Backing out of a home purchase is one of the most stressful situations a buyer or seller can face. Here is a clear breakdown of when you can walk away, what it costs, and how to protect yourself.
When can a buyer legally back out?
| Scenario | Can You Back Out? | Deposit Returned? | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Condition not fulfilled (financing, inspection) | Yes | Yes | No risk — this is what conditions are for |
| During irrevocability period (before seller accepts) | Cannot withdraw | N/A | Offer is binding during this window |
| After conditions waived | Technically yes, but breach of contract | Usually forfeited | Seller can sue for damages |
| Firm offer accepted | Technically yes, but breach of contract | Usually forfeited | Seller can sue for damages |
| BC 3-day rescission period | Yes (0.25% fee) | Yes, minus rescission fee | Minimal risk |
| Ontario pre-construction condo (10-day cooling off) | Yes | Yes | No risk |
The cost of backing out after going firm
When a buyer backs out of a firm or waived-condition deal, the potential financial exposure includes:
| Cost | Description | Typical Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Deposit forfeiture | Seller keeps the deposit | $15,000–$100,000+ (typically 5%–10% of purchase price) |
| Carrying costs | Seller’s mortgage payments, property tax, utilities while relisting | $3,000–$10,000+ per month |
| Relisting costs | Agent commissions, staging, photographer | $10,000–$50,000 |
| Price difference | If seller eventually sells for less | Can be $50,000–$200,000+ |
| Legal fees | Both parties’ legal costs if it goes to court | $10,000–$50,000+ each |
Real-world example
You agreed to buy a home for $800,000 with a $40,000 deposit. After waiving conditions, you back out. The seller relists and sells for $720,000 six months later. Potential claim:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Price difference | $80,000 |
| Carrying costs (6 months) | $24,000 |
| Relisting and commission costs | $35,000 |
| Legal fees | $15,000 |
| Total potential damages | $154,000 |
| Less: deposit forfeited | −$40,000 |
| Additional amount seller could claim | $114,000 |
When can a seller legally back out?
| Scenario | Can Seller Back Out? | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Before accepting the offer | Yes | No consequence — seller has not signed |
| Counter-offer (rejects original) | Yes — counter-offer replaces original | Original offer is dead |
| After accepting (APS signed) | Breach of contract | Buyer can sue for specific performance or damages |
| Buyer fails to fulfill conditions | Deal dies automatically | No consequence |
| Mutual release signed | Yes | Both parties agree to walk away |
Seller consequences for backing out
Canadian courts treat real estate as unique property, meaning buyers can seek specific performance — a court order forcing the seller to complete the sale. This is different from most contract disputes where damages (money) are the remedy.
Alternatively, the buyer can pursue damages:
- Cost of alternative housing (if they bought elsewhere for more)
- Legal fees and moving costs
- Lost mortgage rate (if rate hold expired)
- Emotional distress damages (rare but possible in egregious cases)
BC’s rescission period (since January 2023)
British Columbia introduced a buyer rescission period for residential real estate:
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Length | 3 business days after acceptance |
| Rescission fee | 0.25% of purchase price (paid to seller) |
| Applies to | Residential resale properties in BC |
| Does not apply to | Auction sales, court-ordered sales, new construction covered by other legislation |
| Process | Buyer notifies seller in writing within the rescission window |
| Deposit | Returned in full (rescission fee is separate) |
For a $900,000 home, the rescission fee is $2,250 — a relatively small cost for an exit option.
Ontario’s pre-construction cooling-off period
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Length | 10 calendar days from signing |
| Cost to rescind | None — full deposit returned |
| Applies to | Pre-construction condominium purchases only |
| Does not apply to | Resale condos, freehold homes, commercial property |
| Legal basis | Condominium Act, 1998 (Ontario) |
How to protect yourself as a buyer
Use conditions wisely
The most bulletproof way to protect yourself is through well-drafted conditions in the APS:
- Financing condition — do not waive until you have a firm mortgage commitment (not just a pre-approval)
- Home inspection condition — allows you to walk away if significant defects are found
- Status certificate condition (condos) — your lawyer reviews the condo corporation’s financial health
- Appraisal condition — ensures the lender will finance based on the appraised value
- Sale of buyer’s property — conditional on selling your current home (weakens the offer)
Get a pre-offer inspection
In competitive markets where firm offers are expected, ask the seller’s agent if you can do a pre-offer inspection. This eliminates the need for an inspection condition while still protecting you.
Understand your financing
A pre-approval is not a mortgage commitment. Before waiving your financing condition:
- Confirm the lender has fully underwritten your file
- Provide all requested documents (income verification, down payment confirmation)
- Ensure the property appraisal is complete or waived by the insurer
Mutual release: the cleanest exit
If both parties agree to cancel the deal, they sign a mutual release that:
- Terminates the APS
- Specifies what happens to the deposit (usually returned to buyer, but negotiable)
- Releases both parties from further claims
Sellers may agree to a mutual release if:
- They received a better offer
- The market has gone up since the original deal
- They want to avoid the hassle of suing a defaulting buyer
What to do if you need to back out
- Talk to your real estate lawyer immediately — not your agent, your lawyer
- Do not communicate directly with the seller or their agent about wanting to back out
- Review your conditions — if any are still unfulfilled, exercise your right not to waive
- Request a mutual release — the seller may prefer a clean break over litigation
- If no clean exit exists — your lawyer can negotiate a settlement (partial deposit forfeiture) to avoid court