not the buyer.
When LTT changes your offer strategy
For most buyers, LTT is a budget line item โ annoying but not strategy-changing. For three specific situations, the LTT bracket math meaningfully changes the offer. (1) Just over a bracket threshold: if your target home is asking $410K, you cross from the 1.5% bracket into the 2.0% bracket on the last $10K, adding ~$200 in LTT plus the same in Toronto MLTT if applicable. Offering $400K saves you $400 in tax plus negotiates the price down. (2) Toronto vs near-Toronto: identical 2,500-sqft semi at $1.4M generates $51,950 in combined LTT in Toronto vs $25,975 in Mississauga. That $26K delta is a real number worth modelling when you’re indifferent between two GTA locations. (3) First-time buyer just over the threshold: an FTB buying at $370K in Toronto pays $9 in LTT (the rebate eats almost all of it); the same FTB at $500K pays $4,225. Bracket awareness shifts the FTB sweet spot below $400K when it can. Book a 20-minute walkthrough for a full closing-cost picture before you make an offer.
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