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Country Guide國家指南 2026-03-10 30 min read閱讀時間 30 分鐘

Recovering Assets in Canada After Death: A Complete Guide for Hong Kong Families

加拿大遺產資產回收完全指南:香港家庭實用手冊

A comprehensive guide to recovering deceased relatives' assets in Canada — covering provincial probate systems, RRSP/RRIF/TFSA tax rules, Big Five bank recovery, CPP/OAS survivor benefits, Bank of Canada unclaimed balances ($900M+), property transfers, and cross-border HK-Canada estate administration.

全面指南助香港家庭追回先人在加拿大的資產 — 涵蓋各省遺產認證制度、RRSP/RRIF/TFSA稅務規則、五大銀行資金回收、CPP/OAS遺屬福利、加拿大銀行無人認領結餘(超過9億加元)、物業轉讓,以及港加跨境遺產管理程序。

1. Overview of Canadian Estate Law

Canada is one of the most popular emigration destinations for Hong Kong residents. Since the 1980s, hundreds of thousands of Hongkongers have settled in cities like Vancouver, Toronto, Calgary, and Montreal, building financial lives that span both jurisdictions. Common scenarios include:

  • A parent who emigrated to Canada and accumulated bank accounts, registered retirement plans, and real estate before passing away.
  • A Hong Kong resident who invested in Canadian property — condos in Vancouver or Toronto purchased for investment or for children attending university.
  • RRSP and TFSA accounts built up during years of Canadian employment, sometimes forgotten after the individual returned to Hong Kong.
  • Dormant bank accounts and unclaimed balances transferred to the Bank of Canada after 10 years of inactivity.
No Inheritance Tax in Canada: Canada abolished federal estate tax in 1972. There is no inheritance tax, estate tax, or death duty at either the federal or provincial level. However, the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) treats death as a "deemed disposition" of all assets at fair market value, triggering capital gains tax on the deceased's final tax return.

Key features of Canada's estate system that Hong Kong families need to understand:

  • Provincial jurisdiction: Unlike Hong Kong's single High Court probate registry, Canada has separate probate systems in each province and territory, each with different rules, fees, and timelines.
  • Deemed disposition at death: All capital property is deemed sold at fair market value on the date of death. Capital gains are taxed on the final return.
  • RRSP/RRIF inclusion: The full fair market value of registered retirement savings is included as income on the deceased's final tax return (unless rolled over to a surviving spouse).
  • Probate fees vary widely: From zero in Quebec (for notarial wills) to 1.5% in Ontario on estates over $50,000.
  • Common law vs. civil law: All provinces use common law except Quebec, which follows civil law — with significantly different rules for succession and estate administration.

2. Probate by Province

The probate process in Canada varies significantly by province. Below are the four provinces where the majority of Hong Kong emigrants' assets are located.

2.1 Ontario

Ontario is Canada's most populous province and home to the largest number of Hong Kong emigrants outside British Columbia. Probate in Ontario is called a Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee.

  • Court: Ontario Superior Court of Justice
  • Estate Administration Tax (probate fee): $5 per $1,000 on the first $50,000; then $15 per $1,000 (1.5%) on value exceeding $50,000. This makes Ontario one of the most expensive provinces for probate.
  • Timeline: Typically 8–16 weeks from application to issuance of the Certificate.
  • Estate Information Return: The executor must file an Estate Information Return with the Ontario Ministry of Finance within 180 days (approximately 6 months) of receiving the Certificate, detailing all estate assets and their values.
Ontario's 1.5% Tax: On a $1,000,000 estate in Ontario, the probate fee alone is approximately $14,500. This is one of the highest rates in Canada. Many Canadians use joint tenancy, beneficiary designations, and inter vivos trusts to minimize the value of assets passing through probate.

2.2 British Columbia

BC is the primary destination for Hong Kong emigrants, especially in Metro Vancouver. Probate is known as a Grant of Probate (with a will) or Grant of Administration (without a will).

  • Court: Supreme Court of British Columbia
  • Probate fees: No fee on the first $25,000; 0.6% on $25,001–$50,000; 1.4% on value exceeding $50,000.
  • Timeline: Typically 6–12 weeks. BC's probate registry is relatively efficient.
  • Wills, Estates and Succession Act (WESA): BC modernised its estate law with WESA in 2014, allowing the court to rectify errors in wills and providing a fairer framework for wills variation claims.

2.3 Alberta

Alberta is notable for having Canada's lowest probate fees with a fixed maximum cap.

  • Court: Court of King's Bench of Alberta, Surrogate Division
  • Probate fees (capped):
    • $35 for estates up to $10,000
    • $135 for $10,001–$25,000
    • $275 for $25,001–$125,000
    • $400 for $125,001–$250,000
    • $525 maximum for estates over $250,000
  • Timeline: Typically 4–8 weeks.

2.4 Quebec

Quebec is unique in Canada as it follows the civil law tradition (derived from French law) rather than common law. Estate law in Quebec is governed by the Civil Code of Québec.

  • Notarial wills: If the deceased made a notarial will (executed before a Quebec notary and one witness), no probate is required. The notarial will is self-proving and can be used directly to administer the estate.
  • Holograph and witness wills: Wills made in holograph form (entirely handwritten and signed) or before two witnesses do require probate (called "verification") by the Superior Court of Quebec or a Quebec notary.
  • Probate fees: Essentially zero for notarial wills. For other wills, only a nominal court filing fee applies (approximately $200–$400).
  • Forced heirship: Quebec eliminated forced heirship provisions in 1994. A testator has full freedom of disposition.
ProvinceProbate Fee StructureFee on $500K EstateTypical Timeline
Ontario1.5% over $50,000~$7,2508–16 weeks
British Columbia1.4% over $50,000~$6,4506–12 weeks
AlbertaCapped at $525$5254–8 weeks
Quebec (notarial will)$0$0No probate needed
Quebec (other wills)~$200–$400~$200–$4004–8 weeks

3. Bank Recovery: RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank, CIBC

Canada's banking system is dominated by the "Big Five" chartered banks. Recovering funds from a deceased person's bank account generally follows a similar process across all five institutions, but each has its own estate department and documentation requirements.

General Process

1

Notify the Bank

Contact the bank's estate or bereavement department as soon as possible after the death. The account will be frozen to protect the assets. Joint accounts with right of survivorship pass automatically to the surviving joint holder and are not frozen.

2

Provide Documentation

Submit the original or certified copy of the death certificate, the probate certificate (Certificate of Appointment / Grant of Probate), the will, and government-issued ID of the executor/administrator.

3

Estate Account Setup

The bank will open an estate account in the name of the estate. All funds from the deceased's accounts are consolidated here.

4

Release of Funds

Once documentation is verified, funds are released to the estate account. The executor can then distribute according to the will or intestacy rules. Timeline: typically 2–6 weeks per institution.

Bank-Specific Contact Information

Royal Bank of Canada (RBC)

Canada's largest bank by assets. Contact the RBC Estate and Trust Services department. Phone: 1-800-769-2541. RBC has a dedicated online estate settlement guide.

Toronto-Dominion (TD)

TD Canada Trust's estate services team handles bereavement claims. Phone: 1-866-222-3456. Visit any TD branch with documentation to initiate the process. TD also offers a "small estate" process for accounts under $50,000.

Bank of Montreal (BMO)

BMO's Estate Settlement team can be reached at 1-800-668-9614. BMO requires the original probate certificate (not copies) for release of funds exceeding $50,000.

Scotiabank

Contact Scotiabank's Estate Administration at 1-800-747-2890. Scotiabank provides an Estate Settlement Guide upon request. They accept foreign grants of probate with appropriate apostille or notarisation.

CIBC

CIBC's estate services can be contacted at 1-800-465-2422. CIBC has published a detailed Estate Settlement FAQ online. For small estates, they may release funds with a statutory declaration and indemnity.

Small Estates Exception: Most Canadian banks have internal thresholds (typically $50,000–$75,000) below which they may release funds without requiring a formal probate certificate. An original death certificate, statutory declaration, indemnity agreement, and proof of identity are usually sufficient. This can save significant time and cost for modest estates.

4. RRSP / RRIF / TFSA on Death

Registered retirement and tax-free savings accounts are a critical component of most Canadian estates. The tax treatment on death depends on the type of account and the designated beneficiary.

4.1 RRSP (Registered Retirement Savings Plan)

The RRSP is Canada's primary tax-deferred retirement savings vehicle, similar in concept to Hong Kong's MPF but with much higher contribution limits.

  • General rule: The full fair market value of the RRSP on the date of death is included as income on the deceased's final tax return. This can result in a substantial tax bill.
  • Spouse/common-law partner rollover: If a spouse or common-law partner is named as beneficiary, the RRSP can be transferred tax-free (rolled over) to the spouse's own RRSP or RRIF. The transfer must be completed by December 31 of the year following death.
  • Financially dependent child/grandchild: For a financially dependent minor child or grandchild, the RRSP proceeds can be used to purchase a term annuity payable until the child turns 18. For a dependent child of any age who is infirm, the funds can be rolled into the child's own RRSP or RDSP.
  • Non-qualified beneficiary: If the beneficiary is an adult child, sibling, or other person, the full amount is taxed on the deceased's final return. The beneficiary receives the funds tax-free, but the estate bears the tax liability.
Tax Shock Warning: A large RRSP can generate an enormous final tax bill. For example, if the deceased had a $500,000 RRSP and $50,000 of other income in the year of death, the combined $550,000 of income could attract over $200,000 in federal and provincial tax. Families should ensure sufficient liquid assets exist to pay this tax before distributing the estate.

4.2 RRIF (Registered Retirement Income Fund)

An RRIF is the mandatory conversion of an RRSP once the holder turns 71. The tax rules on death are essentially the same as for an RRSP:

  • The full FMV is included in the deceased's final income, unless a surviving spouse is the successor annuitant or beneficiary.
  • If the spouse is named as successor annuitant, the RRIF continues in the spouse's name with no tax consequences. The spouse simply continues receiving minimum annual payments.
  • If the spouse is named as beneficiary (not successor annuitant), the RRIF is collapsed and the proceeds are transferred to the spouse's own RRSP/RRIF.

4.3 TFSA (Tax-Free Savings Account)

The TFSA is a flexible savings vehicle where investment income and withdrawals are completely tax-free.

  • Spouse as successor holder: The TFSA continues in the surviving spouse's name. No tax consequences, and it does not affect the spouse's own TFSA contribution room.
  • Named beneficiary: The FMV of the TFSA at the date of death is paid to the beneficiary tax-free. However, any investment gains that accrue after the date of death are taxable to the beneficiary.
  • No beneficiary designated: The TFSA becomes part of the estate and is distributed according to the will or intestacy law.
Account TypeSpouse BeneficiaryNon-Spouse BeneficiaryNo Beneficiary
RRSPTax-free rollover to spouse's RRSP/RRIFFull value taxed on deceased's final returnFull value taxed; passes through estate
RRIFContinues as successor annuitant, or rolloverFull value taxed on deceased's final returnFull value taxed; passes through estate
TFSAContinues as successor holder (tax-free)FMV at death tax-free; post-death gains taxablePasses through estate

5. CPP / OAS Survivor Benefits

If the deceased contributed to the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) during their working years, surviving family members may be entitled to several benefits. Old Age Security (OAS) benefits, however, largely cease upon death.

5.1 CPP Death Benefit

  • Amount: A one-time lump-sum payment of up to $2,500.
  • Top-up (effective January 2025): An additional top-up of up to $2,500 may apply if the deceased never collected CPP/QPP retirement or disability benefits and left no eligible surviving spouse — bringing the potential maximum to $5,000.
  • Who receives it: Priority goes to the estate, then the surviving spouse/common-law partner, then the person responsible for funeral costs.
  • How to apply: Complete form ISP1200 (Application for a Canada Pension Plan Death Benefit) and submit to Service Canada.

5.2 CPP Survivor's Pension

  • Monthly payment to the surviving spouse or common-law partner.
  • Amount if survivor is 65+: 60% of the deceased's CPP retirement pension amount.
  • Amount if survivor is under 65: A flat-rate portion plus 37.5% of the deceased's retirement pension.
  • Important: Apply as soon as possible. CPP can only make back payments for up to 12 months (11 months plus the month of application). Delayed applications mean lost benefits.

5.3 CPP Children's Benefit

  • A monthly payment for dependent children of a deceased CPP contributor.
  • Payable until the child turns 18, or up to age 25 if attending a recognised educational institution full-time.

5.4 OAS — What Happens After Death

  • OAS payments stop upon the death of the recipient. Unlike CPP, OAS does not provide a survivor pension.
  • Allowance for the Survivor: A special monthly benefit for low-income surviving spouses aged 60–64 who have not yet become eligible for OAS. Maximum: approximately $1,680/month (2026 rate). This benefit stops when the survivor turns 65, remarries, or leaves Canada for more than 6 months.
Non-Resident Survivors: Hong Kong-based surviving spouses can receive CPP survivor benefits even if they live outside Canada, provided the deceased made sufficient CPP contributions. OAS payments to non-residents may be subject to a 25% non-resident tax withholding (reduced to 15% under the Canada-Hong Kong tax treaty).

6. Bank of Canada Unclaimed Balances ($900M+)

The Bank of Canada holds over $900 million in unclaimed balances that were transferred from federally regulated banks and trust companies across Canada. This is one of the most important — and most overlooked — searches for families of deceased Canadians.

How Balances Become Unclaimed

  • A Canadian-dollar deposit, bank account, bank draft, certified cheque, or money order held at a federally regulated institution becomes "unclaimed" after 10 years of inactivity (no deposits, withdrawals, or owner contact).
  • Each year on December 31, these balances are transferred to the Bank of Canada, which acts as custodian.
  • Balances under $1,000 are held for 30 years; balances of $1,000 or more are held for 100 years.

How to Search

1

Online Search (Free)

Visit unclaimedproperties.bankofcanada.ca and search by name. You can search for free using the deceased's full name and any known former addresses.

2

Submit an Estate Claim

If a match is found, file an estate claim. You will need: the death certificate, probate certificate or letters of administration, proof of the claimant's identity, and proof of the claimant's authority to act for the estate.

3

Receive Payment

Claims are typically processed within 6–8 weeks. Payment is issued by cheque in Canadian dollars. There are no fees charged by the Bank of Canada for this service.

Do Not Use Third-Party Finders: Some companies charge 10–35% of the balance to "find" unclaimed money. The Bank of Canada's search is completely free. Never pay someone to search the unclaimed balances registry on your behalf.

7. Property Transfer by Province

Real estate in Canada is governed by provincial land title systems. Transferring property after death requires the executor to work with the relevant provincial land registry.

7.1 Ontario

  • Land registry: Ontario uses both the Land Registry System and the Land Titles System; most modern transactions use the electronic Teraview system.
  • Transmission Application: The executor files a Transmission Application to register their authority, then a Transfer/Deed to convey the property to the beneficiary or buyer.
  • Land Transfer Tax: Generally, a transfer from an estate to a beneficiary named in the will is exempt from Ontario's Land Transfer Tax. However, if the property is sold to a third party, normal LTT applies.

7.2 British Columbia

  • Land registry: The Land Title and Survey Authority (LTSA) of British Columbia manages all land titles.
  • Transmission: The executor files a Transmission (Form 5) with the LTSA to register as the estate representative on title.
  • Property Transfer Tax: Transfers to beneficiaries under a will are exempt from BC's Property Transfer Tax. Foreign buyer tax does not apply to estate transmissions.
  • Joint tenancy: If the property was held in joint tenancy, it passes automatically to the surviving joint tenant. A Form A (Transfer) with a death certificate is filed at LTSA.

7.3 Alberta

  • Land registry: Alberta Land Titles Office.
  • Transmission: The executor files a Transmission to register as the personal representative, then a Transfer to convey the property.
  • No land transfer tax: Alberta does not impose a land transfer tax. Only nominal registration fees apply.

7.4 Quebec

  • Land registry: Bureau de la publicité des droits (Land Registry Office). Quebec uses a civil law system for property.
  • Succession transfer: The liquidator (Quebec's term for executor) can transfer property through a declaration of transmission registered at the land registry.
  • Transfer duties (Welcome Tax): Transfers between certain family members and to legatees under a will may qualify for exemptions from municipal transfer duties.
Deemed Disposition & Capital Gains: Regardless of province, the CRA treats the deceased's death as a deemed sale of the property at fair market value. If the property was not the deceased's principal residence, capital gains tax will be payable on the final tax return. The principal residence exemption can shelter the gain on the deceased's primary home.

8. Provincial Unclaimed Property Programs

In addition to the Bank of Canada's federal unclaimed balances registry, several provinces operate their own unclaimed property programs. These cover assets held by provincial institutions, insurers, utilities, and other entities.

ProvinceProgram StatusTypes of Property CoveredSearch URL
Alberta Active since 2008; ~$168M, 344,808 items Bank accounts, insurance proceeds, securities, utility deposits, wages, court deposits alberta.ca/unclaimed-property
British Columbia Active; managed by BC Unclaimed Property Society Credit union balances, insurance, estates, utility refunds bcunclaimed.ca
Quebec Active; managed by Revenu Québec Bank accounts, securities, insurance, uncashed cheques revenuquebec.ca
Ontario No provincial unclaimed property registry N/A — rely on Bank of Canada federal registry only N/A
Manitoba Active; Unclaimed Intangible Property Act Broad categories similar to Alberta Contact Manitoba Finance
New Brunswick Active; Unclaimed Property Act General intangible property Contact Service New Brunswick
Ontario Gap: Ontario — Canada's largest province — does not have a provincial unclaimed property program. This means dormant accounts at provincially regulated credit unions, insurance companies, and other entities in Ontario may be harder to trace. The Bank of Canada registry only covers federally regulated institutions.

Other Sources of Unclaimed Assets

  • Uncashed government cheques: Federal cheques (tax refunds, benefit payments) that go uncashed for 10+ years are returned to the Receiver General. Contact Service Canada or CRA.
  • Lost pension benefits: Search the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) pension search tool for federally regulated pension plans.
  • Provincial pensions: Each province maintains records of provincially regulated pension plans. Contact the relevant provincial pension commission.
  • Insurance policies: The Canadian Life and Health Insurance Association (CLHIA) provides a Policy Information Centre to help locate lost life insurance policies across member companies.

9. Cross-Border HK-Canada Tax Treaty

Canada and Hong Kong signed a comprehensive tax agreement on November 11, 2012 — the Agreement Between the Government of Canada and the Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income.

9.1 Key Provisions

  • Scope: The treaty covers income taxes only — it does not cover estate taxes or gift taxes. This is consistent with the fact that neither Canada nor Hong Kong currently imposes an estate or inheritance tax.
  • Dividends: Withholding tax limited to 5% for company-to-company dividends (10%+ ownership); 15% for all other dividends.
  • Interest: Withholding tax limited to 10%.
  • Royalties: Withholding tax limited to 10%.
  • Pensions: Periodic pension payments (including CPP/OAS) paid to a Hong Kong resident are taxable only in Hong Kong (which effectively means zero tax, since Hong Kong does not tax foreign-source pension income).

9.2 Estate-Related Tax Implications

  • Deemed disposition: Canada's deemed disposition at death can create capital gains on Canadian assets owned by a Hong Kong resident. The treaty does not override this, but provides mechanisms to avoid double taxation on the gains.
  • RRSP/RRIF withholding: Lump-sum RRSP/RRIF payments to a non-resident beneficiary in Hong Kong are subject to Canadian withholding tax of 25%. Under the treaty, this may be reduced for periodic payments classified as pensions.
  • Real property: Canada retains full taxing rights on gains from the sale of Canadian real estate, regardless of the owner's residence. The treaty does not limit this.
  • Hong Kong's position: Hong Kong abolished estate duty in 2006 and does not tax capital gains, foreign-source income, or inheritances. There is no double-tax risk on the Hong Kong side for most types of inherited Canadian assets.
CRA Clearance Certificate: Before distributing Canadian estate assets to beneficiaries outside Canada, the executor must obtain a clearance certificate from the CRA (by filing form TX19). This confirms all Canadian taxes have been paid. Distributing assets without a clearance certificate makes the executor personally liable for any unpaid taxes.

10. Remote Asset Search from Hong Kong

Hong Kong families can begin the process of identifying and recovering Canadian assets without travelling to Canada. Here is a systematic approach:

Step 1: Gather Information

Death certificate — original or certified copy; obtain an apostilled or notarised copy for use in Canada
Canadian Social Insurance Number (SIN) — essential for searching CRA records, CPP, and bank accounts
Will — check for a Canadian will (many dual-jurisdiction residents have separate wills for each country)
Last known Canadian addresses — needed for bank and unclaimed property searches
Tax returns (T1) — Canadian tax returns list income sources, RRSP contributions, and financial institutions
Bank statements, passbooks, or cheque books — any records showing Canadian financial institutions
Property title documents or municipal tax bills
RRSP/TFSA/RRIF statements
Canadian passport or permanent residency card
Insurance policy documents

Step 2: Free Online Searches

Step 3: Engage Professionals

  • Canadian estate lawyer: Engage a lawyer in the province where the bulk of assets are located. They can apply for probate, correspond with banks, and handle property transfers.
  • Hong Kong solicitor: You may need a Hong Kong solicitor to obtain a Hong Kong Grant of Probate if the deceased also had HK assets, and to arrange apostille/notarisation of documents for use in Canada.
  • Canadian accountant: A CPA familiar with cross-border estates can prepare the deceased's final Canadian tax return (T1), the estate trust return (T3), and obtain the CRA clearance certificate.
  • Power of Attorney: If you cannot travel to Canada, consider granting a power of attorney to a trusted person in Canada (or to the lawyer) to act on your behalf for bank visits and document signings.

Step 4: Timeline Overview

TaskTypical DurationEstimated Cost (CAD)
Obtain HK Grant of Probate2–6 months (in HK)HK-based costs
Engage Canadian lawyer1–2 weeksInitial consult: $300–$500
Apply for Canadian probate6–16 weeks$2,000–$8,000 + probate fees
Bank account recovery (per bank)2–6 weeksMinimal fees
RRSP/RRIF/TFSA claims4–8 weeksNo direct fee
CPP survivor benefit application6–12 weeksNo fee
Unclaimed balances claim6–8 weeksNo fee
Property transfer4–12 weeks$1,500–$5,000
Final tax return & CRA clearance3–9 months$1,000–$3,000
Total (typical)8–24 months$5,000–$20,000+

1. 加拿大遺產法概覽

加拿大是香港居民最熱門的移民目的地之一。自1980年代起,數十萬港人定居溫哥華、多倫多、卡加利及滿地可等城市,在兩地建立跨境財務生活。常見情況包括:

  • 移民加拿大的父母累積了銀行帳戶、註冊退休儲蓄計劃及房地產後離世。
  • 在加拿大投資物業的香港居民 — 在溫哥華或多倫多購買公寓作投資或供子女留學使用。
  • RRSP及TFSA帳戶在加拿大就業期間累積,回港後有時被遺忘。
  • 休眠銀行帳戶在10年不活動後被轉移至加拿大銀行。
加拿大沒有遺產稅:加拿大於1972年廢除聯邦遺產稅。聯邦及省級均無遺產稅、繼承稅或死亡稅。但加拿大稅務局(CRA)將死亡視為所有資產按公平市價的「視同出售」,在先人最終報稅表上觸發資本增值稅。

香港家庭需要了解的加拿大遺產制度主要特點:

  • 省級管轄:與香港單一的高等法院遺產承辦處不同,加拿大每個省和地區都有獨立的遺產認證制度,規則、費用和時間各異。
  • 死亡時視同出售:所有資本資產在死亡日期按公平市價視同出售,資本增值在最終報稅表上課稅。
  • RRSP/RRIF計入收入:註冊退休儲蓄的全部公平市價在先人最終報稅表上計入收入(除非轉移給在世配偶)。
  • 認證費用差異極大:從魁北克的零費用(公證遺囑)到安大略超過$50,000部分的1.5%。
  • 普通法與民法:除魁北克採用民法外,所有省份均使用普通法 — 繼承和遺產管理規則有顯著差異。

2. 各省遺產認證(Probate)

加拿大的遺產認證程序因省而異。以下是大多數香港移民資產所在的四個主要省份。

2.1 安大略省(Ontario)

安大略是加拿大人口最多的省份,也是繼卑詩省之後最多香港移民的省份。安大略的遺產認證稱為「遺產受託人委任證書」(Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee)

  • 法院:安大略高等法院
  • 遺產管理稅(認證費):首$50,000每$1,000收$5;超過$50,000部分每$1,000收$15(即1.5%)。安大略是加拿大認證費最昂貴的省份之一。
  • 時間:從申請到獲發證書通常需8至16週。
  • 遺產資料申報表:遺囑執行人須在收到證書後180天內向安大略財政部提交遺產資料申報表。
安大略1.5%稅率:一個價值$1,000,000的安大略遺產,僅認證費就約$14,500。這是加拿大最高的稅率之一。許多加拿大人使用聯名業權、受益人指定和生前信託來減少需經認證的資產價值。

2.2 卑詩省(British Columbia)

卑詩省是香港移民的首選目的地,尤其是大溫哥華地區。遺產認證稱為「遺產認證書」(Grant of Probate)「遺產管理書」(Grant of Administration)

  • 法院:卑詩省最高法院
  • 認證費:首$25,000免費;$25,001至$50,000按0.6%;超過$50,000部分按1.4%
  • 時間:通常6至12週。卑詩省的認證登記處效率相對較高。
  • WESA法例:卑詩省於2014年以《遺囑、遺產及繼承法》(WESA)現代化其遺產法,允許法院更正遺囑錯誤。

2.3 亞伯達省(Alberta)

亞伯達省以擁有加拿大最低的認證費(設有固定上限)著稱。

  • 法院:亞伯達國王法庭代理法庭
  • 認證費(設上限):
    • 遺產價值$10,000以下:$35
    • $10,001至$25,000:$135
    • $25,001至$125,000:$275
    • $125,001至$250,000:$400
    • 超過$250,000:最高$525
  • 時間:通常4至8週。

2.4 魁北克省(Quebec)

魁北克是加拿大唯一採用民法制度(源自法國法律)的省份。遺產法由《魁北克民法典》管轄。

  • 公證遺囑:如先人在魁北克公證人面前訂立公證遺囑無需遺產認證。公證遺囑具有自證效力,可直接用於遺產管理。
  • 自書遺囑及見證遺囑:自書遺囑(完全手寫並簽名)或在兩名見證人面前訂立的遺囑需要由魁北克高等法院或公證人進行認證(稱為「驗證」)。
  • 認證費:公證遺囑基本為。其他遺囑僅需象徵性的法院申請費(約$200至$400)。
省份認證費結構$500K遺產費用典型時間
安大略超過$50,000部分1.5%~$7,2508至16週
卑詩超過$50,000部分1.4%~$6,4506至12週
亞伯達上限$525$5254至8週
魁北克(公證遺囑)$0$0無需認證
魁北克(其他遺囑)~$200至$400~$200至$4004至8週

3. 銀行資金回收:RBC、TD、BMO、Scotiabank、CIBC

加拿大銀行體系由「五大」特許銀行主導。從先人銀行帳戶回收資金的一般流程在五間銀行大致相同,但各有其遺產部門和文件要求。

一般流程

1

通知銀行

在先人去世後盡快聯絡銀行的遺產或喪親部門。帳戶將被凍結以保護資產。具有生存者權利的聯名帳戶會自動轉移給在世的聯名持有人,不會被凍結。

2

提供文件

提交死亡證明書原件或核證副本、遺產認證書、遺囑及遺囑執行人/管理人的政府簽發身份證明。

3

開設遺產帳戶

銀行將以遺產名義開設遺產帳戶,將先人所有帳戶的資金匯集於此。

4

釋放資金

文件驗證後,資金將釋放至遺產帳戶。執行人可按遺囑或無遺囑繼承規則進行分配。時間:每間銀行通常2至6週。

各銀行聯絡資訊

加拿大皇家銀行(RBC)

加拿大最大的銀行。聯絡RBC遺產及信託服務部門。電話:1-800-769-2541。RBC設有專門的網上遺產結算指南。

道明銀行(TD)

TD Canada Trust的遺產服務團隊處理喪親索償。電話:1-866-222-3456。可攜帶文件到任何TD分行啟動流程。TD亦為$50,000以下的帳戶提供「小額遺產」簡易流程。

滿地可銀行(BMO)

BMO遺產結算團隊電話:1-800-668-9614。BMO要求超過$50,000的資金釋放須提供認證書原件(不接受副本)。

豐業銀行(Scotiabank)

聯絡Scotiabank遺產管理部門:1-800-747-2890。Scotiabank可應要求提供遺產結算指南,並接受經適當認證的外國遺產認證書。

加拿大帝國商業銀行(CIBC)

CIBC遺產服務電話:1-800-465-2422。CIBC在網上發佈了詳細的遺產結算常見問題。對於小額遺產,可能僅需法定聲明及彌償書即可釋放資金。

小額遺產例外:大多數加拿大銀行設有內部門檻(通常$50,000至$75,000),低於此金額無需正式遺產認證書即可釋放資金。通常只需死亡證明書原件、法定聲明、彌償協議及身份證明即可。這可為小額遺產節省大量時間和費用。

4. RRSP / RRIF / TFSA 死亡時稅務規則

註冊退休儲蓄及免稅儲蓄帳戶是大多數加拿大遺產的關鍵組成部分。死亡時的稅務處理取決於帳戶類型及指定受益人。

4.1 RRSP(註冊退休儲蓄計劃)

RRSP是加拿大主要的延稅退休儲蓄工具,概念類似香港的強積金但供款上限遠高。

  • 一般規則:RRSP在死亡日的全部公平市價計入先人最終報稅表的收入。這可能導致巨額稅單。
  • 配偶/同居伴侶轉移:如配偶或同居伴侶被指定為受益人,RRSP可免稅轉移(過渡)至配偶自己的RRSP或RRIF。轉移須在死亡翌年12月31日前完成。
  • 受撫養子女/孫子女:受撫養的未成年子女或孫子女可用RRSP款項購買定期年金,支付至子女年滿18歲。殘障受撫養子女則可將資金轉入其自己的RRSP或RDSP。
  • 非合資格受益人:如受益人是成年子女、兄弟姐妹或其他人,全額在先人最終報稅表上課稅。受益人免稅收取款項,但遺產承擔稅務責任。
稅務衝擊警告:大額RRSP可產生巨額最終稅單。例如,如先人有$500,000的RRSP和$50,000的其他收入,合計$550,000的收入可能產生超過$200,000的聯邦及省級稅款。家庭應確保有足夠流動資產在分配遺產前支付此稅款。

4.2 RRIF(註冊退休收入基金)

RRIF是RRSP在持有人年滿71歲後的強制轉換。死亡時的稅務規則與RRSP基本相同:

  • 全部公平市價計入先人最終收入,除非在世配偶是繼任年金人或受益人。
  • 如配偶被指定為繼任年金人,RRIF以配偶名義繼續,無稅務影響。
  • 如配偶被指定為受益人(非繼任年金人),RRIF被清算,款項轉入配偶自己的RRSP/RRIF。

4.3 TFSA(免稅儲蓄帳戶)

  • 配偶為繼任持有人:TFSA以在世配偶名義繼續。無稅務影響,不影響配偶自己的TFSA供款額度。
  • 指定受益人:死亡日TFSA的公平市價免稅支付給受益人。但死亡日後產生的投資收益須由受益人課稅。
  • 無指定受益人:TFSA成為遺產的一部分,按遺囑或無遺囑繼承法分配。
帳戶類型配偶受益人非配偶受益人無受益人
RRSP免稅轉移至配偶的RRSP/RRIF全額在最終報稅表課稅全額課稅;經遺產分配
RRIF繼任年金人繼續,或轉移全額在最終報稅表課稅全額課稅;經遺產分配
TFSA繼任持有人繼續(免稅)死亡日市價免稅;之後收益課稅經遺產分配

5. CPP / OAS 遺屬福利

如先人在工作期間曾向加拿大退休金計劃(CPP)供款,遺屬家庭成員可能有權獲得數項福利。老年保障金(OAS)福利則在死亡後大致終止。

5.1 CPP死亡撫恤金

  • 金額:一次性支付最高$2,500
  • 加碼(2025年1月起生效):如先人從未領取CPP/QPP退休或傷殘福利且沒有合資格的在世配偶,可額外加碼最高$2,500 — 潛在最高合計$5,000
  • 領取優先順序:遺產優先,其次是在世配偶/同居伴侶,最後是負責喪葬費的人。
  • 申請方式:填寫ISP1200表格(加拿大退休金計劃死亡撫恤金申請)並提交至Service Canada。

5.2 CPP遺屬養老金

  • 每月支付給在世配偶或同居伴侶的月度款項
  • 遺屬65歲或以上:先人CPP退休養老金金額的60%。
  • 遺屬65歲以下:固定金額部分加上先人退休養老金的37.5%。
  • 重要:盡快申請。CPP最多只能補發12個月(11個月加申請月份)。延遲申請意味著損失福利。

5.3 CPP子女福利

  • 每月支付給CPP供款人受撫養子女的款項。
  • 支付至子女年滿18歲,如全日制就讀認可教育機構則延至25歲

5.4 OAS — 死亡後情況

  • OAS付款在領取人死亡後停止。與CPP不同,OAS不提供遺屬養老金。
  • 遺屬津貼:為60至64歲、尚未符合OAS資格的低收入在世配偶提供的特別月度福利。最高約每月$1,680(2026年費率)。此福利在遺屬年滿65歲、再婚或離開加拿大超過6個月後停止。
非居民遺屬:居住在香港的在世配偶可以領取CPP遺屬福利,即使他們不住在加拿大,前提是先人有足夠的CPP供款。支付給非居民的OAS款項可能須繳納25%的非居民預扣稅(根據港加稅務協定可降至15%)。

6. 加拿大銀行無人認領結餘(超過9億加元)

加拿大銀行持有超過9億加元的無人認領結餘,這些結餘是從全加拿大聯邦監管的銀行和信託公司轉移而來。這是已故加拿大人家庭最重要但最常被忽視的搜尋之一。

結餘如何成為無人認領

  • 聯邦監管機構持有的加元存款、銀行帳戶、銀行匯票、保付支票或匯票,在10年不活動(無存款、提款或持有人聯繫)後成為「無人認領」。
  • 每年12月31日,這些結餘轉移至加拿大銀行,由其代為保管。
  • $1,000以下的結餘保管30年$1,000或以上的結餘保管100年

如何搜尋

1

網上搜尋(免費)

瀏覽 unclaimedproperties.bankofcanada.ca,按姓名搜尋。使用先人全名及任何已知的前住址免費搜尋。

2

提交遺產索償

如找到匹配項目,提交遺產索償。需提供:死亡證明書、遺產認證書或管理書、索償人身份證明,以及索償人代表遺產行事的授權證明。

3

收取款項

索償通常在6至8週內處理。以加元支票支付。加拿大銀行不收取此項服務的任何費用。

勿使用第三方搜尋公司:部分公司收取結餘的10至35%作為「搜尋」費用。加拿大銀行的搜尋完全免費。切勿付費讓他人代為搜尋無人認領結餘登記冊。

7. 各省物業轉讓

加拿大的房地產受各省土地業權制度管轄。死亡後的物業轉讓需要遺囑執行人與相關省級土地登記處合作。

7.1 安大略省

  • 土地登記處:安大略使用土地登記系統和土地業權系統;大多數現代交易使用電子Teraview系統。
  • 轉授申請:遺囑執行人提交轉授申請以登記其權限,然後提交轉讓/契約將物業轉讓給受益人或買家。
  • 土地轉讓稅:從遺產轉讓給遺囑指名受益人的物業通常豁免安大略土地轉讓稅。但如物業出售給第三方,則適用正常稅率。

7.2 卑詩省

  • 土地登記處:卑詩省土地業權及測量局(LTSA)管理所有土地業權。
  • 轉授:遺囑執行人向LTSA提交轉授表格(表格5)以登記為業權上的遺產代表。
  • 物業轉讓稅:根據遺囑轉讓給受益人的物業豁免卑詩省物業轉讓稅。外國買家稅不適用於遺產轉授。
  • 聯名業權:如物業以聯名業權持有,自動轉移給在世的聯名持有人。向LTSA提交轉讓表格A及死亡證明書。

7.3 亞伯達省

  • 土地登記處:亞伯達土地業權辦公室。
  • 轉授:遺囑執行人提交轉授以登記為個人代表,然後提交轉讓以轉讓物業。
  • 無土地轉讓稅:亞伯達不徵收土地轉讓稅。僅需支付象徵性的登記費。

7.4 魁北克省

  • 土地登記處:權利公示局。魁北克使用民法制度管理物業。
  • 繼承轉讓:清算人(魁北克對遺囑執行人的稱呼)可通過在土地登記處登記的轉讓聲明書轉讓物業。
  • 轉讓稅(歡迎稅):某些家庭成員之間及遺囑受遺贈人之間的轉讓可能符合市政轉讓稅豁免條件。
視同出售與資本增值:無論省份,CRA將先人的死亡視為物業按公平市價的視同出售。如物業非先人的主要居所,最終報稅表上須繳納資本增值稅。主要居所豁免可免除先人主要住宅的增值。

8. 各省無人認領財產計劃

除加拿大銀行的聯邦無人認領結餘登記冊外,多個省份亦設有自己的無人認領財產計劃,涵蓋省級機構、保險公司、公用事業及其他實體持有的資產。

省份計劃狀態涵蓋財產類型搜尋網址
亞伯達 2008年起實施;約1.68億加元,344,808項 銀行帳戶、保險收益、證券、公用事業押金、工資、法院存款 alberta.ca/unclaimed-property
卑詩 運作中;由卑詩無人認領財產協會管理 信用合作社結餘、保險、遺產、公用事業退款 bcunclaimed.ca
魁北克 運作中;由魁北克稅務局管理 銀行帳戶、證券、保險、未兌現支票 revenuquebec.ca
安大略 無省級無人認領財產登記冊 不適用 — 僅依賴加拿大銀行聯邦登記冊 不適用
曼尼托巴 運作中;《無人認領無形財產法》 類似亞伯達的廣泛類別 聯絡曼尼托巴財政部
新不倫瑞克 運作中;《無人認領財產法》 一般無形財產 聯絡新不倫瑞克服務中心
安大略省缺口:安大略 — 加拿大最大的省份 — 沒有省級無人認領財產計劃。這意味著安大略省級監管的信用合作社、保險公司及其他實體的休眠帳戶可能更難追蹤。加拿大銀行登記冊僅涵蓋聯邦監管機構。

其他無人認領資產來源

  • 未兌現政府支票:超過10年未兌現的聯邦支票(退稅、福利金)退回總收入官。聯絡Service Canada或CRA。
  • 遺失退休金福利:搜尋聯邦金融機構監管辦公室(OSFI)的退休金搜尋工具查找聯邦監管的退休金計劃。
  • 省級退休金:各省維護省級監管退休金計劃的記錄。聯絡相關省級退休金委員會。
  • 保險保單:加拿大人壽及健康保險協會(CLHIA)提供保單資訊中心,幫助在成員公司中尋找遺失的人壽保險保單。

9. 港加跨境稅務協定

加拿大與香港於2012年11月11日簽署全面稅務協定 — 《加拿大政府與中華人民共和國香港特別行政區政府關於對所得避免雙重徵稅和防止偷漏稅的協定》。

9.1 主要條款

  • 範圍:協定僅涵蓋所得稅 — 不涵蓋遺產稅或贈與稅。這與加拿大和香港目前均不徵收遺產稅或繼承稅的事實一致。
  • 股息:預扣稅限於公司間股息(10%以上持股)的5%;其他所有股息的15%
  • 利息:預扣稅限於10%
  • 特許權使用費:預扣稅限於10%
  • 退休金:支付給香港居民的定期退休金款項(包括CPP/OAS)僅在香港課稅(實際上等於零稅,因為香港不對外國來源的退休金收入課稅)。

9.2 遺產相關稅務影響

  • 視同出售:加拿大的死亡視同出售可對香港居民擁有的加拿大資產產生資本增值。協定不能推翻此規定,但提供避免雙重課稅的機制。
  • RRSP/RRIF預扣稅:一次性支付給香港非居民受益人的RRSP/RRIF款項須繳納加拿大25%的預扣稅。根據協定,被歸類為退休金的定期付款可能獲得減免。
  • 不動產:加拿大對加拿大房地產出售的增值保留完整課稅權,不論業主居住地。協定不限制此權利。
  • 香港的立場:香港於2006年廢除遺產稅,不對資本增值、外國來源收入或繼承課稅。對於大多數類型的繼承加拿大資產,香港方面不存在雙重課稅風險。
CRA清稅證書:在向加拿大境外受益人分配遺產資產前,遺囑執行人必須從CRA取得清稅證書(提交TX19表格)。這確認所有加拿大稅款已繳清。未取得清稅證書即分配資產,遺囑執行人須對任何未繳稅款承擔個人責任

10. 從香港遠程搜尋資產

香港家庭可在無需前往加拿大的情況下開始識別和回收加拿大資產。以下是系統化的方法:

第一步:收集資料

死亡證明書 — 原件或核證副本;取得加蓋認證章或公證的副本以在加拿大使用
加拿大社會保險號碼(SIN) — 搜尋CRA記錄、CPP及銀行帳戶的必要資料
遺囑 — 檢查是否有加拿大遺囑(許多雙重司法管轄區居民為每個國家訂立獨立遺囑)
最後已知的加拿大地址 — 銀行及無人認領財產搜尋所需
報稅表(T1) — 加拿大報稅表列出收入來源、RRSP供款及金融機構
銀行帳單、存摺或支票簿 — 任何顯示加拿大金融機構的記錄
物業業權文件或市政稅單
RRSP/TFSA/RRIF帳單
加拿大護照或永久居民卡
保險保單文件

第二步:免費網上搜尋

第三步:聘請專業人士

  • 加拿大遺產律師:在大部分資產所在省份聘請律師。律師可申請遺產認證、與銀行聯絡及處理物業轉讓。
  • 香港律師:如先人在香港亦有資產,可能需要香港律師取得香港遺產承辦書,並安排文件的認證/公證以在加拿大使用。
  • 加拿大會計師:熟悉跨境遺產的註冊會計師可準備先人的最終加拿大報稅表(T1)、遺產信託報稅表(T3),並取得CRA清稅證書。
  • 授權書:如無法前往加拿大,考慮授予在加拿大的可信任人士(或律師)授權書,代為到銀行及簽署文件。

第四步:時間表概覽

任務典型時間估計費用(加元)
取得香港遺產承辦書2至6個月(在港辦理)香港費用
聘請加拿大律師1至2週初次諮詢:$300至$500
申請加拿大遺產認證6至16週$2,000至$8,000 + 認證費
銀行帳戶回收(每間銀行)2至6週極少費用
RRSP/RRIF/TFSA索償4至8週無直接費用
CPP遺屬福利申請6至12週無費用
無人認領結餘索償6至8週無費用
物業轉讓4至12週$1,500至$5,000
最終報稅及CRA清稅證書3至9個月$1,000至$3,000
合計(典型)8至24個月$5,000至$20,000+

CONCEPT ONLY僅為概念

AssetCadet Is a Service ConceptAssetCadet 是一個服務概念

AssetCadet is not an operating service. This guide is published for free as a public resource. If you are interested in building this service together, contact Mr Ko.AssetCadet 並非營運中的服務。本指南作為公共資源免費發佈。如果您有興趣一起打造此服務,請聯絡高先生。

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