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How to Buy a Home in a Bidding War in Canada 2026

Updated

How Bidding Wars Work in Canada

StageWhat Happens
ListingSeller lists the property, often at a strategically low price
Offer date setAgent announces a specific date for receiving offers
Open housesHeld before offer date to drive interest
Offer submissionAll interested buyers submit offers by the deadline
Seller reviewsSeller (with agent) reviews all offers simultaneously
Counter or acceptSeller may accept the best offer, counter one or more, or request “highest and best”
SoldWinning offer is accepted; other buyers are notified

Types of Bidding War Situations

TypeDescriptionCommon In
Blind biddingBuyers don’t know other offers; submit best offer blindMost of Canada (default)
Open bidding (new in some areas)Buyers can see competing offer pricesBeing tested in some markets
Bully offer / pre-emptive offerOffer submitted before offer date with tight deadlineHot markets (Toronto, Vancouver)
Multiple roundsSeller asks top bidders to improve their offerVery competitive situations

How to Win: Offer Strategy

Price

StrategyDetails
Offer based on comparables, not asking pricePull recent comparable sales within 500m and last 90 days
Set a maximum price and stick to itKnow your walk-away number before offer night
Round up (odd numbers)Offer $703,000 instead of $700,000 — psychologically differentiating
Include escalation clause (if allowed)“I will pay $X above the highest competing offer, up to $Y maximum”

Conditions

ConditionImpact on CompetitivenessRisk If Waived
Financing conditionWeakens offer significantlyLow risk if you have firm pre-approval
Home inspection conditionWeakens offer moderatelyHigh risk — could miss major defects
Status certificate review (condo)Weakens offer slightlyModerate risk
Sale of buyer’s propertyVery weak — sellers avoid theseN/A (don’t include in bidding war)
No conditionsStrongest possible offerHighest risk

Making a Condition-Free Offer Safely

StepAction
1Get a firm mortgage pre-approval (not just pre-qualification)
2Have your mortgage broker review the specific property and confirm they will lend
3Do a pre-offer home inspection (before offer day) — costs $400–$600
4Review the status certificate in advance (for condos)
5Submit a clean, condition-free offer with confidence

Deposit

Deposit StrategyImpact
Standard deposit (1–2%)Expected minimum
Large deposit (3–5%)Signals serious buyer; seller feels more secure
Deposit with offer (certified cheque)Strongest — shows immediate commitment

Closing Date

StrategyBest Approach
Accommodate seller’s preferred dateAsk the listing agent what the seller prefers
Flexible closingOffer to close on the seller’s timeline (30, 60, or 90 days)
Quick closingIf seller wants fast — 30 days or less shows urgency

What Sellers Look For in Offers

FactorWeightWhat Wins
PriceHighestHighest credible offer
ConditionsVery highFewer/no conditions preferred
DepositModerateLarger deposit signals commitment
Closing dateModerateMatching seller’s preferred date
FinancingHighPre-approved buyer preferred
Personal letterLow–moderateCan help in close situations (not always read)
Buyer’s agent reputationLowKnown, reputable agent adds credibility

Pre-Offer Home Inspection

A pre-offer inspection is the best way to submit a condition-free offer without the risk:

FeatureDetails
Cost$400–$600
TimingArrange during open house period (before offer day)
Duration2–3 hours
BenefitAllows you to waive the inspection condition with full knowledge
RiskIf you don’t win, you lose the inspection cost
TipAsk listing agent for permission; most allow it in competitive markets

Budget for Bidding Wars

How Much Over Asking Do Homes Sell For?

MarketTypical Over-Asking (Hot Market)Typical Over-Asking (Balanced Market)
Toronto (detached)5–20%0–5%
Toronto (condo)0–10%At or below asking
Vancouver (detached)5–15%0–5%
Ottawa0–10%At or near asking
Calgary0–5%At asking
Montreal0–8%At or near asking

Example: Toronto Detached Home

ItemAmount
Asking price$1,099,000
Number of offers8
Comparable sales$1,150,000–$1,200,000
Winning offer$1,195,000 (8.7% over asking)
Second highest offer$1,175,000
Conditions on winning offerNone
Deposit$60,000 (5%)

When to Walk Away

Red FlagWhy You Should Walk Away
Offering more than comparable sales supportYou’ll be overpaying vs. market value
Waiving inspection on an older home (30+ years)Major hidden defects are more likely
Emotional attachment overriding budgetBidding wars trigger FOMO — stick to your max
Price exceeds your mortgage pre-approvalYou may not be able to finance the purchase
You’re stretching far beyond comfortable paymentsWinning the bid but being house-poor isn’t winning
The property has been relisted multiple timesMay indicate hidden issues

Bully Offers (Pre-Emptive Offers)

A bully offer is submitted before the scheduled offer date, pressuring the seller to decide quickly:

FeatureDetails
TimingSubmitted hours or days before offer date
Typical irrevocabilityVery short (2–4 hours)
PriceUsually strong — 5% or more above asking
ConditionsTypically condition-free
Seller obligationSeller is not required to accept; can decline and wait for offer date
Ethical concernsLegal but controversial; listing agent may refuse to present before offer date

When to Submit a Bully Offer

SituationRecommended?
You’ve done a pre-offer inspection✅ Yes
You have firm financing confirmed✅ Yes
You’re certain of the property’s value✅ Yes
You haven’t seen the property❌ No
You’re guessing at the value❌ No

Post-Bidding War Checklist

ActionTimeline
Confirm financing with your lender/brokerWithin 24 hours
Arrange home inspection (if not done pre-offer)Within 5 business days
Hire a real estate lawyerImmediately after acceptance
Arrange home insuranceBefore closing
Review status certificate (condo)Within condition period
Budget for closing costs (1.5–4% of price)Before closing