Mont-Tremblant, February 14, 2026

2026 property taxes: inequity in real numbers

Following an access to information request submitted to the Ville de Mont-Tremblant which was initially accepted and then rejected, we submitted a new request to the MRC des Laurentides. The latter provided Les Amis with the requested documents, including Mont-Tremblant’s 2023 and 2026 triennial assessment rolls.

Although further information will be published in a future newsletter, the data below for 8 residential and 8 commercial properties illustrate the impact of the new adjusted tax rate on the 2026 tax bill for certain residents and businesses compared to 2025:

Marked increases in tax bills (residential examples): Rue Labelle (+96%), Rue Limoges (+65%), Chemin Killarney (+33%), Rue Saint-Louis (+27%), Chemin du Village (+22%), Rue Pinoteau (+21%), Chemin Carol (+16%), Chemin Claude-Lefebvre (+10%). Note: These figures represent individual properties, not a street average.

Tax bill decreases (commercial examples): La Maison du Spaghetti (-45%), RONA (-25%), SAQ (Saint-Jovite, -25%), Petro-Canada (Montée Ryan, -24%), Maxi (-23%), Uniprix (-22%), Shell (Saint-Jovite, -20%), St-Hubert (-15%).

Click here to view your 2026 tax assessment. If your assessment does not reflect reality, submit an official request for review before May 1st.

About Les Amis de Mont-Tremblant
Our mandate is to ensure the harmonious real estate development of the region while maintaining transparency and community acceptability.

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