
Property tax notices for 2025 were mailed out this week. Most property owners will notice an increase in taxation. Two key factors driving this year’s tax increases are Revaluation and the 2025 Budget.
In January, Prince Albert City Council approved an $8.5 million increase to the 2025 budget. Property tax is the main source of funding for the City budget, and this year’s approved tax tool changes include a combination of mill rate and base tax increases, applied as follows:
- A 5.43% mill rate increase for residential
- $320 base tax increase for all residential properties
- $118 base tax per unit for multi-residential properties
- Tiered base tax increases for commercial properties
A portion of the property tax impact is due to the budget increase and the other is due to revaluation. Not all properties saw a tax increase as a result of revaluation.
1. Revaluation Year
2025 is a province-wide revaluation year. Provincial legislation requires that the assessed value of all properties within Saskatchewan be updated every four years. Property values change over time due to changing market conditions, so it is important that the data that is available reflects these changes. Property assessments were updated based on market conditions as of January 1, 2023, using verified sales data from January 2019 to December 2022.
As a result of revaluation many properties in Prince Albert were assessed higher and since the value of your property is one factor that influences your property tax rates, revaluation has impacted property taxes. In some cases, properties have changed in value by a considerable amount.
Certain neighbourhoods in Prince Albert are in much higher demand than others which is reflected in the market value of these properties. These strong sales drive up assessed value which is one factor that then translates into an increase in property taxes. This is the nature of the property tax system which is designed to reflect the value of the home.
Not all properties changed equally. Your tax increase depends on how your assessment changed compared to others in the city. It is estimated that properties that saw a tax increase greater than approximately $500 were impacted by both the budget increase and revaluation changes.
Assessment Notices were mailed in January 2025. For more information about the revaluation process and how assessments are calculated, please visit www.citypa.ca/revaluation.
2. Budget Increase
For properties that didn’t see a significant change in assessment, the tax increase is tied to the City’s $8.5 million budget increase approved earlier this year. The increase addresses rising operational costs for essential services, including police, fire protection, salaries, road maintenance, and facility upkeep.
The tax tools used in 2025 to raise the city's budget are a combination of a residential 5.43% mill rate increase and a base tax increase of $320 for residential properties and $118 for multi-residential properties, with tiered rates for commercial properties.
To distribute the tax burden more evenly across properties, Council approved increases to the base tax. This approach was selected due to Prince Albert’s unique housing market, where mid-and-lower valued homes saw relatively smaller increases in assessed value. A base tax is a flat fee added to the municipal portion of each tax bill. An increase to the base tax reflects the philosophy that all properties benefit equally from essential services (such as fire, police, roads, etc) regardless of the assessed value of the property.
Base taxes address the market shift and its dramatic impacts on higher-valued homes in Prince Albert. Higher-valued properties will still pay a larger proportion of taxes this year, as the system is designed, but not to the same extent as a mill rate increase alone.
It is estimated that properties that saw an increase of approximately $400 or lower, were not impacted by revaluation changes.
Learn more:
Assessment: https://www.citypa.ca/en/living-in-our-community/assessing-property-value.aspx
Revaluation: https://www.citypa.ca/en/living-in-our-community/revaluation.aspx
Property Tax Rates: https://www.citypa.ca/en/living-in-our-community/tax-rates.aspx
For more information, contact:
Mayor Bill Powalinsky
306.953.4300
Ramona Fauchoux
306.953.4884