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CRA Certificate of Compliance Services for Non-Resident Property Sellers

Selling Canadian real estate as a non-resident? The CRA requires you to apply for a Certificate of Compliance (Form T2062 or T2062A) to report your gain and release funds from the sale. At ComplianceCertificates.ca, we handle the entire process — from calculating your capital gain to submitting your CRA application — so you can close your sale with confidence and avoid unnecessary withholding delays.

Includes:

Preparation and filing of Form T2062/T2062A

Capital gains calculation

Supporting documents (agreements, statements, invoices)

Submission and follow-up with CRA

Guidance on withholding amounts and timelines

WHO IT'S FOR

Non-residents selling Canadian property

Executors of non-resident estates

Non-resident corporations disposing of real estate

Learn more about the CRA Certificate of Compliance process on the CRA website.

Your file is managed personally by a Canadian CPA specializing in real estate transactions.

We focus exclusively on CRA compliance certificates for non-resident sellers.

Clear communication and simple pricing — no surprises.

Professional, timely service designed to help you close smoothly.

Avoid closing delays. File your CRA Certificate of Compliance with confidence — handled by a Canadian CPA.

— CRA Certificate of Compliance (Form T2062)

Frequently Asked Questions

A Certificate of Compliance (also known as a clearance certificate) is a document issued by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) confirming that the appropriate tax has been reported or paid on the sale of Canadian real property by a non-resident.

Without this certificate, the buyer must withhold and remit 25% (or more) of the sale price to the CRA — even if you made little or no profit.

Reference: CRA — Certificate of Compliance Process

If you are not a resident of Canada for tax purposes and you are selling:

• A residential property

• A rental or investment property

• Vacant land

• Any other taxable Canadian real estate

…you are required to apply for a Certificate of Compliance using Form T2062 (and possibly Form

T2062A, if applicable).

The most common forms include:

• Form T2062 – For the disposition (sale) of taxable Canadian property

• Form T2062A – For other types of capital property or depreciable assets

We prepare and file the correct form on your behalf as part of our full service.

Reference: CRA – Form T2062, Request by a Non-Resident of Canada for a Certificate of Compliance

Processing times can vary depending on the CRA’s workload and completeness of your submission.

• Typical processing: 8–12 weeks (2–3 months) after CRA receives a complete application

• During busy periods or complex cases: Up to 120 days (approximately 4 months) or longer

We manage CRA communication to help minimize delays and ensure your application is complete the

first time.

This estimate is based on current CRA practices and may vary depending on workload, documentation

completeness, and CRA review steps.

Without a Certificate of Compliance, the buyer must withhold 25% of the sale price and remit it to the CRA. When you obtain the certificate, the CRA calculates withholding on the actual gain, not the total sale price — often resulting in a lower, fairer amount.

 Example: How CRA Withholding Works

Example Scenario:

A non-resident sells a Canadian property for $600,000 that was originally purchased for $400,000.

• Profit (Capital Gain): $200,000

• Without Certificate: Buyer must remit 25% of $600,000 = $150,000 to the CRA.

• With Certificate of Compliance: CRA applies withholding on the gain only: 25% of $200,000 =

$50,000.

Result: Obtaining the certificate before or shortly after closing saves the seller $100,000 in unnecessary withholding and accelerates the release of funds.

(This is a simplified illustration. Actual withholding may vary depending on expenses, property type, and

applicable CRA policies.)

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