You inherited a home in Ontario. Now you have to empty it.
Most heirs walk into this with no idea what it costs. They guess low, blow through the budget, and end up making rushed decisions in week three.
This guide gives you the real numbers, the Ontario-specific tax rules, and the local resources you need to plan instead of react.
Probate first, cleanout second
When someone dies in Ontario, their estate may need to go through probate. The provincial Estate Administration Tax applies to estates valued over $50,000, charged at $15 for every $1,000 of estate value above that threshold (a rate of 1.5%), according to the official Government of Ontario Estate Administration Tax page.
In practice, that means a $500,000 estate owes $6,750 in probate fees. A $1 million estate owes $14,250.
Ontario’s probate fees are currently the highest in Canada.
Here is how the Estate Administration Tax breaks down:
| Estate Value | Tax Rate (since 2020) | Tax Owed (example) |
|---|---|---|
| First $50,000 | $0 (exempt) | $0 |
| $50,001 to $500,000 | $15 per $1,000 | On a $500K estate: $6,750 |
| $500,001 to $1,000,000 | $15 per $1,000 | On a $1M estate: $14,250 |
| Over $1,000,000 | $15 per $1,000 | On a $2M estate: $29,250 |
Source: Government of Ontario Estate Administration Tax Act, 1998.
The full probate process in Ontario typically takes 8 to 12 months from application to final settlement, according to multiple Ontario estate law firms. The court certificate alone takes 6 to 8 weeks at most locations, and up to 5 months in busy registries like Toronto.
You can usually start the cleanout once probate is granted. Talk to the estate lawyer first if there is any chance of a will dispute.
What an estate cleanout actually costs in Ontario
The price depends on volume, not square footage.
A 2,000 sq ft home with sparse furniture costs less than a 1,200 sq ft bungalow packed to the ceiling. Junk haulers price by truck loads, not floor plans.
Here is what you should expect to pay across Ontario in 2026:
| Property Type | Typical Cost (CAD) | Truckloads |
|---|---|---|
| Toronto or GTA condo | $500 to $1,500 | 1 |
| Hamilton bungalow or starter home | $1,500 to $3,500 | 2 to 3 |
| Standard Ontario 3 bedroom home | $3,000 to $6,000 | 3 to 4 |
| Large home or hoarding cleanout | $7,000 to $25,000 | 5 or more |
Costs vary by region. Toronto and the GTA run on the higher end due to labour and disposal fees. Smaller Ontario cities like London, Kingston, and Sudbury run lower.
DIY vs hiring pros: the Ontario math
Most heirs assume DIY saves money. The math says otherwise.
Tipping fees vary significantly across Ontario regions. Hamilton charges $130 per tonne, Niagara charges $125 per tonne, and Halton charges $194 per tonne, according to the Niagara Region 2024 municipal comparison report.
Here is a typical 3 bedroom cleanout, both ways:
| Cost Item | DIY Approach | Hiring Pros |
|---|---|---|
| Truck rental (3 days, GTA) | $300 to $500 | $0 |
| Hamilton landfill tipping fee | $130 per tonne | Included |
| Niagara Region tipping fee | $125 per tonne | Included |
| Halton Region tipping fee | $194 per tonne | Included |
| Labour | Your weekend (or two) | Included |
| Mattress disposal fees | Extra per item | Included |
| Total time | 2 to 4 weekends | 1 day |
| Total out of pocket | $700 to $1,400 plus your time | $600 to $900 |
DIY makes sense for a small condo with light contents. For a packed family home, you usually break even at best.
The hidden cost most people miss is time. Holding costs on an empty Ontario home (mortgage, property tax, insurance, utilities) typically run $2,500 to $4,000 per month. Every weekend you spend hauling boxes is another week of carrying costs on a property nobody lives in.
If you live more than an hour from the property, hire pros. The math stops being close.
What is actually worth selling
Most stuff in a parent’s home is not worth what they paid for it. Reality check time.
| Worth Appraising | Worth Donating | Just Toss It |
|---|---|---|
| Sterling silver and gold jewelry | Furniture in good condition | Old mattresses and box springs |
| Original Canadian artwork (signed) | Working appliances | Particle board furniture |
| Coin and stamp collections | Books and kitchenware | Mass produced 80s and 90s decor |
| Vintage tools and registered firearms | Clothing in wearable shape | Stained, broken, or missing parts |
| Mid century furniture | Holiday decorations | Old electronics and CRT TVs |
| Real wood antique pieces | Sporting goods | Anything stored in a damp basement |
A useful rule from the National Association of Productivity and Organizing Professionals: 80% of items we keep are never used.
That stat applies double to estates. Most of what fills the house has no resale market. Pricing it, photographing it, and listing it costs you more in time than it returns in cash.
Photograph anything that looks remotely valuable before you decide. Then move on.
The CRA donation tax angle
The Canada Revenue Agency only accepts donation receipts from registered charities, and the receipt must reflect fair market value at the time of donation, not original purchase price. The official CRA guidance on gifts in kind spells out the rules.
Here is how the CRA value thresholds work:
| Donation Value (CAD) | CRA Requirement |
|---|---|
| Under $1,000 | Charity staff or someone qualified can determine fair market value |
| Over $1,000 | CRA strongly recommends a third-party professional appraisal |
| No receipt issued | If the charity cannot determine fair market value |
Source: Canada Revenue Agency guidance on gifts in kind.
Ontario charities that pick up furniture and household items include Habitat for Humanity ReStore, Salvation Army Thrift Store, Diabetes Canada Declutter, and Furniture Bank in Toronto. Book pickups two to three weeks ahead. Spring and fall fill up fast.
One catch worth knowing: items must be in good usable condition. Stained couches, broken lamps, and chipped dishes get refused. Charities cannot afford to repair items before reselling them.
If something gets refused, it heads to the curb. Plan for some rejection.
On your final tax return, a donation tax credit can offset some of the income tax bill on the estate. The federal credit is 15% on the first $200 and 29% above that. Ontario adds another 5.05% on the first $200 and 11.16% above. That works out to roughly 20% to 40% back in tax credits depending on the donation size.
Estate sales and Ontario liquidators
If the home has $10,000 or more in sellable contents, an estate sale company might be worth it.
They handle everything: pricing, displaying, advertising, running the sale, and dealing with shoppers. You hand over keys and pick up a cheque.
The catch is commission. Ontario estate sale companies typically charge 30% to 40% of gross sales. Auction houses (Waddington’s in Toronto, Cowley Abbott, Ritchies) take 15% to 25% plus a buyer’s premium.
| Service Type | Typical Commission | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Estate sale company (Ontario) | 30 to 40% | $10K+ in contents |
| Toronto auction house | 15 to 25% plus buyer premium | High value individual pieces |
| Consignment shop | 40 to 60% | Designer items, name brand furniture |
| Facebook Marketplace or Kijiji | Listing fees only | Patient sellers, mid value items |
Estate sales typically take 4 to 6 weeks to organize. Skip this route if you are on a tight timeline or if the contents look modest. The commission eats most of the proceeds when sales are small.
Why decluttering before selling actually pays in Ontario
If you are clearing the home to sell, the cleanout is not just an expense. It is an investment.
The 2025 NAR Profile of Home Staging found that 91% of agents recommend decluttering as their top pre-listing step. Of those agents, 29% reported a 1% to 10% bump in offer price after decluttering. Consumer Reports estimates the typical return on investment from decluttering and deep cleaning at 3% to 5% of sale price.
The Ontario housing market amplifies that return. The average GTA home sale price runs north of $1 million. Even a small percentage gain represents real money.
Run the numbers on an $800,000 Ontario home:
| Scenario | Cleanout Cost | Sale Price | Net Return |
|---|---|---|---|
| List home as is | $0 | $800,000 | Baseline |
| Declutter (3% gain) | $1,500 | $824,000 | +$22,500 |
| Declutter (5% gain) | $1,500 | $840,000 | +$38,500 |
Decluttered homes also sell faster. Faster sales mean fewer months of holding costs, which compounds the savings.
If you are in Hamilton or the Greater Toronto Area and want this handled in a single day, services like 1 Day Junk handle estate cleanouts on tight timelines so the home can hit the market faster.
A sample budget for a 3 bedroom Ontario estate cleanout
Here is what a realistic budget looks like for a typical inherited Ontario home with average contents:
| Line Item | Cost (CAD) |
|---|---|
| Initial walkthrough and inventory | $0 to $300 |
| Boxes, bins, supplies | $100 |
| Donation pickup tips and gas | $50 to $100 |
| Junk removal service | $600 to $1,200 |
| Deep cleaning post cleanout | $300 to $500 |
| Total realistic budget | $1,050 to $2,200 |
Hoarding situations or homes with biohazards run $5,000 to $25,000. If you walk in and see floor to ceiling boxes or pet damage, get specialized quotes immediately.
A timeline that keeps the budget under control
Rushed cleanouts cost more. Planned ones cost less.
| Week | Action |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | Walkthrough, photograph valuables, locate the will and key documents |
| Week 2 | Get appraisals, contact estate sale companies, file probate application |
| Weeks 3 to 4 | Family takes what they want, run estate sale if applicable |
| Week 5 | Schedule donation pickups (Habitat ReStore, Diabetes Canada) |
| Week 6 | Junk removal clears the rest |
| Week 7 | Deep clean, ready to list |
Remember that you typically cannot sell the property until probate is granted. Use the waiting period for sorting, photographing, and family discussions. That way you are ready to move quickly once the certificate arrives.
The bottom line for Ontario heirs
Estate cleanouts in Ontario cost money no matter how you handle them, and probate fees take their slice on top.
The cheapest approach is the planned one. Walk through, photograph, sort, and decide before you start hauling. Get three quotes for any service you hire. Use donations to offset some cost through CRA tax receipts. Hire pros when the math says your time is worth more than the labour savings.
And if you are clearing the home to sell in Ontario’s market, treat the cleanout as a small investment in a much bigger return. A 3% to 5% bump on the sale price covers the cleanout cost ten to twenty times over.
Plan it like a project, not an emergency. The wallet will thank you.



