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Can You Back Out of a Home Offer in Canada? Legal Consequences & Options (2026)

Updated

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?

ScenarioCan You Back Out?Deposit Returned?Risk
Condition not fulfilled (financing, inspection)YesYesNo risk — this is what conditions are for
During irrevocability period (before seller accepts)Cannot withdrawN/AOffer is binding during this window
After conditions waivedTechnically yes, but breach of contractUsually forfeitedSeller can sue for damages
Firm offer acceptedTechnically yes, but breach of contractUsually forfeitedSeller can sue for damages
BC 3-day rescission periodYes (0.25% fee)Yes, minus rescission feeMinimal risk
Ontario pre-construction condo (10-day cooling off)YesYesNo 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:

CostDescriptionTypical Amount
Deposit forfeitureSeller keeps the deposit$15,000–$100,000+ (typically 5%–10% of purchase price)
Carrying costsSeller’s mortgage payments, property tax, utilities while relisting$3,000–$10,000+ per month
Relisting costsAgent commissions, staging, photographer$10,000–$50,000
Price differenceIf seller eventually sells for lessCan be $50,000–$200,000+
Legal feesBoth 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:

ItemAmount
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?

ScenarioCan Seller Back Out?Consequence
Before accepting the offerYesNo consequence — seller has not signed
Counter-offer (rejects original)Yes — counter-offer replaces originalOriginal offer is dead
After accepting (APS signed)Breach of contractBuyer can sue for specific performance or damages
Buyer fails to fulfill conditionsDeal dies automaticallyNo consequence
Mutual release signedYesBoth 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:

FeatureDetails
Length3 business days after acceptance
Rescission fee0.25% of purchase price (paid to seller)
Applies toResidential resale properties in BC
Does not apply toAuction sales, court-ordered sales, new construction covered by other legislation
ProcessBuyer notifies seller in writing within the rescission window
DepositReturned 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

FeatureDetails
Length10 calendar days from signing
Cost to rescindNone — full deposit returned
Applies toPre-construction condominium purchases only
Does not apply toResale condos, freehold homes, commercial property
Legal basisCondominium 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:

  1. Financing condition — do not waive until you have a firm mortgage commitment (not just a pre-approval)
  2. Home inspection condition — allows you to walk away if significant defects are found
  3. Status certificate condition (condos) — your lawyer reviews the condo corporation’s financial health
  4. Appraisal condition — ensures the lender will finance based on the appraised value
  5. 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

  1. Talk to your real estate lawyer immediately — not your agent, your lawyer
  2. Do not communicate directly with the seller or their agent about wanting to back out
  3. Review your conditions — if any are still unfulfilled, exercise your right not to waive
  4. Request a mutual release — the seller may prefer a clean break over litigation
  5. If no clean exit exists — your lawyer can negotiate a settlement (partial deposit forfeiture) to avoid court
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