Skip to main content

Selling Your House Without a Real Estate Agent in Canada — FSBO Guide (2026)

Updated

Why sellers go agentless

The math is simple: the average Canadian home sold for approximately $660,000 in early 2026. At a typical total commission of 4–5%, that’s $26,400–$33,000 — the single largest cost of selling.

FSBO (For Sale By Owner) sellers aim to keep some or all of that commission. The question is whether the savings outweigh the work, risk, and potential for a lower sale price.


Commission savings: the real numbers

Traditional full-service sale

Cost componentRateOn $660,000 sale
Listing agent commission2.0–2.5%$13,200–$16,500
Buyer’s agent commission2.0–2.5%$13,200–$16,500
Total commission4.0–5.0%$26,400–$33,000

FSBO with buyer’s agent commission offered

Cost componentRateOn $660,000 sale
Flat-fee MLS listing$500–$3,000
Buyer’s agent commission2.0–2.5%$13,200–$16,500
Total$13,700–$19,500
Savings vs. full-service$12,700–$13,500

Fully private sale (no agents on either side)

Cost componentRateOn $660,000 sale
Flat-fee MLS listing (optional)$0–$3,000
Buyer’s agent commission0%$0
Total$0–$3,000
Savings vs. full-service$23,400–$33,000

Reality check: Selling fully without any buyer’s agent commission means most agents won’t show your home to their clients. In practice, the sweet spot is saving the listing commission while offering a competitive buyer’s agent commission.


Step-by-step FSBO process

Step 1 — Price your home accurately

This is the single most important factor. Overpricing is the #1 mistake FSBO sellers make — it leads to a stale listing, price reductions, and ultimately selling for less than if you’d priced correctly from the start.

How to price without an agent:

MethodHow to do itReliability
Comparable sales analysisSearch sold prices on HouseSigma, Realtor.ca (where available), or Zolo for 3–5 similar homes that sold in the last 90 days within 1 kmHigh
Price per square footCalculate $/sq ft of comparables and apply to your homeModerate (doesn’t account for condition, lot, finishes)
Municipal assessmentCheck your property tax assessment vs. sale prices of similar assessed homesLow (assessments lag the market)
Paid appraisalHire a licensed appraiser for $300–$500High
Free agent CMAsSome agents will provide a free Comparative Market Analysis hoping to win your listingModerate (may be inflated to win business)

Pricing strategy: Price at or slightly below fair market value. FSBO properties already face a stigma — overpricing amplifies it. A competitive price generates traffic, competition, and often a higher final sale price than an ambitious ask that sits for weeks.

Step 2 — Prepare your home

TaskWhy it mattersEstimated cost
Declutter and depersonalizeBuyers need to imagine themselves in the space$0 (DIY) or $500–$2,000 (junk removal)
Deep cleanFirst impressions are everything$300–$600 (professional)
Minor repairsLeaky faucets, cracked tiles, squeaky doors signal neglect$200–$1,000
Fresh paint (neutral colours)Highest ROI preparation task$500–$2,000 (DIY) or $2,000–$5,000 (pro)
StagingStaged homes sell faster and for 1–5% more$2,000–$5,000 (professional)
Curb appealMow, edge, plant, clean the driveway, repaint the front door$200–$1,000

Step 3 — Get on MLS (Realtor.ca)

Most buyers search Realtor.ca. Without an MLS listing, you’re invisible to the majority of the market.

Flat-fee MLS services in Canada:

ServiceCoverageFlat feeWhat’s included
PropertyGuys.comNational$1,000–$3,000MLS listing, yard sign, some support
FlatFeeMLSListings.comOntario focus$500–$1,500MLS listing, photos on Realtor.ca
Snap Up Real EstateOntario$500–$2,000MLS posting, basic support
2% RealtyWestern Canada2% total commissionFull MLS, reduced commission (hybrid model)
UnreservedAlberta, BC, Ontario$500–$1,000MLS posting
Local flat-fee brokeragesVaries$500–$2,000MLS posting, often minimal support

What you get: Your listing appears on Realtor.ca, local board websites, and syndicated sites. Buyer’s agents can see your listing and show it to clients. You handle inquiries, showings, and negotiations yourself.

What you don’t get: An agent managing the process, negotiating on your behalf, or advising on offers.

Step 4 — Market beyond MLS

ChannelCostEffort
Professional photography$300–$800Book a real estate photographer — phone photos underperform dramatically
Video / virtual tour$200–$600Matterport or video walkthrough — standard expectation in 2026
Facebook Marketplace & groupsFreePost in local buy/sell groups and community pages
Kijiji / CraigslistFree–$50Still used, especially for rural properties
Yard sign$30–$100With phone number and “by owner” messaging
Open housesFree (your time)Weekend open houses drive walk-in traffic
Paid social ads$100–$500Targeted Facebook/Instagram ads to local buyers

Step 5 — Handle showings

  • Respond to inquiries within 1–2 hours — speed matters in a competitive market.
  • Be flexible on showing times — evenings and weekends are when buyers are available.
  • Leave during showings if possible — buyers are uncomfortable with the owner present.
  • Keep a showing log with names and agent info (if represented).
  • Ask for pre-qualification or pre-approval letters before accepting offers.

Step 6 — Negotiate and accept an offer

This is where most FSBO sellers feel least comfortable. Key principles:

  • Don’t take the first offer personally. Low offers are normal — counter rather than reject.
  • Everything is negotiable: price, closing date, conditions, inclusions (appliances, fixtures).
  • Common conditions to expect: financing (5–10 business days), home inspection (7–10 days), sale of buyer’s property (avoid if possible).
  • Get every offer in writing — verbal agreements are not enforceable for real estate in Canada.
  • Keep emotions separate. This is a business transaction.

Step 7 — Hire a real estate lawyer

Non-negotiable. Whether or not you use an agent, you need a lawyer to:

  • Review and finalize the Agreement of Purchase and Sale.
  • Conduct a title search.
  • Handle mortgage discharge.
  • Manage the trust account for the deposit.
  • Prepare transfer documents.
  • Close the transaction.

Cost: $1,000–$2,500 depending on the province and complexity.


ProvinceOffer formatWho can draft the offer?Disclosure obligationsProfessional required at closing
OntarioStandard OREA formsAnyone (but use standard forms)SPIS (optional but recommended)Real estate lawyer
British ColumbiaStandard BCREA formsAnyoneProperty Disclosure Statement (common)Lawyer or notary
AlbertaStandard AREA formsAnyoneRECA disclosure rules applyReal estate lawyer
QuebecPromise to Purchase (Promesse d’achat)Anyone (standard forms exist through OACIQ)Seller’s Declaration mandatoryNotary (required)
ManitobaStandard formsAnyoneCondition report commonReal estate lawyer
SaskatchewanStandard formsAnyoneProperty Condition Disclosure recommendedReal estate lawyer
Nova ScotiaStandard NSAR formsAnyoneProperty Condition Disclosure Statement (common)Real estate lawyer

Key legal points across all provinces:

  • You must disclose known material defects — hiding a leaky basement or flooding history exposes you to lawsuits.
  • You are responsible for understanding the Agreement of Purchase and Sale without an agent to explain it.
  • Deposits should be held in a lawyer’s trust account, not yours.
  • Title insurance is the buyer’s cost but facilitates a smoother closing.

When FSBO makes sense (and when it doesn’t)

Good candidates for FSBO

SituationWhy
Hot seller’s market with low inventoryHomes sell themselves — agents add less value
You have real estate or legal experienceYou understand contracts, negotiation, and process
Simple transaction (no conditions, strong buyer)Less that can go wrong
High-value property ($1M+)Commission savings are $25,000–$50,000+
Selling to someone you knowNo marketing or showings needed
Condo with clear comparable pricingEasy to price accurately

Better off with an agent

SituationWhy
Buyer’s market with high inventoryYou need an agent’s marketing and negotiation skills
Unique or hard-to-price propertyProfessional pricing expertise prevents costly errors
First time sellingThe process has many legal and financial pitfalls
Emotional attachment to the homeAgents provide a buffer in negotiations
Complex transaction (estate sale, divorce, tenanted)Legal and procedural complexity
Rural property with thin comparablesAgent knowledge of the local market is critical
You don’t have time for showings and inquiriesFSBO is a part-time job

FSBO sale price: do you really net more?

The most-cited statistic: FSBO homes sell for 5–6% less than agent-listed homes (US NAR data). Canadian data is limited but suggests a similar pattern.

However, this statistic is misleading because:

  • FSBO sellers may be less motivated on price (if they’re not in a rush, they may accept lower offers).
  • Some FSBO sales are between family/friends at below-market prices.
  • Self-selection bias — properties that are harder to sell (rural, unique) are more likely to go FSBO.

The honest math:

ScenarioSale priceCommission costsNet proceeds
Agent sale at $660,000$660,000$29,700 (4.5%)$630,300
FSBO at $660,000 (same price)$660,000$14,850 (2.25% buyer agent)$645,150
FSBO at $640,000 (3% lower price)$640,000$14,400 (2.25% buyer agent)$625,600

If you sell for the same price as an agent would achieve, you save ~$15,000. If you sell for 3% less, you lose ~$5,000. The breakeven is roughly 2.25% below what an agent would get.


Hybrid options: partial-service agents

If full FSBO feels risky but full commission feels expensive, hybrid models sit in between:

ModelWhat you getTypical cost
Flat-fee listingMLS access only$500–$3,000
Discount brokerage (1%)MLS + basic support + offer review1% of sale price
2% full-serviceFull agent service at reduced commission2% + buyer agent commission
Flat-fee with à la carteMLS + add pricing help, negotiation, or closing support$1,000–$5,000
Hourly consultingAgent advice by the hour (you do the work)$150–$400/hour

🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →

Affiliate disclosure: WealthNorth may earn a commission if you apply through this link. This does not affect your rate or cost.

Tags: