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Pocket Listings in Canada: Exclusive Listings Explained (2026)

Updated

Pocket listings exist in a gray area of Canadian real estate — offering privacy and exclusivity while potentially leaving money on the table. Here is what you need to know.

How pocket listings work

The process

  1. Seller signs an exclusive listing agreement with an agent (not an MLS listing agreement)
  2. Agent markets the property privately — through their network, brokerage, or select contacts
  3. Showings are arranged privately with pre-qualified buyers
  4. Offers are received and negotiated off-market
  5. The sale closes without the property ever appearing on MLS or realtor.ca

Types of off-market listings

TypeDescriptionMLS Involvement
Pocket listingAgent keeps it within their personal networkNone
Office exclusiveShared within the listing agent’s brokerage onlyNone
Coming soonPre-MLS marketing for a set period before going live on MLSPre-MLS (enters MLS later)
Whisper listingInformally shared among select agentsNone
Private saleOwner sells directly without any agentNone

Why sellers choose pocket listings

ReasonWho Benefits
PrivacyCelebrities, public figures, high-net-worth individuals who do not want their home publicly listed
Test the marketSellers who want to gauge interest before committing to a public listing
Avoid DOM clockDays on Market does not start counting until listed on MLS
Reduce disruptionNo open houses, fewer showings, less disruption to daily life
Sensitive situationsDivorce, estate sale, financial difficulty — seller wants discretion
Control the narrativeAgent can position the property to select buyers without public scrutiny
ExclusivityCreates a sense of scarcity and urgency among select buyers

Pocket listing pros and cons

For sellers

ProsCons
Maximum privacyReduced exposure — fewer potential buyers
No public DOM countingLikely lower sale price (5%–15% less than MLS)
Fewer disruptionsCannot benefit from bidding wars
Controlled showingsDependence on agent’s network quality
Test price without stigmaNo comparative market feedback
Flexibility to move to MLS if neededAgent may prioritize their own buyers (dual agency)

For buyers

ProsCons
Less competition — fewer buyers awareLimited selection — hard to find pocket listings
Potential for better pricingCannot comparison-shop as easily
More time to evaluate (no bidding war pressure)Requires a well-connected agent
Access to unique or premium propertiesDue diligence more important (less market validation of price)
First-mover advantageMay miss better MLS options

CREA and board rules on pocket listings

Canadian real estate boards have been tightening rules around pocket listings:

Rule AreaCREA / Board Position
Seller consentSeller must provide informed, written consent to not list on MLS
Cooperation obligationIf the property is listed through a board member, cooperation with other agents may still be required
Coming soon rulesSome boards limit the duration of coming soon marketing before MLS entry is required
Dual agency disclosureIf the listing agent also represents the buyer, full disclosure is mandatory
Competition BureauCREA has faced past challenges about MLS access — rules continue evolving

The MLS cooperation principle

MLS was built on the principle that listing agents cooperate with buyer agents to maximize exposure and get the best price for sellers. Pocket listings undermine this by:

  • Reducing competition for the property
  • Potentially creating dual agency situations (where the listing agent represents both sides)
  • Limiting buyer access to available inventory

When pocket listings make sense

ScenarioWhy Off-Market Works
Ultra-luxury ($5M+)Small buyer pool — targeted marketing is more effective than broad MLS exposure
Celebrity / public figurePrivacy concerns outweigh price optimization
Tenant-occupied investmentSeller does not want to disrupt tenants with showings
Pre-construction assignmentDeveloper or builder selling to select buyers before public launch
Divorce or estateDiscretion is important; parties want a quick, quiet sale
Neighbourhood saturationMultiple properties for sale on the same street — seller wants to avoid competing directly

When sellers should avoid pocket listings

ScenarioWhy MLS Is Better
Standard residential propertyMaximum exposure drives competitive offers
Price-sensitive (want highest price)MLS bidding wars consistently deliver higher prices
First-time sellerNeed the structure and exposure of the MLS system
Average to above-average propertyBenefits from comparison shopping by buyers
Strong seller’s marketMultiple offers on MLS will exceed any pocket-listing offer

How to access pocket listings as a buyer

  1. Work with a top-producing agent in your target area — they hear about off-market properties first
  2. Ask your agent specifically — “Are there any off-market or coming-soon properties in this neighbourhood?”
  3. Contact listing agents directly for specific streets or buildings you’re interested in
  4. Join real estate investment groups — investors often trade properties privately
  5. Door-knock or letter-campaign — send letters to homeowners in your target neighbourhood expressing interest
  6. Watch coming soon listings — some agents post on social media or their websites before MLS
  7. Work with a brokerage with a large agent network — internal listings may be shared before going public

Dual agency risks with pocket listings

Pocket listings frequently result in dual agency (where the listing agent also represents the buyer), which creates conflicts:

IssueRisk
Agent represents both sidesCannot fully advocate for either party
Price negotiation conflictAgent’s commission benefits from a higher price (seller’s interest) but buyer wants a lower price
Information asymmetryAgent may know the seller’s bottom line and the buyer’s maximum — difficult to remain neutral
Reduced representationIn dual agency, the agent becomes a transaction facilitator, not an advocate

In Ontario and some other provinces, dual agency through designated representation (two agents in the same brokerage) is the workaround — but it still raises concerns about information barriers within the same office.

Key takeaways

  1. Pocket listings offer privacy but typically sell for 5%–15% less than MLS-listed properties
  2. MLS remains the best way to maximize your sale price through broad market exposure
  3. Buyers benefit from pocket listings through reduced competition — but need a well-connected agent
  4. Always ensure proper disclosure if dual agency is involved
  5. CREA rules around pocket listings are tightening — check with your agent about current board policies
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