Skip to main content

Finances After Selling Your House in Canada | What To Do With the Proceeds

Updated

Finances After Selling Your House in Canada

Selling your home is typically the largest financial transaction of your life. Beyond the excitement of completion, the following weeks and months involve a series of financial decisions that can have lasting consequences. Here is a structured guide to what matters most.

Closing Day: What Happens Financially

Item What happens
Mortgage discharge Outstanding balance paid from proceeds
Prepayment penalty (if breaking term) Deducted at closing
Real estate commission 3–5% of sale price, deducted at closing
Legal fees $1,000–$2,500, deducted at closing
Land transfer tax (buyer pays, not seller) Not applicable
Net proceeds Proceeds minus all of the above

Your real estate lawyer sends a closing statement showing every deduction. Review it carefully before signing.

The Principal Residence Exemption

The principal residence exemption (PRE) is one of the most valuable tax breaks in Canada — it eliminates capital gains tax on the sale of your home.

How to claim it

Step Details
Report the sale on Schedule 3 Required even if 100% exempt — since 2016
File Form T2091 Designates the property as your principal residence
Deadline Filed with your T1 return for the year of sale
Penalty for not reporting CRA can deny the exemption entirely

When the exemption is partial

If you rented out part of your home, converted it to a rental, or used it as a short-term rental (Airbnb), part of the gain may be taxable.

Scenario Tax implication
Lived in 100% of home as principal residence Full exemption — no tax
Rented portion of home (basement suite) Partial capital gain — proportion taxable
Rented whole home for some years Exemption reduced by rental years
Used as home-based business with CCA claimed May lose PRE permanently on that portion
Short-term rental (Airbnb) usage CRA may treat as partial rental — consult an accountant

What to Do With the Proceeds: Decision Tree

Step 1: Cover immediate needs

Priority Action
Roll into new property purchase Transfer to lawyer trust account
Temporary housing Set aside 1–3 months of rent
Moving costs Budget $1,000–$5,000+ depending on distance
Emergency fund top-up Aim for 3–6 months expenses in HISA

Step 2: Pay off high-interest debt

Debt type Address first?
Credit card debt (20%+) ✅ Yes — guaranteed return equal to interest rate
Personal loan / line of credit ✅ Yes
Car loan (5–8%) ✅ Often worth paying off
Student loans ⚠️ Depends on rate — may be worth investing instead
New mortgage ✅ Factor in as primary use of proceeds

Step 3: Fill registered accounts

Account 2026 room Best use
TFSA Up to $102,000 lifetime (varies) Flexible — invest in equities
FHSA N/A if you already own / owned First-home buyers only
RRSP 18% of prior-year income Use if in high tax bracket

Step 4: Invest remaining proceeds

Option Time horizon Notes
HISA / GIC (short-term) 0–12 months If buying again soon
Balanced portfolio 3–5 years Mix of bonds and equities
All-equity portfolio 5+ years Long-term wealth building
Lump sum vs. dollar-cost averaging Immediate DCA reduces timing risk for large amounts

Lump Sum Investing: How to Handle a Large Amount

Research consistently shows lump-sum investing outperforms DCA about two-thirds of the time. However, for peace of mind with a life-changing amount:

Strategy Approach
Lump sum Invest all proceeds in one transaction
3-month DCA Split into 3 equal monthly purchases
6-month DCA More conservative — spreads risk further
HISA staging area Park in HISA while deciding, then deploy

Key Financial Deadlines After Selling

Deadline What to do
Immediately Confirm closing statement with lawyer
Within 30 days Move proceeds to HISA earning 3–4%+
Tax year end (Dec 31) Make RRSP, TFSA, FHSA contributions
April 30 following year File T1 return with Form T2091 and Schedule 3
If large capital gain Consider installment payments or RRSP offset

If You’re Not Buying Another Home

For those transitioning to renting — either by choice or circumstance — a large lump sum can be an opportunity to build long-term wealth more efficiently than real estate in some markets.

Consideration Details
Annual “saved rent equivalent” The difference between your old mortgage and market rent is free cash flow
Opportunity cost comparison At 6% average annual return, $500K grows to ~$895K in 10 years
Property tax / insurance savings Budget $3,000–$10,000/year you are no longer paying
Flexibility premium Freedom to relocate has genuine financial value

Bottom Line

Selling a home creates both a financial opportunity and a window of risk — the proceeds must land somewhere quickly, and decisions made in the first 90 days often shape the next decade. Ensure the principal residence exemption is properly claimed, park the proceeds in a HISA immediately, pay off high-interest debt first, fill registered accounts to maximize tax sheltering, and invest the remainder according to your timeline and goals.