FIRPTA Withholding for Canadians Selling US Property
Sell a US condo or home as a non-US resident and the IRS makes the buyer hold back 15% of the entire sale price — on a $600,000 sale, that is $90,000 frozen, even if your actual gain is small. We file the withholding certificate to cut it down at closing and recover what was over-withheld.
United States
Canada
The Trap: Withholding Is on the Gross Price
FIRPTA withholding is calculated on the full sale price, not your profit. So even a break-even or modest-gain sale can have tens of thousands of dollars locked with the IRS for months. The withholding is a prepayment — your real US tax is only on the gain — but getting the difference back takes the right filings.
15%
Default withholding
Of the gross sale price, withheld by the buyer at closing.
8288-B
Withholding certificate
Reduces withholding to the actual expected tax on the gain.
W-7
ITIN application
Required for the seller (and often spouse) to process the sale.
How We Handle the Sale
- File Form 8288-B withholding certificate before closing to reduce the held amount to the real tax on the gain
- Apply for ITINs on Form W-7 for seller and spouse with certified documentation
- Coordinate Forms 8288 / 8288-A with the buyer, escrow, and title company
- Prepare the Form 1040-NR for the year of sale to report the gain and recover excess withholding
- Coordinate the Canadian side so the US tax is credited on your T1 and you are not double-taxed
Timing is everything. The withholding certificate must be in motion before closing to keep funds from being sent to the IRS. If you are even thinking about listing your US property, talk to us first — not after the sale closes.
FIRPTA FAQs
What is FIRPTA withholding?
Can I reduce the 15%?
Do I need an ITIN?
How do I get over-withheld tax back?
Selling US Property? Don't Lose 15% to the IRS.
A short call covers your sale timeline and whether a withholding certificate can keep your money where it belongs. No commitment.