Buying a home is the largest financial decision most Canadians will ever make — and one of the most complex. Between saving for a down payment, qualifying for a mortgage, navigating bidding wars, and understanding closing costs, there are dozens of steps where a mistake can cost you thousands of dollars. This guide walks you through every stage of the home-buying journey in order, from your first savings deposit to the day you get your keys.
Table of Contents
- Stage 1: Get Financially Ready
- Stage 2: Get Mortgage Pre-Approval
- Stage 3: Find the Right Home
- Stage 4: Make an Offer
- Stage 5: Due Diligence and Conditions
- Stage 6: Prepare for Closing
- Stage 7: Closing Day and Beyond
- How Much Home Can You Afford?
- Government Programs for Home Buyers
- Home Buying Costs at a Glance
- Home Buying Calculators
- Special Situations
- Housing Market Reports
Stage 1: Get Financially Ready
Timeline: 6–24 months before buying
Before you start browsing listings, your finances need to be in order. Lenders look at four things: your credit score, your debt levels, your income stability, and your down payment savings. Weaknesses in any of these areas either disqualify you entirely or cost you thousands in higher rates.
Build Your Credit Score
| Credit Score Range | Impact on Mortgage |
|---|---|
| 760+ | Best available rates from all lenders |
| 720–759 | Excellent rates from most lenders |
| 680–719 | Good rates, most lenders will approve |
| 620–679 | Limited lender options, higher rates |
| Below 620 | B-lender or private lender territory |
Your credit score is the single biggest factor in the rate you receive. A 0.25% rate difference on a $500,000 mortgage costs over $25,000 in extra interest over a 25-year amortization. Start monitoring your credit at least 12 months before you plan to buy so you have time to fix errors and build your score.
→ See: What Credit Score Do You Need for a Mortgage? → See: How to Build Your Credit Score in Canada
Save Your Down Payment
Canada’s minimum down payment depends on the purchase price:
| Home Price | Minimum Down Payment | Amount on $500K Home |
|---|---|---|
| Up to $500,000 | 5% | $25,000 |
| $500,001 – $1,499,999 | 5% on first $500K + 10% on remainder | Varies |
| $1,500,000+ | 20% | N/A |
Putting down less than 20% triggers mandatory CMHC mortgage insurance — a one-time premium of 2.8–4.0% of the mortgage amount added to your balance. On a $475,000 mortgage, that is up to $19,000 in extra costs.
Where to save your down payment:
| Account | Tax Benefit | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| FHSA | Tax-deductible contributions + tax-free withdrawal | First-time buyers (up to $40,000) |
| RRSP (Home Buyers’ Plan) | Tax-deductible contributions, tax-free withdrawal up to $60,000 | Additional down payment funds |
| TFSA | Tax-free growth and withdrawal | Flexible savings, no repayment required |
| HISA | Interest income (taxable in non-registered) | Short-term parking (buying within 1–2 years) |
→ See: How Much Down Payment Do You Need? → See: FHSA vs RRSP HBP — Which Is Better for Your Down Payment? → See: FHSA vs TFSA vs RRSP for First-Time Buyers → Calculator: Down Payment Calculator
Reduce Your Debt
Lenders use two debt ratios to decide how much you can borrow:
| Ratio | What It Measures | Maximum |
|---|---|---|
| GDS (Gross Debt Service) | Housing costs ÷ gross income | 39% |
| TDS (Total Debt Service) | All debt payments ÷ gross income | 44% |
Every dollar of monthly debt reduces your qualifying mortgage amount. A $400/month car payment can reduce your buying power by $80,000–$100,000. Pay down high-interest debt and avoid taking on new debt in the 12 months before you apply.
→ See: Am I Ready to Buy a House? → See: Budgeting 101 Canada → Calculator: Debt Service Ratio Calculator
Stage 2: Get Mortgage Pre-Approval
Timeline: 2–3 months before you start searching
A mortgage pre-approval is not optional — it is your most important preparation step. Pre-approval tells you exactly how much you can borrow, locks in a rate for 90–120 days, and signals to sellers that you are a qualified buyer. In competitive markets, offers without pre-approval are often ignored.
What You Need for Pre-Approval
| Document | Why It Is Needed |
|---|---|
| Government-issued photo ID | Identity verification |
| Recent pay stubs (30 days) | Income verification |
| T4s or NOAs (2 years) | Income history |
| Letter of employment | Job stability confirmation |
| Bank statements (90 days) | Down payment verification |
| List of assets and debts | Net worth and debt ratio calculation |
| Proof of down payment source | Anti-money laundering compliance |
Self-employed applicants need additional documentation: two years of T1 Generals, Notice of Assessments, business financial statements, and potentially a CPA letter.
→ See: Mortgage Pre-Approval Guide → See: Mortgage Document Checklist → See: How Long Does Mortgage Approval Take?
The Stress Test
All borrowers at federally regulated lenders must qualify at the higher of their contract rate plus 2% or the Bank of Canada’s qualifying rate (currently 5.25%). If your actual rate is 5.0%, you must prove you can afford payments at 7.0%.
→ See: Mortgage Stress Test Explained → Calculator: Stress Test Calculator
Choosing a Lender
| Option | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage broker | Compares 30+ lenders, often best rates | Less control over which lender you end up with |
| Big bank | Convenience, relationship pricing | Limited to one institution’s products |
| Online lender | Low rates, fast process | Less hand-holding, may not suit complex situations |
| Credit union | Community focus, flexible qualifying | Rates may not be the lowest |
→ See: Best Mortgage Lenders Canada → See: Mortgage Broker vs Bank vs Online Lender → See: How to Negotiate Your Mortgage Rate
Stage 3: Find the Right Home
Timeline: 1–3 months of active searching
With pre-approval in hand, you know exactly what you can afford. Now the search begins in earnest. The key decisions at this stage — condo vs house, city vs suburb, new build vs resale — all have major financial implications beyond the sticker price.
Condo vs House
| Factor | Condo | House |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase price | Lower entry point | Higher upfront cost |
| Monthly costs | Condo fees ($300–$800+) | Maintenance budgeting (1% of value/year) |
| Maintenance | Handled by condo corp | Your responsibility |
| Appreciation | Historically slower | Historically faster (land value) |
| Lifestyle | Lock-and-leave, amenities | Space, yard, privacy |
→ See: Condo vs House in Canada → See: Condo Fees Explained → See: Status Certificate Ontario — What to Look For
New Construction vs Resale
| Factor | Pre-Construction | Resale |
|---|---|---|
| Price | May be lower at launch | Based on current market |
| Timeline | 2–5 years to completion | 30–90 days to closing |
| Customization | Choose finishes, layout options | What you see is what you get |
| Risks | Builder delays, market changes, HST | Hidden maintenance issues |
| Mortgage | Rate not locked until near closing | Lock rate at pre-approval |
→ See: Buying Pre-Construction — Mortgage Guide → See: Assignment Sales in Canada
Working with a Real Estate Agent
A buyer’s agent represents your interests in the transaction. In most provinces, the seller pays the buyer agent’s commission (typically 2.5% of the sale price), so using an agent costs you nothing directly. A good agent provides market knowledge, negotiation skills, and process guidance.
→ See: Real Estate Agent Fees in Canada → See: Best Real Estate Apps Canada → See: Spring Home Buying Guide
Stage 4: Make an Offer
Timeline: 1–7 days from viewing to accepted offer
When you find the right property, your agent prepares an Agreement of Purchase and Sale. The offer includes the price, deposit amount, closing date, and conditions. In hot markets, you may face bidding wars where multiple offers come in simultaneously.
Anatomy of an Offer
| Component | Details |
|---|---|
| Offer price | Based on comparables, market conditions, and your budget |
| Deposit | Typically 3–5% of purchase price, held in trust |
| Closing date | Usually 30–90 days from acceptance |
| Conditions | Financing, home inspection, status certificate (condos) |
| Irrevocability period | How long the seller has to respond (usually 24–48 hours) |
| Inclusions/exclusions | Appliances, fixtures, window coverings |
Conditional vs Firm Offers
A conditional offer includes clauses that let you walk away if something goes wrong — financing falls through, the inspection reveals major problems, or the status certificate has red flags. A firm offer has no conditions and is riskier but stronger in competitive situations.
→ See: Conditional vs Firm Offer → See: Buying a Home in a Bidding War → See: Blind Bidding in Canada
Stage 5: Due Diligence and Conditions
Timeline: 5–10 business days after accepted offer
Once your offer is accepted, the clock starts on your conditions. This is your last chance to uncover problems and back out without losing your deposit.
Home Inspection
A home inspection costs $400–$600 and takes 2–3 hours. The inspector checks the structure, roof, foundation, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, and exterior. Never skip this step — a $500 inspection can uncover $50,000+ in hidden problems.
| What Inspectors Check | What They Don’t Check |
|---|---|
| Roof condition and age | Inside walls (mold behind drywall) |
| Foundation and structure | Underground pipes and septic |
| Electrical panel and wiring | Asbestos (needs specialist) |
| Plumbing and water pressure | Pest infestations (needs specialist) |
| HVAC systems and age | Environmental hazards (radon, lead paint) |
| Windows, doors, insulation | Cosmetic issues |
→ See: Home Inspection Guide Canada
Home Appraisal
Your lender orders an appraisal to confirm the property is worth what you are paying. If the appraisal comes in low, the lender may reduce your mortgage amount and you need to cover the difference from your own funds — or renegotiate the price.
→ See: Home Appraisal in Canada
Title Search and Insurance
Your lawyer conducts a title search to confirm the seller actually owns the property and there are no liens, easements, or other issues. Title insurance ($300–$500) protects you against defects discovered after closing.
→ See: Title Insurance Canada
For Condos: Status Certificate Review
If buying a condo, your lawyer reviews the status certificate — the condo corporation’s financial and legal health report. Red flags include underfunded reserve funds, pending lawsuits, or upcoming special assessments.
→ See: Status Certificate Ontario
Stage 6: Prepare for Closing
Timeline: 2–4 weeks before closing day
Once conditions are waived, the sale is firm. Now you prepare for closing day — the final steps that transfer ownership to you.
Your Closing Checklist
| Task | When | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Hire a real estate lawyer | Immediately after conditions waived | Expect $1,500–$2,500 in legal fees |
| Arrange home insurance | Before closing (required by lender) | Get 3+ quotes, coverage must be in place on closing day |
| Final mortgage approval | 1–2 weeks before closing | Lender confirms everything after conditions waived |
| Arrange utility transfers | 1 week before | Hydro, gas, water, internet |
| Final walkthrough | Day before or day of closing | Confirm property condition matches agreement |
→ See: Offer to Closing Process → See: Best Home Insurance Canada
Closing Costs Breakdown
Closing costs catch many first-time buyers off guard. Budget 1.5–4% of the purchase price on top of your down payment.
| Cost | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Land transfer tax | 0.5–2.5% of purchase price | Varies by province; doubled in Toronto |
| Legal fees | $1,500–$2,500 | Includes disbursements |
| Title insurance | $300–$500 | One-time premium |
| Home inspection | $400–$600 | Paid before closing |
| Appraisal fee | $300–$500 | Sometimes covered by lender |
| Property tax adjustment | Varies | Reimburse seller for prepaid taxes |
| Moving costs | $500–$3,000 | Depends on distance and volume |
Example: On a $600,000 home in Ontario, closing costs total approximately $15,000–$22,000 on top of your down payment.
→ See: Land Transfer Tax in Canada → See: Closing Costs Guide by Province → Calculator: Closing Costs Calculator
Stage 7: Closing Day and Beyond
Timeline: Closing day + first year of ownership
On closing day, your lawyer handles the final paperwork, transfers funds, and registers the title. You get the keys — usually by mid-afternoon. But the financial journey does not end at closing.
Your First Year as a Homeowner
| Priority | Action | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rebuild your emergency fund | Your savings just took a major hit |
| 2 | Set up automatic mortgage payments | Never miss a payment |
| 3 | Understand your prepayment privileges | Extra payments save thousands in interest |
| 4 | Start a home maintenance fund | Budget 1% of home value per year |
| 5 | Review your mortgage at renewal | Do not auto-renew — shop around |
→ See: How to Read Your Mortgage Statement → See: Prepayment Privileges in Canada → See: Pay Off Your Mortgage Faster → See: Should I Pay Off Mortgage or Invest?
Mortgage Renewal
Your mortgage term (typically 5 years) will end, and you will need to renew. This is your best opportunity to renegotiate your rate. Never simply sign your lender’s renewal offer without shopping the market first.
→ See: Mortgage Renewal Guide → See: Best Time to Renew Your Mortgage → See: When to Switch Mortgage Lenders
How Much Home Can You Afford?
The general rule is to keep housing costs under 39% of your gross income. But the stress test means you qualify for less than the simple math suggests.
| Household Income | Approx. Maximum Home Price | Monthly Payment |
|---|---|---|
| $60,000 | ~$263,000 | ~$1,500 |
| $80,000 | ~$357,000 | ~$2,040 |
| $100,000 | ~$452,000 | ~$2,575 |
| $120,000 | ~$547,000 | ~$3,120 |
| $150,000 | ~$701,000 | ~$3,970 |
Assumes 5% down, 25-year amortization, 5% rate, stress-tested at 7%, no other debts.
→ See: How Much House Can I Afford? → Calculator: Mortgage Affordability Calculator → See: Income Needed to Afford a Home by City
Government Programs for Home Buyers
Federal Programs
| Program | Benefit | Eligibility |
|---|---|---|
| First Home Savings Account (FHSA) | Tax-deductible contributions, tax-free withdrawals up to $40,000 | First-time buyers, Canadian residents 18+ |
| RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP) | Withdraw up to $60,000 from RRSP tax-free | First-time buyers (or not owned in 4 years) |
| First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit | $10,000 non-refundable credit = $1,500 tax savings | Home purchased in the tax year |
| GST/HST New Housing Rebate | Partial rebate on new builds (up to ~$6,300 federal) | New construction or major renovation |
| 30-Year Amortization | Lower monthly payments on insured mortgages | First-time buyers purchasing new construction |
Provincial Programs
| Province | Program | Benefit |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | Land transfer tax rebate | Up to $4,000 for first-time buyers |
| BC | First Time Home Buyers’ Program | LTT exemption on homes up to $500,000 |
| Quebec | Home Buyers’ Tax Credit | 15% of $5,000 = $750 |
| Alberta | No land transfer tax | Significant savings vs Ontario/BC |
| Nova Scotia | Deed transfer tax exemption | Municipal exemptions in select areas |
→ See: First-Time Home Buyer Programs Canada → See: First-Time Home Buyer Guide → See: First-Time Buyer Ontario → See: First-Time Buyer BC → See: First-Time Buyer Quebec
Home Buying Costs at a Glance
| Cost Category | Amount | When You Pay |
|---|---|---|
| Down payment | 5–20% of purchase price | At closing |
| CMHC insurance | 2.8–4.0% of mortgage (if under 20% down) | Added to mortgage |
| Land transfer tax | 0.5–2.5% of purchase price | At closing |
| Legal fees | $1,500–$2,500 | At closing |
| Home inspection | $400–$600 | During conditions period |
| Title insurance | $300–$500 | At closing |
| Appraisal | $300–$500 | During mortgage approval |
| Moving costs | $500–$3,000 | Closing day / after |
| Immediate repairs/upgrades | $1,000–$10,000+ | First month |
Example — $600,000 home with 10% down:
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Down payment | $60,000 |
| CMHC insurance (3.10%) | $16,740 (added to mortgage) |
| Closing costs (est.) | $18,000 |
| Total cash needed | ~$78,000 |
Home Buying Calculators
- Mortgage Calculator — Monthly payment estimate
- Mortgage Affordability Calculator — How much home you can afford
- Down Payment Calculator — Minimum down payment required
- Closing Costs Calculator — Province-by-province closing costs
- Stress Test Calculator — Qualifying rate impact
- Debt Service Ratio Calculator — GDS and TDS ratios
- CMHC Insurance Calculator — Default insurance premiums
- Rent vs Buy Calculator — Should you rent or buy?
- FHSA Calculator — First Home Savings Account projections
- HBP Calculator — Home Buyers’ Plan withdrawal planning
- Land Transfer Tax Calculator — Province-specific LTT
- Bridge Financing Calculator — Bridge loan costs
Special Situations
Not every home purchase follows the standard path. These guides cover scenarios that require additional planning:
Buying as a First-Timer
Unique Buyer Situations
- Buying a Home as a Single Person
- Buying a Home with Student Debt
- Buying for Common-Law vs Married Couples
- Joint Tenancy vs Tenants in Common
- Co-Buying a Home in Canada
- Mortgages for Newcomers and Immigrants
Alternative Mortgage Situations
- B-Lender Mortgages in Canada
- Bad Credit Mortgage Canada
- What to Do When the Bank Denies Your Mortgage
- Self-Employed Mortgage Canada
Property Types
- Condo vs House
- Buying Pre-Construction in Canada
- Laneway House Mortgages
- Buying a Vacation Property
- Buying an Investment Property
Housing Market Reports
Not sure where to buy? Our housing market reports cover prices, trends, and affordability across Canada:
City Reports
Toronto · Vancouver · Calgary · Ottawa · Montreal · Edmonton · Winnipeg · Halifax · Hamilton · Victoria · London · Waterloo Region
Provincial Reports
Ontario · British Columbia · Alberta · Quebec
Mortgage Rates by City
Toronto · Vancouver · Calgary · Edmonton · Ottawa · Montreal · Halifax · Winnipeg
Related Resources
- Complete Canadian Mortgage Guide — Everything about mortgages beyond the buying process
- Mortgage Rate Forecast 2026 — Where rates are heading
- Best Mortgage Rates Canada — Current lowest rates
- CMHC Green Home Program — Premium refunds for energy-efficient homes
- Home Equity Sharing Programs — Co-investment options for affordability
- Mortgage Fraud Protection — Protect yourself from title fraud and scams
- Housing Affordability in Canada — Current affordability landscape for buyers
- Income Required for a Mortgage in Canada — What salary you need to qualify