Confirmed residential mill rates for the Yukon municipalities we track, how the province's assessment and tax-class system works, key dates, and how each city compares.
Property in Yukon is assessed under territorial legislation, with Whitehorse and other municipalities billing locally and the territory handling rural areas.
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.
| City | Mill rate | % of value | YoY | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whitehorse | 11.23 | 1.12% | +0.47 | 2025 |
Rates with a year badge are confirmed for that year; others reflect the most recent confirmed bylaw, updated as municipalities finalize new rates. We currently track Whitehorse; more Yukon municipalities will be added over time. Always verify with the municipality before making financial decisions.
Assessment and payment timing is set locally, but the Yukon cycle generally follows this pattern.
| When | What happens |
|---|---|
| Date on notice | Assessment notice issued — Review your assessed value when the notice arrives. |
| Date on notice | Appeal deadline — The appeal window is printed on your notice. Confirm with your municipal or territorial taxation office. |
| ~Early July (Whitehorse) | Property tax due — Set locally; Whitehorse is typically early July. |
See the full breakdown on the Key Dates page.
Property tax in other provinces and territories: Alberta · British Columbia · Manitoba · Nova Scotia · Northwest Territories · Ontario · Saskatchewan · 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.