How Bidding Wars Work in Canada
| Stage | What Happens |
|---|---|
| Listing | Seller lists the property, often at a strategically low price |
| Offer date set | Agent announces a specific date for receiving offers |
| Open houses | Held before offer date to drive interest |
| Offer submission | All interested buyers submit offers by the deadline |
| Seller reviews | Seller (with agent) reviews all offers simultaneously |
| Counter or accept | Seller may accept the best offer, counter one or more, or request “highest and best” |
| Sold | Winning offer is accepted; other buyers are notified |
Types of Bidding War Situations
| Type | Description | Common In |
|---|---|---|
| Blind bidding | Buyers don’t know other offers; submit best offer blind | Most of Canada (default) |
| Open bidding (new in some areas) | Buyers can see competing offer prices | Being tested in some markets |
| Bully offer / pre-emptive offer | Offer submitted before offer date with tight deadline | Hot markets (Toronto, Vancouver) |
| Multiple rounds | Seller asks top bidders to improve their offer | Very competitive situations |
How to Win: Offer Strategy
Price
| Strategy | Details |
|---|---|
| Offer based on comparables, not asking price | Pull recent comparable sales within 500m and last 90 days |
| Set a maximum price and stick to it | Know 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
| Condition | Impact on Competitiveness | Risk If Waived |
|---|---|---|
| Financing condition | Weakens offer significantly | Low risk if you have firm pre-approval |
| Home inspection condition | Weakens offer moderately | High risk — could miss major defects |
| Status certificate review (condo) | Weakens offer slightly | Moderate risk |
| Sale of buyer’s property | Very weak — sellers avoid these | N/A (don’t include in bidding war) |
| No conditions | Strongest possible offer | Highest risk |
Making a Condition-Free Offer Safely
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Get a firm mortgage pre-approval (not just pre-qualification) |
| 2 | Have your mortgage broker review the specific property and confirm they will lend |
| 3 | Do a pre-offer home inspection (before offer day) — costs $400–$600 |
| 4 | Review the status certificate in advance (for condos) |
| 5 | Submit a clean, condition-free offer with confidence |
Deposit
| Deposit Strategy | Impact |
|---|---|
| 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
| Strategy | Best Approach |
|---|---|
| Accommodate seller’s preferred date | Ask the listing agent what the seller prefers |
| Flexible closing | Offer to close on the seller’s timeline (30, 60, or 90 days) |
| Quick closing | If seller wants fast — 30 days or less shows urgency |
What Sellers Look For in Offers
| Factor | Weight | What Wins |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Highest | Highest credible offer |
| Conditions | Very high | Fewer/no conditions preferred |
| Deposit | Moderate | Larger deposit signals commitment |
| Closing date | Moderate | Matching seller’s preferred date |
| Financing | High | Pre-approved buyer preferred |
| Personal letter | Low–moderate | Can help in close situations (not always read) |
| Buyer’s agent reputation | Low | Known, 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:
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Cost | $400–$600 |
| Timing | Arrange during open house period (before offer day) |
| Duration | 2–3 hours |
| Benefit | Allows you to waive the inspection condition with full knowledge |
| Risk | If you don’t win, you lose the inspection cost |
| Tip | Ask listing agent for permission; most allow it in competitive markets |
Budget for Bidding Wars
How Much Over Asking Do Homes Sell For?
| Market | Typical 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% |
| Ottawa | 0–10% | At or near asking |
| Calgary | 0–5% | At asking |
| Montreal | 0–8% | At or near asking |
Example: Toronto Detached Home
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Asking price | $1,099,000 |
| Number of offers | 8 |
| 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 offer | None |
| Deposit | $60,000 (5%) |
When to Walk Away
| Red Flag | Why You Should Walk Away |
|---|---|
| Offering more than comparable sales support | You’ll be overpaying vs. market value |
| Waiving inspection on an older home (30+ years) | Major hidden defects are more likely |
| Emotional attachment overriding budget | Bidding wars trigger FOMO — stick to your max |
| Price exceeds your mortgage pre-approval | You may not be able to finance the purchase |
| You’re stretching far beyond comfortable payments | Winning the bid but being house-poor isn’t winning |
| The property has been relisted multiple times | May indicate hidden issues |
Bully Offers (Pre-Emptive Offers)
A bully offer is submitted before the scheduled offer date, pressuring the seller to decide quickly:
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Timing | Submitted hours or days before offer date |
| Typical irrevocability | Very short (2–4 hours) |
| Price | Usually strong — 5% or more above asking |
| Conditions | Typically condition-free |
| Seller obligation | Seller is not required to accept; can decline and wait for offer date |
| Ethical concerns | Legal but controversial; listing agent may refuse to present before offer date |
When to Submit a Bully Offer
| Situation | Recommended? |
|---|---|
| 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
| Action | Timeline |
|---|---|
| Confirm financing with your lender/broker | Within 24 hours |
| Arrange home inspection (if not done pre-offer) | Within 5 business days |
| Hire a real estate lawyer | Immediately after acceptance |
| Arrange home insurance | Before closing |
| Review status certificate (condo) | Within condition period |
| Budget for closing costs (1.5–4% of price) | Before closing |