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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

DayStageWho Handles ItYour Role
Day 0Offer acceptedReal estate agentsSign the agreement
Day 1Deposit dueYou (cheque or wire)Deliver deposit to listing brokerage
Days 1–3Home inspectionHome inspector (you hire)Attend the inspection
Days 1–5Mortgage application submittedLender or brokerProvide documents
Days 3–7Appraisal orderedLenderProvide property access if needed
Days 5–10All conditions dueYouWaive or exercise conditions
Days 10–30Lawyer completes title searchYour real estate lawyerHire a lawyer if you haven’t
Days 15–45Mortgage commitment receivedLenderSign mortgage commitment
Days 30–60Arrange property insuranceYouShop and purchase home insurance
Day 55–59Final walkthroughYouInspect the property one last time
Closing daySign, fund, get keysLawyer + lenderBring ID, certified cheque, and sign

Step 1: Deposit (Day 1)

DetailInformation
AmountTypically 1%–5% of purchase price ($5,000–$50,000 on a $500,000 home)
DueWithin 24 hours of acceptance (as specified in the offer)
FormCertified cheque, bank draft, or wire transfer
Held byListing brokerage, in trust
Refundable?Yes — if you exercise a condition within the condition period. No — if you back out after waiving conditions
Applied at closingCredited 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.

DetailInformation
Cost$350–$600 for a typical house
Duration2–4 hours
Who attendsYou (strongly recommended) and the inspector
Report deliveredSame day or next day
What happens nextNegotiate repairs, request price reduction, or walk away

→ See: Home Inspection Guide Canada

Step 3: Finalize mortgage approval (Days 1–10)

Your lender needs to approve the specific property, not just your financial profile.

TaskTimelineNotes
Submit purchase agreement to lenderDay 1Your broker or banker handles this
Appraisal ordered by lenderDays 2–5Costs $300–$500 (sometimes lender-covered)
Appraisal completedDays 5–10Appraiser visits property and submits report
Conditional mortgage approvalDays 5–10Lender confirms they will fund the mortgage

→ See: How Long Does Mortgage Approval Take?

Step 4: Status certificate review — condos only (Days 1–10)

DetailInformation
What it isA 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 byYour lawyer (mandatory)
Red flagsLow reserve fund, special assessments, ongoing litigation, insurance issues
TimelineRequest 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.

ActionWhenWhat Happens
Waive all conditionsBy the condition deadlineDeal becomes firm and binding
Exercise a conditionBefore the deadlineDeal is cancelled and your deposit is returned
Request an extensionBefore the deadlineSeller may or may not agree
Miss the deadlineOn the deadlineVaries 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)

DetailInformation
When to hireIdeally before making offers; no later than after acceptance
Cost$1,000–$2,500 + disbursements ($200–$500)
What they doTitle search, mortgage registration, fund transfer, closing documents
How to find oneReferrals from your real estate agent or mortgage broker

What your lawyer checks

CheckWhat They’re Looking For
Title searchClean title — no liens, mortgages, or encumbrances
Property tax statusTaxes are current (unpaid taxes become your problem)
Zoning complianceProperty use matches zoning bylaws
Building permitsRenovations were properly permitted
Easements and rights of wayNo surprises about shared access
Survey or title insuranceProperty 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.

DetailInformation
When to arrangeAt least 2 weeks before closing
What’s neededProof of insurance (binder letter) sent to your lawyer and lender
Coverage requiredAt minimum, replacement cost coverage that satisfies the lender
Cost$1,000–$3,000+/year depending on property type and location

→ See: Best Home Insurance in Canada

Step 8: Final walkthrough (1–2 days before closing)

What to CheckWhy
All agreed-upon repairs completedSeller was supposed to fix items from inspection negotiation
Appliances and fixtures included in the sale are presentSometimes sellers remove fixtures not included in the agreement
No new damageWater damage, broken windows, holes in walls
Property is clean and vacant (unless otherwise agreed)Seller should have moved out
All systems workingRun taps, flush toilets, test furnace/AC, check lights
Garage door openers, keys, access codesSeller should leave all access devices

If something is wrong, notify your lawyer immediately. They can hold back funds from the seller to cover the issue.

Step 9: Closing day

What to bring to your lawyer’s office

ItemNotes
Government-issued photo IDSame ID used on your mortgage application
Certified cheque or bank draftFor the remaining down payment and closing costs
Void chequeFor mortgage payment setup
Proof of insuranceIf not already sent to the lawyer

What you sign

DocumentPurpose
Mortgage documentsYour agreement with the lender
Transfer/deedTransfers property title to your name
Statement of adjustmentsFinal accounting of what you owe (purchase price, deposit credit, tax adjustments, legal fees)
Title insurance policyProtects against title defects
Property tax undertakingConfirms responsibility for future taxes

What happens with the money

PaymentFromTo
Your down payment (minus deposit)Your bank account → your lawyerSeller’s lawyer
Mortgage fundsYour lender → your lawyerSeller’s lawyer
Your deposit (held in trust)Listing brokerageCredited at closing
Closing costsYour bank account → your lawyerVarious (lawyer, land transfer tax, title insurance)

When you get the keys

ProvinceTypical Key Release
OntarioSame day — typically 3–6 PM
BC1–2 business days after closing (due to registration process)
AlbertaSame day (once land titles confirms registration)
QuebecSame day (notary handles closing)

Complete closing costs summary

CostAmountNotes
Land transfer tax0.5%–4% of purchase priceVaries by province; Ontario has double land transfer in Toronto
Legal fees$1,000–$2,500Plus $200–$500 disbursements
Title insurance$250–$400Alternative to a property survey
Home inspection$350–$600Paid before closing
Appraisal$300–$500Sometimes covered by lender
Property insurance (first year)$1,000–$3,000Must be arranged before closing
Moving costs$500–$5,000Depends on distance and volume
Property tax adjustmentVariesProrated from closing date to year-end
Utility connections$0–$200Setup fees for hydro, gas, water, internet
CMHC insurance premium2.8%–4.0% of mortgageOnly if down payment is under 20%

→ See: Closing Costs Guide by Province