Alberta has a reputation as one of Canada’s most affordable major markets — Calgary and Edmonton routinely rank near the top of “best cities to buy” lists, and the numbers back it up. But there’s another reason Alberta stands out for buyers, and it’s a genuine structural advantage: Alberta has no land transfer tax at all. While buyers in Ontario or BC hand over thousands at closing to cover a provincial land transfer tax, Albertans pay a modest registration fee instead. That difference alone can be worth thousands of dollars. This calculator walks you through the full picture — your monthly payment, your CMHC insurance, and what to budget for closing day.
Estimates only. Rates shown are examples as of June 2026. Always confirm the actual numbers with your lender or mortgage broker before you commit.
Quick facts for Alberta buyers
- Alberta has no land transfer tax — instead, you pay modest Land Titles registration fees on the property value and mortgage amount.
- Alberta does not charge a provincial tax on your CMHC insurance premium — only Ontario (8%), Quebec (9%), and Saskatchewan (6%) levy that surcharge.
- The FHSA and RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan are the main federal tools for building a down payment — both work the same in Alberta as anywhere in Canada.
- Closing costs in Alberta are genuinely lower than in most other provinces — no land transfer tax means thousands of dollars stay in your pocket.
Minimum down payment rules in Alberta
Alberta follows the same federal rules as every other province:
- 5% on the first $500,000 of the price
- 10% on the portion between $500,000 and $1,500,000
- 20% if the home costs $1,500,000 or more (these homes cannot be insured)
For a home priced between $500,000 and $1.5 million, you blend the two tiers. On a $700,000 home, for example: 5% of the first $500,000 is $25,000, plus 10% of the next $200,000 is $20,000 — a minimum down payment of $45,000.
The maximum insured mortgage is $1.5 million, a threshold raised from $1 million in December 2024. Above $1.5 million, insurance isn’t available and 20% down is required.
How CMHC insurance works in Alberta
If your down payment — the cash you put toward the home up front — is less than 20% of the price, Canadian law requires you to carry mortgage default insurance. This most often comes from the CMHC (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation), the federal agency that backs these loans.
Worth being clear about right away: this insurance protects your lender, not you. If you stopped making payments, it reimburses the bank — it does nothing to shield your own finances. You pay the cost, but the bank is the beneficiary.
Why does it exist? Because it lets banks lend to buyers with smaller down payments. Without it, you’d need the full 20% saved up before you could get a mortgage at all. The insurance is the trade-off that opens the door sooner.
The cost is the premium — a percentage of your loan that depends on how much you put down. According to CMHC, the standard rates are:
- 5% down → premium of 4.00% of the loan
- 10% down → premium of 3.10% of the loan
- 15% down → premium of 2.80% of the loan
The more you put down, the smaller the premium. And the premium itself is financed — added onto your mortgage — so you don’t pay it in cash. You repay it gradually as part of your monthly payments.
Here’s Alberta’s advantage on this front: Alberta does not charge a provincial tax on the CMHC premium. Ontario, Quebec, and Saskatchewan all add a one-time provincial surcharge (8%, 9%, and 6% respectively) that you have to pay in cash at closing. Alberta buyers pay nothing extra on the premium beyond the premium itself, which is folded into your mortgage.
Local regulations and closing costs in Alberta
Here is the headline: Alberta has no land transfer tax. When you buy a home in most Canadian provinces, you pay a provincial tax calculated as a percentage of the purchase price — it’s called a land transfer tax (or property transfer tax in BC), and it can easily run $8,000–$15,000 or more on a typical home. Alberta simply doesn’t have one.
What Alberta does have is modest Land Titles registration fees, charged by the provincial land-title registry when ownership and the new mortgage are officially registered. The fees apply to both the property value and the mortgage amount separately. As of October 2024, the structure is roughly $50 plus $5 for every $5,000 of value on each registration. On a $550,000 purchase, that works out to approximately $1,100–$1,400 in total — a small fraction of what a land transfer tax would cost. To confirm the current fee schedule, check the Alberta Land Titles office directly, as these amounts can change.
For full context on why Alberta has no land transfer tax — and what that means for your closing budget compared to other provinces — see our Alberta land transfer tax page.
What does a complete Alberta closing budget look like? Beyond your down payment and registration fees, expect:
- Lawyer fees: typically $1,200–$1,800 in Alberta (lawyers, not notaries, handle real estate closings here)
- Title insurance: around $250–$400 for a typical residential purchase
- Home inspection: typically $450–$600
These figures are approximations. Your lawyer will provide a full closing-cost statement tailored to your transaction.
Your options as an Alberta buyer
Federal programs can make a real difference, especially in a market as active as Calgary or Edmonton. Here are the ones that matter in 2026.
First Home Savings Account (FHSA) The FHSA is a registered account designed specifically for first-time buyers. You can contribute up to $8,000 per year and up to $40,000 lifetime. Contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP), and qualifying withdrawals toward a home purchase are completely tax-free (like a TFSA). You can also combine the FHSA with the Home Buyers’ Plan below. According to Canada.ca, the FHSA opened for contributions in April 2023.
RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) With the HBP, you can withdraw up to $60,000 per person from your RRSP — $120,000 for a couple buying together — tax-free, to put toward a down payment. You repay the amount back into your RRSP over 15 years. It’s not free money, but it is an interest-free loan from yourself, which is hard to beat.
First-Time Home Buyers’ GST/HST Rebate (introduced March 2025) For agreements of purchase and sale signed on or after March 20, 2025, eligible first-time buyers of a newly built home can recover the GST (or the federal part of the HST) paid to the builder — up to $50,000. The full rebate applies to homes valued up to $1 million; a partial rebate applies for homes from $1 million to $1.5 million.
One important note: the definition of “first-time buyer” here uses a 5-year lookback, not a “never owned” rule. You qualify if neither you nor your spouse or common-law partner has lived in a home you (or they) owned in the current year or the four preceding calendar years. Confirm your eligibility at canada.ca before counting on this rebate — the program is recent and details may have been updated.
What Alberta does not currently offer is a provincial first-time-buyer grant, rebate, or tax credit. The no-land-transfer-tax advantage is effectively Alberta’s built-in benefit to buyers — you just quietly keep the money that buyers in other provinces have to hand over at closing. Some cities run their own programs — Edmonton’s First Place program and Calgary’s Attainable Homes initiative each have their own eligibility rules and caps — so it’s worth checking what’s available in your city.
How to use this calculator
It takes about thirty seconds:
- Enter the home price you’re considering.
- Enter your down payment in dollars. The tool checks it against the federal minimum and flags it if it falls short.
- Enter the interest rate your lender quoted (or a rate you want to test).
- Choose your amortization — the number of years to pay the mortgage off, usually 25.
You’ll see your estimated monthly payment, your CMHC premium, and your total mortgage with the premium included. There is no provincial premium tax line for Alberta, because Alberta doesn’t charge one.
One detail worth knowing: this calculator uses the correct Canadian method. Canadian fixed-rate mortgages compound semi-annually (twice a year), not monthly as in the United States. Many calculators get this wrong and slightly overstate your payment. Ours follows the Canadian convention.
Example — a $550,000 Alberta home with 10% down
Let’s walk through a realistic Alberta scenario so you can see every number.
You’re buying a $550,000 home in Calgary and putting 10% down ($55,000) — comfortably above the $30,000 minimum for this price. Rate: 4.79%, amortization: 25 years.
The mortgage side:
- Down payment: $55,000
- Loan before insurance: $550,000 − $55,000 = $495,000
- CMHC premium at 10% down (3.10%): $495,000 × 3.10% = $15,345 (financed into the mortgage)
- No Alberta provincial tax on the premium — this line doesn’t exist in Alberta
- Total mortgage: $495,000 + $15,345 = $510,345
- Estimated monthly payment at 4.79% over 25 years: $2,907
The closing-cost side:
- Land Titles registration fees (property + mortgage): approximately $1,150
- Lawyer fees: approximately $1,500
- Title insurance: approximately $300
- Home inspection: approximately $500
- Approximate total closing costs beyond the down payment: about $3,450
That $3,450 in closing costs is worth putting in context. On a similar $550,000 home in Ontario, the land transfer tax alone would run approximately $8,500–$10,000 before any first-time-buyer rebate. In Alberta, that entire category of cost simply doesn’t exist. The difference stays in your pocket.
Frequently asked questions
Does Alberta have a land transfer tax?
No. Alberta is one of only a few provinces in Canada with no land transfer tax. Instead, buyers pay Land Titles registration fees — modest flat-plus-per-$5,000 charges that come out to a fraction of what a transfer tax would cost. On a $550,000 purchase, expect roughly $1,100–$1,400 total. See our Alberta land transfer tax page for the full explanation.
What are the main closing costs in Alberta?
Beyond your down payment, the biggest items are: Land Titles registration fees (roughly $1,100–$1,400 on a $550,000 purchase), lawyer fees (typically $1,200–$1,800), title insurance (around $300), and a home inspection (around $500). There is no land transfer tax and no provincial tax on the CMHC premium — Alberta’s closing costs are among the lowest in the country.
Does Alberta charge a tax on CMHC insurance?
No. Alberta does not apply a provincial tax to the CMHC insurance premium. Ontario charges 8%, Quebec charges 9%, and Saskatchewan charges 6% — all in cash at closing. Alberta buyers pay only the premium itself, which is financed into the mortgage.
Can I use my RRSP or FHSA for a down payment in Alberta?
Yes to both. Through the Home Buyers’ Plan, you can withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSP tax-free toward a first home ($120,000 for a couple). Through the FHSA, you can accumulate up to $40,000 lifetime in tax-deductible, tax-free savings specifically for a home purchase. You can also use both programs together to maximize your down payment.
Can I avoid CMHC insurance in Alberta?
Yes — put down 20% or more of the purchase price. At 20% down, mortgage default insurance isn’t required, which means no CMHC premium. That said, Alberta’s lower price points relative to Vancouver or Toronto make the minimum down payment more manageable, and many buyers choose to get in sooner rather than wait to save a larger amount.
Is there a first-time-buyer provincial grant in Alberta?
Not at the provincial level. Alberta does not currently offer a province-wide first-time-buyer grant, rebate, or tax credit. The benefit is structural rather than program-based — the absence of a land transfer tax means you close with thousands more in your pocket than you would in most other provinces. Some cities (Edmonton, Calgary) run their own programs; check with your local municipality.
Sources
- Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) — mortgage loan insurance, premium rates, and minimum down payment rules.
- Government of Alberta — Land Titles — Land Titles registration fee schedule and property registration information.
- Canada.ca — First Home Savings Account (FHSA) — contribution limits, tax treatment, and withdrawal rules.
- Canada.ca — Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) — withdrawal limits, eligibility, and repayment rules.
- Canada.ca — First-Time Home Buyers’ GST/HST Rebate — eligibility criteria, home value thresholds, and how to apply.
This page is for general information, not financial advice. Figures are estimates as of June 2026 and change over time — confirm the current numbers with your lender, mortgage broker, or lawyer before you commit.