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Naming an Out-of-Province or Non-Resident Executor in Ontario: What to Know

Can a non-resident or out-of-province executor administer an Ontario estate? Learn the bond requirement, tax complications, and practical alternatives.

Wills & Estates5 min readTSLBy the Treadstone Law team · OntarioUpdated 2026-06
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Key takeaways
  • There is no statutory requirement that an executor be resident in Ontario or even in Canada.
  • Under Ontario's Estates Act, when the court grants a Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee (probate), it can require the executor to post a bond — a form of financial security…
  • When the estate includes assets with unrealized capital gains — and most estates do — the Canada Revenue Agency's rules around non-resident executors come into play.

Families are spread across the country — and across the world. It is entirely natural to want to name a trusted daughter who lives in British Columbia, a son who settled in the United States, or a lifelong friend who retired to Portugal as the executor of your Ontario estate. Ontario law does not prohibit this, but it creates real complications that testators and their families often do not anticipate.

Understanding the rules around non-resident executors in Ontario before you finalize your will lets you make an informed choice — and, if you do name someone abroad, draft provisions that reduce the burden on them and the estate.

The Legal Basics: Ontario Has No Residency Requirement for Executors

There is no statutory requirement that an executor be resident in Ontario or even in Canada. Anyone with legal capacity can be named as executor, regardless of where they live.

However, this is where the easy part ends. The practical and legal complications multiply significantly when the executor lives outside Ontario.

The Bond Requirement

Under Ontario's Estates Act, when the court grants a Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee (probate), it can require the executor to post a bond — a form of financial security that protects the estate and beneficiaries in case the executor mismanages or absconds with estate assets.

Ontario courts routinely require bonds from non-resident executors. The bond amount is typically calculated as a multiple of the estate value and must be issued by a licensed surety company. Bond premiums cost money — and that money comes from the estate.

The bond requirement can be waived by the will. If you explicitly state in your will that no bond is required of your executor, even if non-resident, the court will generally respect this direction. This is a critical drafting step if you intend to name an out-of-province or international executor.

Without a bond waiver clause, the executor faces significant upfront costs and administrative hurdles before they can even begin the real work of the estate.

Tax Complications When the Executor Is a Non-Resident of Canada

This is where things become most serious. When the estate includes assets with unrealized capital gains — and most estates do — the Canada Revenue Agency's rules around non-resident executors come into play.

CRA withholding obligations

A non-resident executor of a Canadian estate may be required to withhold and remit tax on certain estate distributions, particularly where the estate earns income. Navigating the CRA's requirements as a non-resident is complex and can easily result in errors.

Risk of double taxation

In some cross-border situations, the same assets may be subject to tax in Canada and in the executor's country of residence or citizenship. A Canadian resident who dies owning Canadian assets while the executor is a US person, for example, can create a filing and withholding matrix that requires both Canadian and foreign tax specialists.

Clearance Certificate delays

Getting a CRA Clearance Certificate — the essential document that protects the executor from personal liability for unpaid Canadian taxes — may be more complex for a non-resident executor, requiring more documentation and sometimes longer processing times.

Practical Challenges of a Geographically Distant Executor

Beyond the legal technicalities, there are day-to-day practicalities:

Options to Consider

Name an Ontario resident as executor or co-executor

The simplest solution. If you have a trusted person in Ontario, name them as executor with the non-resident person as an alternate (if the Ontario-based executor predeceases you or cannot act). Alternatively, name the two as co-executors — though co-executor complications then apply.

Name the non-resident with an Ontario-based estate lawyer as agent

An executor can delegate certain administrative tasks to a local lawyer or agent, while retaining the ultimate authority. This can be specified in the will or arranged after death. It does not eliminate the bond requirement but makes the day-to-day administration far more manageable.

Include a bond waiver in the will

If you are determined to name a non-resident executor, at minimum include an explicit bond waiver clause so they are not required to post security. Your Ontario estate lawyer can draft this.

Consider a trust company

If your estate is large or complex and you have no ideal Ontario-based individual, a licensed trust company operating in Ontario sidesteps all the non-residency complications entirely. They are by definition Ontario-present and locally regulated.

US Executors: A Special Note

Naming a US citizen or US resident as executor of a Canadian estate — particularly one that owns US assets or where the deceased was a Canadian with US ties — introduces cross-border estate planning complexity of a different order. US estate tax rules, RRSP treatment, and the Canada-US Tax Convention all interact in ways that require specialist advice on both sides of the border. If your executor is a US person, you should consult both a Canadian and a US estate planning professional.

Frequently asked questions

Will an Ontario court refuse to grant probate to a non-resident executor?

No. Ontario courts will grant probate to a non-resident executor, but will typically require a bond unless the will waives it. Probate is not refused on residency grounds alone.

Does the executor need to be in Ontario to deal with Ontario real estate?

In practice, yes — someone with signing authority needs to be available to sign documents at a lawyer's office. A non-resident executor can be present virtually for some steps and can authorize a local agent for others, but should be prepared for some trips or use of a power of attorney.

My child lives in another Canadian province — is this the same as living in another country?

Similar concerns apply regarding bond requirements and communication logistics, but tax complications are generally less severe for a co-executor who is a Canadian resident in another province, compared to a non-resident of Canada entirely.

Can I change my executor nomination after the will is signed?

Yes. Your will remains revocable until death. If your named executor moves to another country after you sign your will, review the nomination and update if appropriate.

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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