What deductions can I claim when selling a home?
What deductions can I claim when selling a home? Read this and keep more of your profit.
Quick answer
Selling a primary residence rarely gives you an ongoing tax deduction — but it can reduce or eliminate taxable capital gain. For investment, rental, or second properties you can claim specific selling costs and adjust your cost base. Tracking the right expenses now saves money when you file.
Key deductions and actions to track
- Real estate commission: Deductible against the sale proceeds when calculating capital gain. Keep the invoice.
- Legal and closing fees: Fees paid to lawyers/notaries and title transfer costs reduce taxable gain. Save every bill.
- Advertising and staging costs: Marketing, professional photos, and staging costs are often deductible for investment properties or when calculating business-related sales. For principal residences, they reduce gain if the sale isn’t exempt.
- Home improvements (capital improvements): Major upgrades that increase value (new roof, addition, major renovation) add to your cost base and lower capital gains. Keep before/after photos and receipts.
- Mortgage discharge/penalty fees: Lenders’ discharge fees usually factor into selling costs for capital gains. Keep documentation.
- Repair vs. improvement: Routine repairs to prepare a home for sale are generally current expenses and not added to cost base. Major renovations that extend the life or value of the property count as capital improvements. Track which is which.

Country-specific rules (high level)
- United States: If the property is your main home and you meet the ownership/use test (2 of last 5 years), you may exclude up to $250K ($500K if married filing jointly) of gain. Selling costs and improvements reduce gain.
- Canada: The principal residence exemption can exempt capital gains for years the property was your principal residence. For rental or business properties, selling expenses and capital improvements reduce taxable capital gains.
Action plan (do this now)
- Collect all invoices: commissions, legal fees, advertising, repairs, renovations.
- Separate receipts: label which are improvements vs. repairs.
- Calculate adjusted cost base: original purchase price + capital improvements + eligible selling costs.
- Confirm residency rules: determine principal residence years or investment status.
- Talk to a tax professional before filing. Simple mistakes cost more than a short meeting.
FAQs
Q: Are realtor commissions deductible when I sell my home?
A: Yes for capital gain calculations. Commissions reduce the net proceeds you report. If the sale is exempt by principal residence rules, you may not owe tax, but keep the records.
Q: Can I deduct repairs done right before selling?
A: Routine repairs usually aren’t added to cost base. Major renovations that increase value may be. Document scope and cost.
Q: Do I owe tax immediately after sale?
A: Taxes on capital gains are reported on your tax return for the year of sale. Residency exemptions and deferrals depend on country rules.
Final note and offer
This is practical. Track invoices. Label improvements. Get a quick tax review. If you’re selling now and want local guidance on pricing, timing, or documents to save on tax, contact Tony Sousa — local market expert who gets the numbers right. Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
Make your sale cleaner and keep more cash. Call or email now.



















