How do I transfer my address and official
records?
Want your mail, ID, taxes and utilities updated without headaches? Here’s a clear, no-fluff step-by-step that gets it done.
Why updating your address matters
You moved. Plenty can go wrong if you don’t change your address: lost mail, missed bills, delayed tax notices, insurance gaps, and licensing issues. This guide gives a prioritized checklist so you update official records quickly and correctly.
Step-by-step: Transfer your address and update official records
- Create a master list
- List all institutions: government (CRA, Service Canada), driver’s licence, vehicle registration, provincial health, municipal property tax, banks, mortgage, insurance, work, and subscription services.
- Start with the government
- Canada Revenue Agency (CRA): update your address online through My Account or by phone. This ensures tax notices and benefits reach you.
- Service Canada: change address for CPP/OAS and other federal benefits.
- Provincial health card and benefits: update through your provincial portal (e.g., OHIP in Ontario).
- Update driver’s licence and vehicle registration
- Book an appointment with your provincial licensing office. Some provinces allow online updates; others require an in-person visit.
- Notify financial institutions immediately
- Banks, credit cards, mortgage lender, RRSP/TFSA providers. Update online or by phone. Ask for new statements to go to your updated address and enable e-statements.
- Update insurance policies
- Home, auto, life: give your new address to avoid coverage problems and adjust premiums if needed.
- Utilities and home services
- Electricity, gas, water, internet, cable, garbage. Schedule start/stop dates so there’s no overlap or cut-off.
- Forward mail with Canada Post
- Set up mail forwarding online. This catches mail you missed and gives you breathing room.
- Update payroll and workplace records
- Inform HR so T4 and other employment docs go to the right place.
- Update professional registrations and subscriptions
- Doctors, dentist, lawyer, clubs, magazines, online accounts. Use your master list.
- Update municipal records
- Property tax and local voter registration. Register your new municipal address so you don’t miss local notices.
- Confirm and document
- Save confirmation numbers, screenshots, and dates for every update. Store this in a cloud folder for access.
- Final sweep 30 days later
- Check mail forwarding reports and revisit any missed items on your master list.
Practical tips that save time
- Prioritize government, banks, and insurance first.
- Use online portals where possible; call only if required.
- Keep digital copies of confirmations.
- Use a single password manager and the same contact email for all changes.

Why work with a local expert
When you’re closing and moving in Toronto or the GTA, one phone call avoids mistakes. Tony Sousa is the market expert who coordinates the closing, confirms municipal transfers, and ensures your address changes are handled in the right order. Contact Tony at tony@sousasells.ca or 416-477-2620 for a move plan that prevents missed bills and lost mail.
Follow these steps and your official records update will be fast, complete, and stress-free. This is the checklist to close and move like a pro.



















