Buying a home listed as-is can represent a significant opportunity — or a costly mistake. The key is understanding what as-is actually means, what your rights still are, and how to evaluate whether the deal makes financial sense.
What “as-is” actually means
As-is is a contractual term indicating the seller will not:
- Make any repairs or improvements before closing
- Reduce the price based on defects found during inspection
- Offer credits or holdbacks for required work
- Warrant that any systems or components are in working order
What as-is does NOT mean
| Common Misconception | Reality |
|---|---|
| “I’m buying a dumpster” | Many as-is homes are in decent shape — seller just doesn’t want to negotiate repairs |
| “No inspection needed” | You should absolutely inspect; as-is just means no repair obligations for the seller |
| “Seller doesn’t have to disclose anything” | Seller must still disclose known latent defects |
| “I can’t negotiate price” | You can still negotiate the purchase price — as-is refers to repairs, not price |
| “No financing available” | Financing is possible if the property meets lender habitability standards |
Why homes sell as-is
| Reason | Frequency | What It Usually Signals |
|---|---|---|
| Estate sale | Very common | Heirs unfamiliar with condition, want quick sale |
| Deferred maintenance | Common | Owner couldn’t or didn’t maintain the property |
| Investor liquidation | Common | Investor wants to exit quickly |
| Power of sale / foreclosure | Occasional | Lender selling to recover debt |
| Renovation needed beyond owner’s budget | Common | Owner knows repairs are needed but can’t afford them |
| Owner relocation | Occasional | No time for repairs before moving |
The home inspection: essential for as-is purchases
Even though the seller will not fix anything, an inspection reveals what you are taking on:
What to prioritize in an as-is inspection
| Category | Red Flag Issues | Estimated Repair Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Foundation | Cracks, shifting, water intrusion | $10,000–$50,000+ |
| Roof | Missing shingles, sagging, leaks | $8,000–$25,000 |
| Electrical | Knob and tube, aluminum wiring, no grounding | $8,000–$20,000 |
| Plumbing | Galvanized pipes, lead pipes, poly-b | $5,000–$15,000 |
| HVAC | Non-functional furnace or AC, no ductwork | $5,000–$12,000 |
| Mould and asbestos | Visible mould, vermiculite insulation | $3,000–$30,000+ |
| Structural | Load-bearing wall removal, sagging floors | $15,000–$100,000+ |
Building your repair budget
Use this formula to evaluate an as-is deal:
Fair market value (if renovated) − Estimated repair costs − Contingency (15%–20%) − Your profit margin (if investing) = Maximum purchase price
Example:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Estimated renovated value | $650,000 |
| Estimated repairs (roof, electrical, kitchen, bath) | −$85,000 |
| Contingency (20% of repairs) | −$17,000 |
| Break-even purchase price | $548,000 |
If the seller is asking $550,000, there is no margin. If they are asking $480,000, there is room for the unexpected.
Financing an as-is property
Lender requirements
Lenders require the property to be:
- Habitable — running water, working heat, functional electrical, no safety hazards
- Structurally sound — no major foundation or structural concerns
- Insurable — home insurance must be obtainable
| Property Condition | Financing Likelihood |
|---|---|
| Cosmetically dated but functional | No issues — standard mortgage available |
| Needs moderate renovation | Possible — appraiser may flag concerns but lender may proceed |
| Major systems not working (no heating, plumbing issues) | Difficult — lender may require repairs before funding |
| Structurally compromised (foundation failure, fire damage) | Very difficult — likely cash-only or alternative lender |
| Not habitable (condemned, no utilities) | Cash only |
Purchase plus improvements mortgage
Some lenders offer a Purchase Plus Improvements (PPI) mortgage that lets you finance the purchase price plus renovation costs (up to $40,000 for insured, or more for conventional):
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Maximum renovation amount | $40,000 (insured) or higher (conventional) |
| How it works | Renovation funds held back and released as work is completed |
| Eligible renovations | Structural, mechanical, cosmetic — must increase value |
| Inspection required | Appraiser inspects after renovation completion |
| Lenders that offer PPI | Most major banks and monoline lenders |
Seller’s disclosure obligations
Even with as-is sales, Canadian law requires sellers to disclose known latent defects:
| Defect Type | Seller Obligation | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Patent defect (visible) | No obligation — buyer should see it | Cracked window, peeling paint |
| Latent defect (hidden + material) | Must disclose | Concealed water damage, known foundation crack behind drywall |
| Latent defect (hidden + dangerous) | Must disclose | Mould behind walls, asbestos, underground oil tank |
Property disclosure statements
Most provinces use a Seller Property Information Statement (SPIS) or similar form:
| Province | Form | Mandatory? |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario | SPIS (OREA Form 220) | Voluntary (but common) |
| British Columbia | Property Disclosure Statement | Voluntary (but standard) |
| Alberta | Real Property Report + Seller Disclosure | RPR required for title insurance |
| Quebec | Declaration by the Seller | Common in brokered transactions |
Even if the seller declines to fill out a disclosure form, their legal obligation to disclose known latent defects remains.
Negotiating an as-is purchase
| Strategy | How It Works |
|---|---|
| Price reduction | Offer below asking based on estimated repair costs |
| Extended closing | Request more time to arrange financing or inspections |
| Deposit structure | Smaller deposit given the higher risk |
| Inspection condition | Include a condition even for as-is — to walk away, not to demand repairs |
| Pre-offer inspection | Inspect before submitting your offer (common with as-is) |
| Escrow holdback | Negotiate funds held back at closing for critical repairs |
Red flags that an as-is property isn’t worth the risk
- No property disclosure form and seller refuses to complete one — what are they hiding?
- Lender refuses to finance — if the bank won’t touch it, the problems may be worse than they appear
- Insurance companies decline coverage — another signal of significant risk
- Environmental contamination (oil tank, asbestos, grow-op history) — remediation costs can exceed the property value
- Title issues (liens, encroachments, zoning violations) — these are separate from physical condition and can be equally costly
- Repair estimates exceed 30% of the purchase price — the math rarely works unless you are extremely experienced
As-is buying checklist
- Get a thorough home inspection (hire a specialist if needed for foundations, roofing, etc.)
- Obtain 2–3 contractor quotes for major repairs
- Confirm mortgage financing is possible given property condition
- Verify you can obtain home insurance
- Have your lawyer review the APS and disclosure documents
- Calculate total cost (purchase + repairs + contingency) vs renovated market value
- Check for environmental concerns (TSSA oil tank search, asbestos, mould)
- Review title for liens, easements, and zoning compliance
- Ensure the deal makes financial sense after all costs are factored in