compare US Tax Lien vs Canadian Tax Sale — Side by Side
| Caractéristique | 🇺🇸 US Tax Lien | 🇨🇦 Canadian Tax Deed |
|---|---|---|
| What do you buy? | A lien certificate — not the property | The property itself (title) |
| Return mechanism | Interest (8–36% p.a. depending on state) | Equity gain / property appreciation |
| Capital required | Amount of tax arrears only (small) | Full minimum bid (cancellation price) |
| Redemption by owner | Owner pays lien + interest; you get paid out | Usually pre-sale (varies by province) |
| End result if not redeemed | Tax deed sale (separate process) | You already own it (direct tax deed) |
| Risk level | Lower per transaction (but hundreds needed) | Higher per property (but immediate ownership) |
Warning for US Investors Entering Canada
US investors experienced with tax lien certificates sometimes try to apply the same strategies to Canada. This is a mistake. In Canada, you cannot buy a tax lien certificate and passively earn interest. You must bid on and purchase the property outright. The capital requirements and risk profile are therefore significantly higher. Engage a Canadian real estate lawyer before participating in any Canadian tax sale.
article What Does a Canadian Tax Deed Actually Give You?
When you win a Canadian tax sale, the municipality issues a tax deed (sometimes called a 'sheriff's deed' or 'treasurer's deed' depending on the province). This document:
- check_circle Transfers legal title (ownership) to you
- check_circle Extinguishes most private liens (mortgages, judgment liens)
- warning Does NOT necessarily extinguish Crown / CRA liens (federal tax debts)
- warning Does NOT extinguish utility or infrastructure easements
- warning Does NOT extinguish environmental orders in most provinces
For a complete guide to liens that survive a tax sale in Canada, see our Crown Interests & CRA Liens guide.
Find Canadian Tax Sale Properties
239 properties currently listed across Canada
Parcourir les propriétés arrow_forward