National Post (National Edition)

Tax on foreign buyers hitting home in Ontario

Non-resident sales appear to be dropping

- ALLISON JONES The Canadian Press, with files from Craig Wong

TORONTO • The number of home purchases by non-Canadians appears to be dropping in an Ontario region, including Toronto, that is subject to a foreign buyer tax.

The 15-per-cent tax was imposed in April on buyers in the Greater Golden Horseshoe area — stretching from the Niagara Region to Peterborou­gh — who are not citizens, permanent residents or Canadian corporatio­ns.

It came as the housing market in the Toronto area and beyond saw year-overyear price increases of over 30 per cent. The government previously released data from April 24 to May 26, which showed that about 4.7 per cent of properties were bought by people who weren’t citizens or permanent residents.

The latest set of numbers covers May 27 to Aug. 18 and shows the percentage of foreign transactio­ns in the region dropped to about 3.2 per cent. In Toronto, the percentage dropped from 7.2 in that first month to 5.6 per cent in the subsequent three months. In York Region, just north of Toronto, 9.1 per cent of sales in the first month were by foreign buyers, dropping to 6.9 per cent in the next three months.

Finance Minister Charles Sousa credits the government’s 16-part housing plan, which included the tax, with spurring those decreases.

“So I would say yes, it is working,” he said Thursday, adding that the measures have also brought some stability to the real estate market.

The latest figures also looked outside the Greater Golden Horseshoe region, and in the first month of the tax foreign transactio­ns represente­d 1.5 per cent of sales, while in the following three months it was nearly the same, at 1.6 per cent.

Overall, from April to August, the average foreign buyer activity in the region was 3.5 per cent.

Ontario’s foreign buyer tax followed a similar one in Vancouver last summer that had a cooling effect on the red hot housing market, however since then sales have rebounded.

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