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Statement of Adjustments Explained: How to Read Your Closing Statement in Canada (2026)

Updated

The statement of adjustments is the most important document you will review before your mortgage closes. It is the final accounting of every dollar in the deal — the purchase price, your deposit credit, the mortgage funds, property tax adjustments, prepaid utilities, land transfer tax, and your lawyer’s fees. At the bottom is one number: the exact amount you need to bring to close.

Every home purchase in Canada produces a statement of adjustments. This guide breaks down every line so you know exactly what you are paying for and why.

What a Statement of Adjustments Looks Like

The document is split into two sides: credits to the buyer (money the buyer receives or is credited) and debits to the buyer (money the buyer owes). The difference is what you owe at closing.

Buyer’s Statement of Adjustments — Example

Purchase Details:

DetailInformation
Property123 Maple Street, Toronto, ON
Purchase price$750,000
Closing dateJuly 15, 2026
Annual property taxes$5,400

Credits to Buyer (Reduces Amount Owed)

ItemAmount
Deposit held in trust$37,500
New first mortgage$600,000
Property tax adjustment (seller owes for Jan 1–Jul 14)$0
Total credits$637,500

Debits to Buyer (Amount Owed)

ItemAmount
Purchase price$750,000
Ontario land transfer tax$11,950
Toronto municipal land transfer tax$11,950
Property tax adjustment (buyer reimburses seller for Jul 15–Dec 31)$2,482.19
Interest adjustment (7 days)$769.86
Title insurance$375
Legal fees + disbursements$2,200
Registration fees (deed + mortgage)$300
Total debits$780,027.05

Balance Due on Closing

CalculationAmount
Total debits$780,027.05
Less: Total credits($637,500.00)
Balance due from buyer$142,527.05

This is the certified cheque or bank draft you deliver to your lawyer before closing.

Every Line Item Explained

Credits to the Buyer

Credits reduce the amount you need to bring to closing.

1. Deposit

DetailExplanation
What it isThe earnest money you paid when the offer was accepted
Typical amount3%–10% of purchase price
How it appearsFull deposit credited to buyer
Example$37,500 deposit on a $750,000 purchase

The deposit is held in the listing brokerage’s trust account or the seller’s lawyer’s trust account. On closing, it is released and applied against the purchase price. See deposit vs down payment explained for the full breakdown.

2. Mortgage Proceeds

DetailExplanation
What it isThe mortgage funds your lender sends to your lawyer
How it appearsFull mortgage amount credited
Example$600,000 first mortgage

Your lender sends the mortgage funds directly to your lawyer’s trust account, usually the morning of closing.

3. Property Tax Credit (if seller underpaid)

If the seller has not paid their property taxes up to the closing date, the amount they owe is credited to you. You then owe the municipality for the full year and will pay it going forward.

Debits to the Buyer

Debits are amounts you owe.

4. Purchase Price

DetailExplanation
What it isThe agreed sale price in the offer
Always the biggest itemYes
Example$750,000

5. Land Transfer Tax (LTT)

ProvinceLTT on $750,000 Purchase
Ontario$11,950
British Columbia$13,000 (+ 2% foreign buyer if applicable)
Quebec (transfer duties)~$9,375
Alberta$0 (Alberta has no LTT)
Manitoba$11,450
Nova Scotia$11,250
New Brunswick$7,500
PEI$7,500
Saskatchewan$0 (no LTT; only titles registration fee)

Toronto/Vancouver additional tax: Toronto charges a second municipal LTT on top of Ontario’s provincial LTT. Vancouver charges an additional property transfer tax for properties over $3M and foreign buyers.

First-time buyer rebates: Ontario offers up to $4,000 in LTT rebate; Toronto offers up to $4,475 in municipal LTT rebate. BC offers a full exemption on properties up to $500,000 (partial on $500K–$525K).

6. Property Tax Adjustment

This is where most confusion occurs. The adjustment ensures each party pays property taxes for the days they own the property.

ScenarioWho Pays Whom
Seller has prepaid taxes past closing dateBuyer reimburses seller
Seller has not paid taxes up to closing dateSeller credits buyer

Calculation method:

StepExample
Annual property tax$5,400
Daily rate$5,400 ÷ 365 = $14.79/day
Seller owns Jan 1 – Jul 14 (195 days)$14.79 × 195 = $2,884.11
Buyer owns Jul 15 – Dec 31 (170 days)$14.79 × 170 = $2,514.25

If the seller paid the full year ($5,400), the buyer reimburses the seller $2,514.25 for the portion covering the buyer’s ownership period. If taxes were billed but not yet paid, the credits flow the other direction.

Watch for the billing cycle: In most Ontario municipalities, property taxes are billed twice a year (interim in February, final in June). The adjustment depends on what the seller has already paid at closing.

7. Utility Adjustments

UtilityHow It Is Handled
Water/sewerIf billed in advance, seller gets credit for prepaid portion
Oil tankIf property has oil heat, buyer reimburses seller for oil remaining in tank
PropaneSame as oil — buyer pays for remaining fuel
Hydro/gasNot adjusted — seller closes account, buyer opens new one
Condo feesAdjusted if seller prepaid for the month

Oil tank adjustment example:

DetailAmount
Oil remaining600 litres
Current price$1.55/litre
Buyer reimburses seller$930

8. Interest Adjustment

DetailExplanation
What it isPrepaid interest from closing date to your first regular payment date
When it occursIf you close mid-month (most closings)
CalculationDaily interest rate × mortgage balance × number of days
Example$600,000 × 4.50% ÷ 365 × 7 days = $769.86

See mortgage interest adjustment date explained for a full breakdown of how to calculate and minimize this cost.

9. Title Insurance

DetailExplanation
What it isInsurance protecting you and your lender against title defects
Typical cost$250–$500 for residential purchases
Who requires itMost lenders require lender’s title insurance; buyer’s coverage is optional but recommended
AlternativeAn up-to-date survey (more expensive, $1,500–$2,500)
ComponentTypical Cost
Lawyer’s fee$1,000–$2,000
Disbursements (searches, couriers, registration)$400–$800
Title search fee$50–$100
Tax certificate$50–$100
Utility certificate$50
Status certificate (condos)$100–$200 (usually paid earlier)
Total legal costs$1,500–$3,000

11. Registration Fees

FeeAmount (Ontario)
Transfer/deed registration$72.95 + $1.50 per $1,000 of purchase price
Mortgage registration$72.95 + $1.50 per $1,000 of mortgage

Registration fees vary by province. Your lawyer includes them as a disbursement.

The Trust Ledger Statement

Your lawyer also provides a trust ledger statement showing all money flowing through their trust account:

ItemInOut
Your certified cheque (balance due on closing)$142,527.05
Mortgage funds from lender$600,000.00
Deposit released from listing brokerage$37,500.00
Payment to seller$750,000.00
Land transfer tax — Ontario$11,950.00
Land transfer tax — Toronto$11,950.00
Legal fees + HST$2,486.00
Title insurance$375.00
Registration fees$300.00
Property tax adjustment to seller$2,482.19
Interest adjustment to lender$769.86
Balance in trust$0.00

Every dollar in equals every dollar out. The balance should be zero.

Common Mistakes and What to Watch For

Review Checklist

Item to VerifyWhat to Check
Purchase priceMatches your offer exactly
Deposit amountMatches what you actually paid
Mortgage amountMatches your mortgage commitment letter
Property addressCorrect legal description
Closing dateMatches agreement
Property tax amountMatches municipality’s current assessment
Land transfer taxCalculated correctly; first-time rebate applied if eligible
Lawyer’s feesMatch the quoted amount

Common Surprises

SurpriseWhy It Happens
Amount due is higher than expectedClosing costs (LTT, legal fees, adjustments) were not budgeted separately from down payment
Property tax adjustment is largeClosing early in the year when seller has prepaid; or property tax reassessment
HST on legal feesLawyers charge HST on their fees — many buyers forget
CMHC premium not on statementCMHC insurance is added to the mortgage balance, not paid at closing (in most provinces)
PST on CMHC premiumSome provinces charge PST — this IS paid at closing

Seller’s Statement of Adjustments

The seller gets their own statement of adjustments, showing proceeds from the sale minus their obligations:

ItemAmount
Purchase price$750,000
Less: outstanding mortgage (paid out)($320,000)
Less: real estate commission + HST($39,550)
Plus: property tax adjustment (reimbursement)$2,482.19
Less: discharge fee (existing mortgage)($300)
Less: legal fees + HST($1,800)
Less: mortgage penalty (if applicable)$0
Net proceeds to seller$390,832.19

Timeline: When to Expect the Statement of Adjustments

DayEvent
30–60 days before closingMortgage commitment confirmed; lender sends instructions to lawyer
10–14 days before closingLawyer begins preparing documents
5–7 days before closingLawyer sends statement of adjustments to buyer for review
2–3 days before closingBuyer delivers certified cheque or bank draft to lawyer
1 day before closingLawyer confirms all funds received; prepares for registration
Closing dayMortgage registered, deed transferred, keys released

How to Minimize Your Closing Costs on the Statement

StrategyPotential Savings
Close at the end of the monthReduces interest adjustment
Claim first-time buyer LTT rebateUp to $4,000 (ON) + $4,475 (Toronto)
Request title insurance instead of surveySave $1,000–$2,000 vs new survey
Shop for a competitive legal fee$500–$1,000 difference between lawyers
Close on a date aligned with property tax billingReduces property tax adjustment complexity
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