租房买房买生意上iU91
查看: 3570|回复: 11
打印 上一主题 下一主题

地税要狂涨了!

[复制链接]   [推荐给好友]
跳转到指定楼层
楼主
发表于 2010-9-16 10:17 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式
看看今天的报纸或新闻吧。

地产价格评估明年平均上涨23.5%。
查了一下我的房子,政府明年的评估居然比2007年的高出了40%。
大家可以在政府网站上查看一下自己房子的政府最新估值:
http://evalweb.cum.qc.ca/Role2011actualise/recherche.asp
2#
发表于 2010-9-16 10:36 | 只看该作者
你住哪个区,涨那么高。
我看DOVAL 涨了60%。。但是一看SINGLE HOUSE的平均房价也就只有19.1万。。

我感觉ST-LAURENT涨的要40%吧。结果人家只涨24.4%。
看看网上的BOIS FRANC 的房子要价比新评的估价还要大大的高出不少。。。

其它地区其实不算多。。
有的卖价比估价高,有的比估价低的。。
参差不齐。。

地税怎么MATCH还没说呢。别急。。
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

3#
发表于 2010-9-16 11:22 | 只看该作者
my building increased 50% of value in ville marie. That means they will take away $3043 more from me in 2011 and goes on and on.
Shitty goverment. REvolution and kick their ass!!!!!
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

4#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-9-16 18:25 | 只看该作者
不过报纸上也写了,地税的增幅不会像政府估值的增幅那么大。
具体只能看明年的地税单了。
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

5#
发表于 2010-9-16 20:22 | 只看该作者
http://evalweb.cum.qc.ca/Role2011actualise/recherche.asp

用这个查吧,真的疯涨。 现在是任人宰割,要多少都得给。
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

6#
发表于 2010-9-16 20:30 | 只看该作者
让你们说的,够吓人的!
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

7#
发表于 2010-9-16 21:17 | 只看该作者
跳高评估价,再多收地税,这是政府的惯用伎俩。这几个City调完了,na个City....
这次大家讨论的,到底是哪个,或者那些City呀?
sponsored by http://[url=\"http://www.asia-bride.com.\"]www.asia-bride.com.[/url]
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

8#
发表于 2010-9-16 21:52 | 只看该作者

Will taxes match eye-popping valuations?

MONTREAL - Smoking-hot real-estate markets for revenue properties in the boroughs of Plateau Mont Royal and the Sud Ouest have pushed both neighbourhoods to the top of the tax assessment heap in the city of Montreal.
That good news for potential sellers of those properties - and potentially bad news for those expecting a tax bill from the city of Montreal - is contained in the assessment roll for Montreal Island for 2011-2013, which was unveiled yesterday.
Assessments for all types of properties - commercial, industrial and residential - increased across the island by an average of 22.4 per cent compared with the roll that covered 2007-2010.
The average increase in property values for the city of Montreal was 23.5 per cent, while the average for its 15 suburbs was 21.58 per cent.
The suburban average increase is skewed by the whopping 59.9-per-cent assessment increase on Dorval Island. A municipality containing all of 58 summer residences, it is so tiny an arrow indicating a dot on the south shore of Montreal Island had to be edited onto the map during yesterday's presentation of the roll just to show where it is.
With Dorval Island removed from the equation, the average assessment increase for the suburbs is 18.8 per cent. The largest assessment jump occurred in Montreal East (24.6 per cent), closely followed by the cities of Ste. Anne de Bellevue and Montreal West, both at 23 per cent.
The lowest average assessment increase (11.2 per cent) occurred in Côte St. Luc.
The assessment roll, while handy for those interested in seeing what their home is worth on the real-estate market, is also used by Montreal Island's 16 municipalities as part of a formula to levy taxes needed for their annual budgets.
Normally, the rule of thumb is that a property owner whose assessment increase is above the average in his or her municipality can expect to see some kind of tax hike, while those below the average will pay the same or enjoy a decrease.
But the task of budget making, which essentially involves coming up with a tax rate levied on every $100 of evaluation to cover city expenses but not bankrupt taxpayers (or worse, make them move to another municipality with lower taxes), can be nuanced in several ways.
One option is to ask the province, which sets the rules of the game when it comes to setting assessment rolls, to extend the roll's lifespan to allow necessary tax increases to be spread over a longer period of time.
That's what happened in 2007 when "unprecedented" assessment hikes - residential assessments increased by 47.4 per cent - compelled Quebec to extend the roll's duration to four years from three. Montreal also has the power, thanks to special provincial legislation, to levy taxes on other sources of revenue. It used that power last year to slap a tax on downtown parking lots and it could, if it wanted, revive a municipal entertainment tax.
Montreal city hall was keeping mum yesterday on the new assessment roll's impact on the 2011 budget, other than to note that an assessment increase doesn't necessarily mean a tax hike of the same magnitude.
This may come as good news to property owners in Plateau Mont Royal (which saw its overall assessment increase by 34.7 per cent, the highest on the island) and the borough of Sud Ouest, where the average increase was 30.6 per cent.
But much in the same way the overall average increase for the suburbs was skewed by the summer residences on Dorval Island, the Plateau and Sud Ouest saw their average increase bumped up by a flurry of real-estate transactions involving multi-unit residential rental properties.
In the Plateau, those properties saw their assessments increase by 41 per cent; in the Sud Ouest, assessments on the same category of properties increased by an average of 35 per cent. Yet while the average price of a single family home in the Plateau is $500,000, the same sort of dwelling in the Sud Ouest is selling for an average of $291,000.
For Pierre Lampron of Vision Montreal, the official opposition at Montreal city hall, the overall increase in residential property values could deter the kind of long-term taxpayers Montreal needs - young families - from settling in the city.
"These new assessments are creating extra pressure (on the city) to help families - especially young families - live in Montreal," Lampron said.
"These are market values; they can't be debated.
"And this roll will have to be extended (beyond three years) if we don't want people to open their tax bills and have them explode in their face."
Peter McQueen of Projet Montréal said the assessment hikes in the Plateau and Sud Ouest would hit renters in the boroughs because any tax hike for revenue property owners would be passed along to leaseholders.
"This situation is worsened by the fact the Tremblay administration already raised taxes at the beginning of the year," he said.
"If they'd put tolls (on roads leading into Montreal), increased the gas tax or increased parking taxes across all of Montreal, the pressures on vulnerable people in the Plateau and the Sud Ouest wouldn't be as bad."
Both McQueen and Lampron served on a special committee formed to find ways to eliminate a $400-million shortfall anticipated for the 2011 budget.


Read more: http://www.montrealgazette.com/b ... .html#ixzz0zkdg7zY8
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

9#
发表于 2010-9-16 22:45 | 只看该作者

2011 montreal 房价必跌

2011 montreal 房价必跌,大家尽快在之前卖屋撤出montreal.当你收到巨额税单就晚了!:mad::p
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

10#
发表于 2010-9-17 02:14 | 只看该作者
在这里你能逃到哪去啊? 为了不交税卖房子? 为了不交税就不工作? 为了不交税不买东西?

搬到哪还不得交地税? 美国的地税也很狠的. 除非搬回国享受超高房价.
回复 支持 反对

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 免费注册

本版积分规则

Copyright © 1999 - 2024 by Sinoquebec Media Inc. All Rights Reserved 未经许可不得摘抄  |  GMT-5, 2024-12-18 03:18 , Processed in 0.068101 second(s), 39 queries .