Jessica Plamondon - logo
Royale Le Page
SP | The Pike Group Realtor

Halifax is proposing a 10% property tax increase — and I think it’s time we have a serious, honest conversation about what that actually means for homeowners, buyers, and the future of our housing market.

As someone working inside the real estate market every day, this isn’t just a political issue to me — it’s a practical one. I see firsthand how current tax policy is creating unintended consequences that are making affordability worse, not better.

Where Did All the Boom-Time Revenue Go?

Since 2015 — and especially during the pandemic — Halifax experienced unprecedented appreciation in property values. Municipal tax revenues grew significantly as assessments climbed and transaction volumes surged.

A fair question that many homeowners are now asking:
Where did all that money go?

Before asking residents to shoulder another double-digit increase, there should be more transparency around how past revenue was allocated and whether existing funds are being managed efficiently.

The Real Problem: The Property Tax Cap

This may be an unpopular opinion — but I believe the property tax cap is actually hurting Halifax, not helping it.

The cap was designed to protect long-time homeowners from sudden spikes in assessments. In theory, that sounds fair. In practice, it has created a two-tier system:

  • Long-time homeowners are paying artificially low property taxes
  • New buyers are paying the full market tax burden

This imbalance has major consequences.

How the Cap Is Freezing the Market

Here’s what I’m seeing daily:

  • Seniors and long-term homeowners want to downsize
  • Growing families want to move up
  • But they’re locked in place because selling would mean moving to a smaller home… with two to three times the property tax bill

So instead of freeing up family homes and entry-level housing, people stay put.

And when people stay put:
✅ Inventory doesn’t increase
✅ Prices stay high
✅ First-time buyers carry the heaviest burden

First-Time Buyers Are Carrying the Weight

Let’s be clear:
The current system places the greatest financial strain on the people trying to enter the market.

Today’s first-time buyers are facing:

  • Average purchase prices north of $600,000
  • Rising interest rates
  • Stress tests
  • Closing costs
    And the highest property tax burdens in the city

That is not a balanced market — that is a system forcing new homeowners to subsidize long-time owners.

We Need a Level Playing Field

I’m not advocating for reckless change — but I do believe we need:

  • A gradual phase-out or reform of the tax cap
  • A fairer distribution of tax responsibility
  • A system that encourages movement through the housing ladder, not stagnation

When people can downsize or move up without a massive tax shock, inventory improves…and affordability improves with it.

Final Thoughts

Halifax is growing. Growth is good.

But growth must be managed thoughtfully.
A flat 10% tax increase without structural reform won’t solve the real problem.

We don’t just need more revenue — we need smarter housing policy.

And yes — the cap has to be part of that conversation.