Property Assessment Lookup
Pick a province and go to the official assessment source. This is a router, not a title search, appraisal, or property-value calculator.
To look up a Canadian property assessment, start with the official provincial or municipal assessment source, then treat assessed value as a tax value, not a live market price.
How to use it
- Choose a province. Pick the province where the property is located.
- Open the official source. Use the assessment authority, municipality, or provincial lookup linked by the router.
- Compare the value carefully. Remember that assessed value is for tax allocation and may not match today's sale price.
- Use the official appeal route. If details look wrong, follow the review or appeal process on the assessment notice.
How assessment lookups work
An assessment is normally a mass-appraisal value used to distribute property tax. A sale price, listing estimate, bank appraisal, insurance value, and assessed value can all be different. Appeal windows are short, so use the official notice and authority page when details look wrong.
Official sources
- MPAC AboutMyProperty (Ontario)
- BC Assessment (British Columbia)
- Alberta property assessment (Alberta)
- SAMAView (Saskatchewan)
- Manitoba Assessment Online (Manitoba)
- Municipal role d evaluation (Quebec)
- Service New Brunswick PAOL (New Brunswick)
- Property Valuation Services Corporation (Nova Scotia)
- GeoLinc Plus (Prince Edward Island)
- Municipal Assessment Agency (Newfoundland and Labrador)
This page links only to official assessment sources and does not display or store title data.
Property assessment questions
Is assessed value the same as market value?
No. Assessed value is the value used to distribute property taxes under local rules. It can lag the current market, use a fixed valuation date, or be phased in.
Why does Alberta route to municipalities?
Alberta residential assessments are handled by municipal assessors, so the right lookup depends on the city, town, county, or municipal district.
Can I appeal a property assessment?
Usually yes, but deadlines and forms are set by the province, municipality, or assessment authority. Start with the official notice and the appeal page linked there.
Does this page show ownership or title data?
No. It only routes to official sources. It does not display, collect, or store title data, ownership records, or parcel register details.
Why are some provinces split between a province and a city source?
Some provinces have a central authority and some delegate parts of the lookup to municipalities. The router points to the official starting point and major local exceptions where needed.