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Buying Property on Leased First Nations or Crown Land in Ontario

Buying on leased First Nations or Crown land in Ontario? Understand the legal differences, financing challenges, and what to review before making an offer.

Real Estate5 min readTSLBy the Treadstone Law team · OntarioUpdated 2026-06
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Key takeaways
  • How this works First Nations reserve land in Canada is federal Crown land held in trust by the Crown for First Nations communities.
  • How Crown land leases work in Ontario Provincial Crown land in Ontario is managed by the province under the Public Lands Act (named generally here).
  • Across both scenarios, financing is the issue buyers most often underestimate.

You've found a cottage or home you love — maybe a waterfront lot in Northern Ontario or a property near a First Nations community — and then you learn it sits on leased land. The listing price looks attractive, the location is perfect, and now you're wondering what "leased land" actually means for you as a buyer. The short answer: it depends entirely on which type of leased land you're looking at, because two very different legal frameworks apply.

In Ontario, buyers most commonly encounter two distinct situations: property on First Nations reserve land (governed primarily by federal law) and property on provincial Crown land held under a lease or licence of occupation from the Ontario government. These are not the same thing, and they carry very different risks, rights, and restrictions. Treating them interchangeably is a common — and potentially costly — mistake.

This article walks through each scenario separately. In both cases the risks are real and the legal analysis is genuinely complicated — a standard Ontario real estate lawyer reviewing a typical freehold purchase may not have the specialized experience these transactions require. Both scenarios are areas where specialist legal advice is not optional; it is essential before you sign anything. Treadstone Law can help you understand the framework and review your documents, and we will refer you to lawyers with deep First Nations land experience where the situation calls for it.

Scenario 1: Property on First Nations (Reserve) Land

How this works

First Nations reserve land in Canada is federal Crown land held in trust by the Crown for First Nations communities. It is not provincial land and is not governed by Ontario's land titles legislation. The primary federal statute governing reserve lands (the Indian Act, which we name generally here) creates a system of land rights that is fundamentally different from anything most Ontario buyers have encountered. A separate federal framework — the First Nations Land Management Act — allows some First Nations to opt out of Indian Act land provisions and manage their own lands under a land code; if that applies, the rules may differ again.

Within this system, band members may be allotted use rights to specific parcels, sometimes evidenced by a Certificate of Possession. Alternatively, the Band Council may grant leasehold interests to non-band members, allowing someone to occupy and use a parcel for a defined period. What looks like a "sale" from the outside is typically an assignment of that leasehold or an agreement to occupy — not a transfer of land ownership in the conventional sense.

What buyers need to know

Non-band members generally cannot hold a fee simple (outright ownership) interest in reserve land. What you may actually be purchasing is a leasehold interest or a licence that the band has authorized, subject to conditions set by the Band Council. Critically, any assignment of that interest to you will typically require Band Council approval — and there is no guarantee that approval will be granted, or that it will be granted on the timeline you need to close.

Financing is one of the most serious practical obstacles. Most institutional lenders — banks and credit unions alike — will not issue a conventional mortgage on a leasehold interest in reserve land because they cannot register and enforce a mortgage in the way they can on freehold title. Some lenders with experience in First Nations communities have developed specialized products, but they are far from standard. Title insurance is also very limited in this context; most title insurers will not issue a standard residential policy on reserve land.

Key risks

Scenario 2: Property on Provincial Crown Land (Lease or Licence of Occupation)

How Crown land leases work in Ontario

Provincial Crown land in Ontario is managed by the province under the Public Lands Act (named generally here). In many parts of Northern and Central Ontario, cottagers and other users hold a lease or licence of occupation issued by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (MNRF) rather than owning the land outright. This arrangement is common for lakefront cottage lots that were never converted to freehold. The province owns the land; you hold a lease giving you the right to occupy and use it.

Crown land leases can be long-term — some run for decades — and the province has, from time to time, offered programs allowing leaseholders to convert their leasehold to freehold title by purchasing the land outright. As of writing, the availability, terms, and cost of any such conversion program should be verified directly with MNRF, as these programs change and eligibility depends on the specific parcel.

What buyers need to know

When you buy a property on Crown land, you are acquiring the lease — not land title. The Crown remains the landowner and the lease terms govern what you can do on the land: what you can build, how you can use it, whether you can sublet, and under what conditions your lease can be terminated. Assignment of the lease to a buyer requires written consent from the province; your real estate transaction cannot complete without it, and the process takes time. Build sufficient time into your agreement of purchase and sale for the provincial consent process, and make the transaction conditional on receiving that consent in acceptable form.

Renewal of a Crown land lease is not automatic. When the term expires, the province has discretion over whether to renew, on what terms, and at what rent. Review the remaining term carefully before you make an offer. A lease with ten years remaining is a very different proposition from one with forty. Also read the use restrictions closely — Crown land leases routinely limit what you can build, whether you can operate a business from the property, and how many people can stay there at once.

Key risks for Crown land lease buyers

Financing challenges on leased land

Across both scenarios, financing is the issue buyers most often underestimate. Most conventional lenders require a registered mortgage on a recognized land interest that they can enforce on default. A leasehold interest — whether on reserve land or Crown land — does not give them that in the standard way. Some credit unions serving cottage-country or First Nations communities have developed leasehold mortgage products, and some lenders will advance funds secured against the structure itself (a chattel loan), but these products carry higher rates and shorter amortization periods than a conventional mortgage. The CMHC insured-mortgage programs that most first-time buyers rely on are generally not available for leasehold interests. As of writing, verify current lending products directly with lenders who specialize in leased-land financing before you count on any particular financing structure — and do this before you make your offer, not during the financing condition period.

This article is general information, not legal advice. Reading it does not create a lawyer-client relationship. Ontario laws, tax rates, and government programs change, and how the law applies depends on your specific facts. For advice about your situation, speak with a licensed Ontario lawyer. Treadstone Law is licensed by the Law Society of Ontario — reach us at 1-844-900-1070 or start a file online.

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