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Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS) in Canada: What You Need to Know (2026)

Updated

The Agreement of Purchase and Sale is the most important document in any Canadian real estate transaction. Whether you are buying your first home or your fifth investment property, understanding every section of the APS protects you from costly mistakes.

What is an Agreement of Purchase and Sale?

An APS is a legally binding contract that lays out every term of a real estate deal. In most provinces, standard forms are provided by the local real estate board — in Ontario, the Ontario Real Estate Association (OREA) Form 100 is the standard.

ElementWhat It Covers
PartiesLegal names of buyer(s) and seller(s)
PropertyLegal description, municipal address, PIN
Purchase priceAgreed price for the property
DepositAmount, due date, and who holds it in trust
Closing dateWhen title transfers and the buyer takes possession
IrrevocabilityDeadline for the other party to accept the offer
ConditionsClauses that must be fulfilled before the deal is firm
Inclusions / exclusionsWhat stays with the house vs what the seller takes
Chattels & fixturesSpecific items negotiated (appliances, light fixtures, window coverings)
Special clausesAnything else negotiated (seller rent-back, early access, etc.)

Standard APS forms by province

Each province uses its own standard real estate forms:

ProvinceStandard FormManaged By
OntarioOREA Form 100 (freehold), Form 101 (condo)Ontario Real Estate Association
British ColumbiaContract of Purchase and Sale (CPS)BC Real Estate Association
AlbertaResidential Purchase ContractReal Estate Council of Alberta / AREA
QuebecPromise to Purchase (Promesse d’achat)OACIQ / Organisme d’autoréglementation du courtage immobilier du Québec
ManitobaOffer to PurchaseManitoba Real Estate Association
SaskatchewanOffer to PurchaseSaskatchewan Real Estate Commission
Atlantic provincesOffer to Purchase (varies)Provincial real estate associations

Key sections of the APS

Purchase price and deposit

The purchase price is what the buyer agrees to pay. The deposit — typically held in a trust account — shows the buyer’s good faith:

Market ConditionTypical Deposit
Balanced market3%–5% of purchase price
Seller’s market (GTA, Vancouver)5%–10% or more
Rural / slower markets1%–3%

The deposit is credited toward the purchase on closing. If the buyer breaches the APS (backs out without a valid condition), the deposit may be forfeited to the seller.

Conditions (buyer protections)

Conditions are the most important part of the APS for buyers. Common conditions include:

ConditionPurposeTypical Timeline
FinancingBuyer must obtain mortgage approval5–10 business days
Home inspectionBuyer has property professionally inspected5–7 business days
Status certificate review (condos)Buyer’s lawyer reviews condo corporation financials and bylaws10 business days
AppraisalLender requires the property to appraise at or above purchase priceIncluded in financing condition
Sale of buyer’s propertyOffer conditional on buyer selling current home30–90 days (weak condition)
InsuranceBuyer must secure satisfactory home insurance5–10 business days

Each condition has a condition date — the deadline by which the buyer must waive or not fulfill the condition. If the buyer does not waive by the deadline, the deal typically falls through and the deposit is returned.

Inclusions and exclusions

Anything not permanently attached to the property should be explicitly addressed:

Common inclusions (items that stay):

  • Kitchen appliances (fridge, stove, dishwasher)
  • Window coverings (blinds, curtains)
  • Light fixtures
  • Garage door opener and remotes
  • Central vacuum and accessories

Common exclusions (items the seller takes):

  • Personal property and furniture
  • Specific light fixtures or chandeliers
  • Mounted TVs and brackets
  • Garden sheds (if not permanently affixed)

Closing date

The closing date is when:

  • Title transfers from seller to buyer
  • The buyer’s mortgage funds are distributed
  • The buyer receives the keys

Standard timelines range from 30 to 90 days after the APS is signed, though this is negotiable. Some transactions close in as little as two weeks (cash purchases) or extend to several months (new construction).

Firm vs conditional offers

FeatureConditional OfferFirm Offer
ConditionsOne or more (financing, inspection, etc.)None
BindingOnly after all conditions waivedImmediately upon acceptance
Deposit at riskProtected until conditions expireAt risk immediately
CompetitivenessWeaker in multiple-offer situationsStrongest offer type
Risk to buyerLow (can walk away via conditions)High (no easy exit)
When usedBalanced or buyer’s marketsHot seller’s markets, bidding wars

Should you submit a firm offer?

Firm offers are tempting in competitive markets but dangerous:

  • You may overpay with no appraisal condition
  • You cannot walk away if the inspection reveals major issues
  • If your mortgage falls through, you are still on the hook

Risk mitigation for firm offers:

  1. Get a pre-approval with a rate hold (not just a pre-qualification)
  2. Do a pre-offer inspection if the seller allows it
  3. Review condo status certificates before offering
  4. Have your lawyer review comparable sales to avoid overpaying
  5. Ensure you have sufficient funds to close even if financing changes

The APS timeline: from offer to closing

StepTimingWhat Happens
Offer submittedDay 0Buyer submits APS to seller’s agent
Irrevocability expiresDay 0–1Seller must accept, reject, or counter by this deadline
AcceptanceDay 0–3Both parties sign — deal is alive (conditional or firm)
Condition periodDay 1–10Buyer fulfills conditions (inspection, financing)
Conditions waivedDay 5–10Buyer signs condition waiver — deal becomes firm
Lawyer prepares closingDay 10–closingTitle search, mortgage instructions, closing documents
Final walkthrough1–2 days before closingBuyer inspects property one last time
Closing dayAs specified in APSTitle transfers, mortgage funds disbursed, keys transferred

Ontario-specific APS considerations

Ontario’s OREA Form 100 includes several notable features:

  • Buyer representation acknowledgement — confirms who represents the buyer
  • Title search period — 30 days from acceptance for the buyer’s lawyer to examine title (separate from conditions)
  • UFFI disclosure — seller must disclose if urea formaldehyde foam insulation was used
  • HST clause — specifies whether HST is included in the purchase price (critical for new builds)
  • Assignment clause — determines whether the buyer can assign the APS to another party before closing

Quebec differences: the Promise to Purchase

Quebec’s real estate process is distinct from the rest of Canada:

FeatureRest of Canada (APS)Quebec (Promise to Purchase)
Legal systemCommon lawCivil law (Civil Code of Quebec)
Standard formAPS / Offer to PurchasePromesse d’achat
Closing handled byLawyerNotary (mandatory)
Land registrationLand Titles / Registry OfficeQuebec Land Register
Transfer taxLand Transfer TaxWelcome Tax (droits de mutation)
Inspection practiceCondition in the offerOften done pre-offer

Common APS mistakes to avoid

  1. Waiving the financing condition without firm approval — a pre-approval is not a commitment; the lender can still decline
  2. Not specifying inclusions clearly — “all appliances” is vague; list each item by brand and model if possible
  3. Too-short condition timelines — five business days for financing is tight; ensure your broker can deliver
  4. Ignoring the title search — your lawyer may find liens, easements, or encroachments that affect value
  5. Forgetting closing costs — land transfer tax, legal fees, and adjustments can add 1.5%–4% to the purchase price
  6. Not understanding irrevocability — if you submit an offer irrevocable for 24 hours, you cannot retract it during that period

What to do if the other party breaches the APS

If the seller breaches (refuses to close):

  • The buyer can sue for specific performance (forcing the sale) or damages
  • The buyer may also recover legal costs, moving expenses, and the difference in price if they buy elsewhere at a higher cost

If the buyer breaches (backs out without valid condition):

  • The seller can keep the deposit
  • The seller can sue for additional damages (carrying costs, relisting costs, price difference if sold for less)
  • In practice, most disputes settle on forfeiting the deposit rather than going to court
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