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Saskatchewan Property Tax Rates

Confirmed residential mill rates for the 2 Saskatchewan municipalities we track, how the province's assessment and tax-class system works, key dates, and how each city compares.

Residential average
13.05
mills · 1.31% · 2 cities
Lowest rate
12.60
Saskatoon
Highest rate
13.50
Regina
Municipalities
2
tracked residential rates

How property tax works in Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan taxes a percentage of value by class, with residential assessed at 80%. SAMA values most properties while Saskatoon, Regina and Swift Current run their own, on a four-year revaluation cycle.

SAMA values most properties; Saskatoon, Regina and Swift Current run their own. A province-wide revaluation happens every four years. 2025 was a revaluation year (base date Jan 1, 2023); the next is 2029. Your annual municipal tax is assessed value × mill rate ÷ 1,000. Use the True Cost Calculator to estimate a specific property.

Saskatchewan property tax rates by city

Confirmed residential mill rates, lowest to highest. The percentage is the rate as a share of assessed value. Linked cities have a full breakdown, 10-year trend, and a forward projection.

CityMill rate% of valueYoYYear
Saskatoon12.601.26%2025
Regina13.501.35%2025

Rates with a year badge are confirmed for that year; others reflect the most recent confirmed bylaw, updated as municipalities finalize new rates. The average is taken across the 2 Saskatchewan municipalities we currently track and will broaden as more are added. Always verify with the municipality before making financial decisions.

Saskatchewan key dates

Assessment and payment timing is set locally, but the Saskatchewan cycle generally follows this pattern.

WhenWhat happens
2025, then 2029Four-year revaluation cycle — All assessed values reset on the cycle. Between cycles, only changed properties are reassessed.
Spring (varies)Assessment notices mailed — Mailed by your municipality, often in spring; in a revaluation year every owner gets one.
Date on noticeBoard of Revision appeal deadline — Tied to the open roll period and printed on your notice (a fee applies). Saskatoon's 2025 deadline was late March.
VariesProperty tax due — Set by your municipality.

See the full breakdown on the Key Dates page.

Saskatchewan property tax FAQ

What is the average property tax rate in Saskatchewan?
Across the 2 Saskatchewan municipalities we track, the average residential mill rate is about 13.05, or roughly 1.31% of assessed value. Rates range from 12.60 in Saskatoon to 13.50 in Regina.
Which Saskatchewan city has the lowest property tax?
Of the municipalities we track, Saskatoon has the lowest residential rate at 12.60 mills, followed by Regina at 13.50.
How are property taxes assessed in Saskatchewan?
Saskatchewan taxes a percentage of value by class, with residential assessed at 80%. SAMA values most properties while Saskatoon, Regina and Swift Current run their own, on a four-year revaluation cycle.
When are Saskatchewan property taxes due?
Saskatchewan property taxes are set by each municipality, with dates printed on your notice. Assessment complaint or appeal deadlines fall around Date on notice. Exact dates are printed on your assessment or tax notice.

More property tax data

Property tax in other provinces and territories: Alberta · British Columbia · Manitoba · Nova Scotia · Northwest Territories · Ontario · Yukon · Quebec · New Brunswick · Newfoundland and Labrador · Prince Edward Island · Nunavut.

Data reflects confirmed municipal tax bylaws; 2026 rates are added as each municipality finalizes them. Always verify current rates with the relevant municipality before making financial decisions. MillRate.ca aggregates publicly available municipal property tax rates for information only and is not affiliated with any municipality or assessment authority.