The Canadian Press explains how Ontario’s new foreign homebuyer tax would work
TORONTO — A 15-per-cent non-resident speculation tax proposed by the Ontario government Thursday forms a key plank in the province’s plan to cool the hot housing market in its southern cities.
The tax specifically targets foreign speculators who purchase property in the Greater Golden Horseshoe — an area that stretches from the Niagara Region to Peterborough — to turn a quick profit rather than to find a place in which to live. Here’s a look at how the new tax would work.
What does a non-resident speculation tax entail?
A 15-per-cent tax will be applied to the purchase of a residential property in the Greater Golden Horseshoe area, in addition to the general land transfer tax. It will be retroactively effective as of Friday, once enabling legislation goes through.


