Guidepost

Free Saskatchewan Calculator

How Much House Can I Afford in Saskatchewan? (2026)

Province-scoped defaults pre-loaded for Saskatchewan: 1.1977% property tax rate (Regina), $206/mo electricity (Regina), and Saskatchewan closing costs. All figures are editable — enter your own numbers for accuracy.

All defaults are estimates — enter your own figures. The interest rate shown is a typical 5-year fixed rate as of July 2026. Rates change frequently; use the rate from your pre-approval or your lender's quote.

Saskatchewan Closing Costs at a Glance

Land/Transfer Tax: Saskatchewan has no provincial land transfer tax. A title registration fee applies (approximately $500–$700 on a typical purchase).

First-Time Buyer: No provincial LTT rebate program — there is no LTT to rebate. Federal FTHB GST rebate and FHSA/HBP apply.

Saskatchewan buyers pay PST (6%) on the CMHC insurance premium in cash at closing if their down payment is under 20%. No provincial LTT otherwise.




Saskatchewan Home Buying — Frequently Asked Questions

How much house can I afford in Saskatchewan?

Saskatchewan buyers pay PST (6%) on the CMHC insurance premium in cash at closing if their down payment is under 20%. No provincial LTT otherwise. Use the calculator above — it pre-fills Saskatchewan-specific property tax and utility defaults. Always stress-test at your contract rate + 2% (minimum 5.25% OSFI floor). Verify all figures with a licensed mortgage professional.

What are the closing costs in Saskatchewan?

Saskatchewan has no provincial land transfer tax. A title registration fee applies (approximately $500–$700 on a typical purchase). No provincial LTT rebate program — there is no LTT to rebate. Federal FTHB GST rebate and FHSA/HBP apply. Beyond land transfer tax: legal/notary fees (~$1,200–$2,500), title insurance (~$250–$600), home inspection (~$400–$700), and property-tax/utility adjustments.

Does Saskatchewan charge land transfer tax?

No — Saskatchewan does not charge a provincial land transfer tax. A title registration fee applies but it is a fraction of typical LTT amounts in Ontario or BC.

Related guides for Saskatchewan

All figures are estimates based on provincial averages as of July 2026. Property tax rates are major-city estimates from Zoocasa 2024 data. Electricity figures from Hydro-Québec 2025 comparison report. LTT/PTT/DTT figures verified against official provincial government sources. Not financial or legal advice.