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payments Key Terminology 5 Min Read

Minimum Bid &
Cancellation Price

The minimum bid at a Canadian tax sale is the cancellation price — not the market value. Here's exactly what it includes and why it matters for your bid strategy.

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Quick Answer

The minimum bid at a Canadian municipal tax sale is called the cancellation price. It equals the total unpaid property taxes plus all accumulated interest, penalties, and administrative costs registered against the property. It is not the market value — a property worth $300,000 may have a cancellation price of just $8,000 if the owner owes two years of back taxes.

calculate What is the Cancellation Price?

In Canadian municipal tax sale legislation, the term 'minimum bid' and 'cancellation price' refer to the same figure: the threshold a bidder must meet or exceed to win a property. This price is calculated by the municipality and consists of:

Components of the Cancellation Price (Ontario Municipal Act, 2001 — s.373)
Unpaid property taxes All arrears, including the current year's taxes
Interest & penalties Statutory interest on arrears (Ontario: 1.25%/month; NS: varies)
Administrative costs Publication, advertising, registration, and legal fees
Local improvement charges Any local improvement levies outstanding against the property

The cancellation price is published in the tax sale notice (the 'Statutory Notice of Sale'). Bidders must submit a cheque for at least 20% of their bid amount; the balance is due within 14 days of being declared the successful bidder.

trending_down Why the Minimum Bid is Well Below Market Value

Canadian property tax rates are typically 0.5–1.5% of assessed value per year. For a $300,000 home, two years of unpaid taxes plus interest and costs might total between $6,000 and $12,000. This is why tax sales frequently offer properties at 40–70% below assessed market value — and why they attract investors.

Example: Ontario Residential Property

$310,000

MPAC Assessed Value

$9,400

Cancellation Price (min bid)

97%

Potential Discount vs. Assessed

* Illustrative only. Actual bids are typically higher due to competition.

help_outline What Happens if No One Meets the Minimum Bid?

If the tax sale receives no successful bids (i.e., no one bids at or above the cancellation price), the municipality takes title to the property under provincial law. The municipality then has several options:

  • arrow_right Relist the property at a later date (sometimes with a reduced minimum)
  • arrow_right Sell the property by negotiation to an interested buyer
  • arrow_right Retain the land for municipal purposes (parks, infrastructure, affordable housing)
  • arrow_right Dispose of it under surplus municipal property procedures

Disclaimer: This guide provides general information about Canadian tax sales. Municipal tax sale regulations vary by province and municipality. Always consult a licensed real estate lawyer and verify the specific tender documents before bidding on a tax sale property.

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