“Wait… We’re Paying Land Transfer Tax Again?”
A lot of homeowners think adding a HELOC is just paperwork. You sign a few documents, the lawyer registers a new charge, and away you go. Easy peasy, right?
Well… sometimes.
But every now and then, a refinance or HELOC application quietly drifts into territory where land transfer tax (LTT) in Ontario — or property transfer tax (PTT) in British Columbia — can unexpectedly rear its head. And when that happens, the surprise can hit like a bucket of cold water on closing day.
The tricky part is this: the HELOC itself usually isn’t the problem. The issue is what gets bundled together with the HELOC transaction. Maybe someone gets added to title. Maybe ownership percentages change. Maybe a trust gets restructured. Maybe debt is assumed during a transfer. Suddenly, what looked like a simple refinance starts looking like a conveyance of land in the eyes of the province.
And trust me, I’ve seen clients and even seasoned realtors say, “Whoa… nobody mentioned that.”
Here are some of the most common situations where this can happen.
Transferring Ownership Percentages
Transferring Beneficial Interest
Transfers Between Corporations and Individuals
Assumptions of Debt Tied to a Conveyance

Adding a New Owner to Title
This one happens all the time.
You’re refinancing your home and adding your spouse, adult child, or partner onto title “while we’re at it.” Sounds harmless enough. In many cases, people assume it’s just an administrative update.
But provinces can view this as a transfer of an ownership interest.
In Ontario, for example, if someone is added to title and they assume responsibility for part of the mortgage debt, that assumed debt can sometimes form the basis for land transfer tax calculations unless an exemption applies.
A Practical Story
Mark bought a condo in Toronto years ago, before meeting Sarah. Fast-forward five years: the condo has doubled in value, and they want to add a HELOC for renovations and wedding expenses.
During the refinance, their lawyer asks:
“Do you want Sarah added to title too?”
“Sure,” Mark says. “Might as well.”
What they didn’t realize was that Sarah assuming part of the mortgage debt could potentially create an LTT consideration issue.
Suddenly, a refinance they thought was straightforward becomes a tax discussion.
How Realtors and Clients Can Use This Information
Realtors should encourage clients to discuss title changes before listing or refinancing strategies are finalized.
Clients should avoid assuming:
“Adding someone to title is free.”
Sometimes it is. Sometimes exemptions apply. Sometimes they don’t. The key is getting legal and mortgage guidance before documents are signed.
Transferring Ownership Percentages
This one flies under the radar more than people realize.
Maybe two siblings own a property 50/50. Maybe spouses want to change ownership percentages for estate planning, tax planning, or investment reasons.
If ownership percentages change during a refinance or HELOC registration, provinces may interpret this as a transfer of an interest in land.
A Practical Story
Two brothers, Alex and Daniel, own a rental duplex in Hamilton equally.
Daniel decides he wants out of active ownership, but not entirely. During a refinance with a HELOC for renovations, they restructure ownership so Alex now owns 90% and Daniel owns 10%.
“Hey, we’re both still on title,” Daniel says. “No big deal.”
But legally, ownership interests changed — and that can potentially trigger tax implications.
How Realtors and Clients Can Use This Information
Investment property owners should coordinate refinancing plans with accountants, lawyers, and mortgage professionals together — not separately.
A refinance conversation often turns into a tax conversation very quickly when ownership ratios shift.
Transferring Beneficial Interest
Here’s where things can get really sneaky.
Sometimes, legal title stays exactly the same, but beneficial ownership changes behind the scenes.
That matters.
Tax authorities don’t only care about whose name is on title. They also care about who truly benefits from the property.
A Practical Story
Jennifer owns a property in Vancouver in her personal name, but during a HELOC refinance, she enters into a private agreement giving her parents a beneficial ownership stake because they contributed substantial funds toward the property.
On paper, title didn’t change.
But beneficial ownership arguably did.
Now the transaction may need deeper legal and tax analysis.
How Realtors and Clients Can Use This Information
Clients involved in family financing arrangements, co-investments, or private side agreements should disclose these arrangements upfront.
Realtors should encourage transparency early because hidden beneficial ownership issues can derail financing late in the process.
And nobody likes a panicked phone call two days before closing.
Certain Trust Restructurings
Trusts are powerful tools for estate planning and asset protection, but they can also complicate refinances.
Moving property into or out of a trust during a HELOC transaction may create a transfer for tax purposes depending on the structure and jurisdiction.
A Practical Story
Linda owns a cottage in Muskoka and wants to refinance it with a HELOC to help her kids buy homes.
Her accountant suggests:
“Why don’t we move the property into a family trust at the same time?”
Sounds efficient.
But now the lawyer has to analyze whether the transfer into the trust creates land transfer tax exposure.
What started as a cottage refinance suddenly involves trust law, tax law, and conveyancing analysis.
How Realtors and Clients Can Use This Information
If trusts are involved, clients should engage legal professionals before financing applications are submitted.
Mortgage approval is only one piece of the puzzle. Ownership structure matters too.
Transfers Between Corporations and Individuals
This is especially common with investors and self-employed borrowers.
An investor may want to:
- move a property from personal ownership into a corporation,
- move it out of a corporation,
- or refinance while changing ownership structures.
The problem? These are often considered actual transfers of land.
A Practical Story
Raj owns three rental properties personally and wants to move them into a corporation for liability and tax-planning purposes while adding HELOCs for future investments.
He assumes:
“It’s still me owning everything anyway.”
But legally, the ownership entity changed.
That can potentially trigger land transfer tax, legal fees, reassessment considerations, and lender complications.
How Realtors and Clients Can Use This Information
Realtors working with investors should raise ownership-structure discussions early.
A property transfer involving corporations is not “just a refinance.” It’s often a sophisticated restructuring requiring coordinated legal, accounting, and mortgage planning.
Assumptions of Debt Tied to a Conveyance
This is one of the biggest misunderstood concepts in Canadian real estate.
Even when no cash changes hands, the assumption of mortgage debt can itself become consideration for land transfer tax purposes.
A Practical Story
Emma wants to help her son buy into the family home. During a HELOC refinance, she transfers a 50% ownership interest to him.
“No money changed hands,” she says.
But her son assumes responsibility for part of the mortgage debt attached to the property.
That debt assumption may form part of the taxable consideration calculation.
That’s the part many people miss.
How Realtors and Clients Can Use This Information
Families transferring interests between generations should never assume:
“No money exchanged hands, so there’s no tax.”
Debt assumption itself can matter.
This is where proper legal structuring becomes incredibly important.
Allen’s Final Thoughts
A HELOC by itself usually does not trigger land transfer tax in Ontario or property transfer tax in British Columbia. In most cases, it’s simply financing secured against your property.
But the moment you start mixing that financing with title changes, ownership restructurings, trusts, corporations, or debt assumptions, things can get complicated in a hurry.
And honestly, this is where people can get blindsided.
I’ve seen situations where clients were trying to do something completely reasonable:
- helping a child buy in,
- adding a spouse,
- restructuring investments,
- or refinancing for estate planning purposes.
But somewhere along the way, nobody paused to ask:
“Could this create a transfer issue?”
That’s why having the right mortgage professional in your corner matters.
As a mortgage agent, I can help you:
- identify potential title and tax concerns early,
- coordinate with your lawyer and accountant,
- structure financing more strategically,
- review lender policies around refinances and ownership changes,
- help investors navigate corporate and trust scenarios,
- explain how debt assumptions can affect transactions,
- and work proactively with realtors to avoid nasty surprises before closing.
Sometimes the best mortgage advice has nothing to do with rates.
Sometimes it’s helping you avoid a costly mistake before it happens.

