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Breaking News 6 min read

Developers Begin Pricing in GST Rebate Expectations for Fall Occupancies

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Elena Vaughn
Research Lead

"Elena has spent over 15 years analyzing Ontario real estate policy to bring institutional-grade transparency to first-time buyers. She specializes in legislative impacts and market forecasting."

Several of Ontario's largest pre-construction developers have begun repricing their fall occupancy inventory to reflect the expanded federal GST rebate that took effect after May 26, 2025 under Bill C-4 — raising an important question for buyers: who actually benefits when the rebate grows?

How Developer Rebate Assignment Works

The vast majority of Ontario pre-construction contracts include an HST assignment clause in the Agreement of Purchase and Sale. Under this arrangement, the buyer assigns their right to the federal and provincial HST rebate directly to the builder in exchange for a reduced, net-of-tax purchase price. The builder collects the gross price from the buyer, pays CRA the HST, and then claims the rebate directly — netting the difference.

When the GST rebate was capped at $350,000 home values (the pre-Bill C-4 framework), the maximum rebate a builder could collect via assignment was roughly $6,300. Now that the rebate ceiling has risen to $1,000,000 qualifying value, the maximum assignable federal rebate has grown to approximately $45,000. That is a $38,700 improvement in a builder's effective HST recovery position — on every single unit they sell above the old threshold.

The Repricing Pattern Emerging in the Market

Industry data indicates two distinct responses from developers. The first group — primarily mid-size builders managing tight construction margins — is retaining the expanded rebate entirely as margin recovery, leaving advertised prices unchanged. The second group, largely the major publicly traded developers competing in buyer-friendly 2026 market conditions, is sharing a portion of the rebate benefit through price adjustments or incentive packages on fall occupancy units to drive sales velocity.

For buyers, the practical implication is straightforward: if a developer advertises a unit as "net of HST," that advertised price should now reflect a larger rebate than it did before May 27, 2025. If a builder's pricing on a $900,000 unit has not changed since before that date, you are not receiving the full benefit of the expanded rebate — the builder is. This is a negotiating point your agent and lawyer can probe during the cooling-off period.

What First-Time Buyers Should Do Right Now

Ask any pre-construction sales representative a single direct question: "Is the listed price inclusive of the full HST rebate under the post-May 27, 2025 Bill C-4 framework?" If the answer is ambiguous or the representative cannot confirm, escalate the question to your real estate lawyer before signing anything. The difference in net cost could be as large as $38,000 on a typical GTA pre-construction purchase — a number large enough to alter your deposit structure, your mortgage qualification, and your net closing day obligations entirely.

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