Offer Accepted to Closing in Canada 2026: Step-by-Step Timeline
Updated
Your offer was accepted — now what? The period between an accepted offer and closing day involves more steps than most buyers expect. Here is every stage, what happens, who handles it, and your responsibilities.
Timeline overview
Day
Stage
Who Handles It
Your Role
Day 0
Offer accepted
Real estate agents
Sign the agreement
Day 1
Deposit due
You (cheque or wire)
Deliver deposit to listing brokerage
Days 1–3
Home inspection
Home inspector (you hire)
Attend the inspection
Days 1–5
Mortgage application submitted
Lender or broker
Provide documents
Days 3–7
Appraisal ordered
Lender
Provide property access if needed
Days 5–10
All conditions due
You
Waive or exercise conditions
Days 10–30
Lawyer completes title search
Your real estate lawyer
Hire a lawyer if you haven’t
Days 15–45
Mortgage commitment received
Lender
Sign mortgage commitment
Days 30–60
Arrange property insurance
You
Shop and purchase home insurance
Day 55–59
Final walkthrough
You
Inspect the property one last time
Closing day
Sign, fund, get keys
Lawyer + lender
Bring ID, certified cheque, and sign
Step 1: Deposit (Day 1)
Detail
Information
Amount
Typically 1%–5% of purchase price ($5,000–$50,000 on a $500,000 home)
Due
Within 24 hours of acceptance (as specified in the offer)
Form
Certified cheque, bank draft, or wire transfer
Held by
Listing brokerage, in trust
Refundable?
Yes — if you exercise a condition within the condition period. No — if you back out after waiving conditions
Applied at closing
Credited toward your down payment
Common mistake: Not having the deposit funds immediately accessible. Prepare a certified cheque or bank draft before submitting your offer.
Step 2: Home inspection (Days 1–3)
Book your home inspection as soon as the offer is accepted — inspectors in busy markets may have 2–3 day wait times.
Detail
Information
Cost
$350–$600 for a typical house
Duration
2–4 hours
Who attends
You (strongly recommended) and the inspector
Report delivered
Same day or next day
What happens next
Negotiate repairs, request price reduction, or walk away
Step 4: Status certificate review — condos only (Days 1–10)
Detail
Information
What it is
A document from the condo corporation detailing finances, rules, lawsuits, and reserve fund health
Cost
$100 (paid by seller or buyer, depending on the offer)
Review by
Your lawyer (mandatory)
Red flags
Low reserve fund, special assessments, ongoing litigation, insurance issues
Timeline
Request immediately after acceptance; review can take 3–5 days
Step 5: Waive or exercise conditions (Day 5–10)
This is the most important deadline in the process.
Action
When
What Happens
Waive all conditions
By the condition deadline
Deal becomes firm and binding
Exercise a condition
Before the deadline
Deal is cancelled and your deposit is returned
Request an extension
Before the deadline
Seller may or may not agree
Miss the deadline
On the deadline
Varies by province — may default to waived or expired
Once you waive conditions, you are legally committed to purchase the property. Backing out after waiving conditions means losing your deposit and potentially facing a lawsuit for damages.
Step 6: Hire a real estate lawyer (if not already done)
Detail
Information
When to hire
Ideally before making offers; no later than after acceptance
Cost
$1,000–$2,500 + disbursements ($200–$500)
What they do
Title search, mortgage registration, fund transfer, closing documents
How to find one
Referrals from your real estate agent or mortgage broker
What your lawyer checks
Check
What They’re Looking For
Title search
Clean title — no liens, mortgages, or encumbrances
Property tax status
Taxes are current (unpaid taxes become your problem)
Zoning compliance
Property use matches zoning bylaws
Building permits
Renovations were properly permitted
Easements and rights of way
No surprises about shared access
Survey or title insurance
Property boundaries are correct
Step 7: Arrange property insurance (Days 30–60)
Your lender requires proof of home insurance before they will release the mortgage funds.
Detail
Information
When to arrange
At least 2 weeks before closing
What’s needed
Proof of insurance (binder letter) sent to your lawyer and lender
Coverage required
At minimum, replacement cost coverage that satisfies the lender
Cost
$1,000–$3,000+/year depending on property type and location