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Title Insurance in Canada: Comprehensive Guide to Coverage, Costs & Claims (2026)

Updated

Title insurance is one of the lowest-cost, highest-value protections available to Canadian homebuyers. A single payment of $250–$500 at closing protects you against losses that could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Yet many buyers do not understand what it covers or how it works. This comprehensive guide covers every aspect of title insurance in Canada.

What title insurance is

FeatureDetails
TypeInsurance policy on the legal title (ownership) of real property
PremiumOne-time payment at closing ($250–$500 for residential)
Ongoing costNone — no annual premiums
DurationOwner policy: as long as you own the property. Lender policy: as long as the mortgage exists
ProvidersFCT (First Canadian Title), Stewart Title, Chicago Title, TitlePLUS (through Law Society programs)
Purchased throughYour real estate lawyer arranges it at closing

Two types of policies

Policy TypeProtectsRequired?CostDuration
Lender policyThe mortgage lender’s interest in the propertyYes — most lenders require it$200–$400Life of the mortgage
Owner policyYou, the homeownerOptional (but strongly recommended)$50–$150 additionalAs long as you own the property

Why you need both

ScenarioLender Policy OnlyOwner + Lender Policy
Title fraud discoveredLender is made whole — you are notBoth you and the lender are covered
Encroachment requires removal of structureLender’s security protected — you pay the costsInsurance covers your costs
Zoning violation prevents planned renovationNot the lender’s problem — your lossInsurance covers your loss
Missing lien surfaces after purchaseLender has priority — you deal with itInsurance pays to resolve the lien

Complete coverage comparison

What title insurance covers

RiskCoverageExample
Title fraud and forgeryYesSomeone forges your signature to sell or mortgage your home
Existing liens or chargesYesPrevious owner had a CRA lien, contractor’s lien, or unpaid mortgage
EncroachmentYesYour deck extends onto the neighbour’s property (or vice versa)
Building permit violationsYesPrevious owner finished basement without permits — city orders removal
Zoning non-complianceYesProperty use violates current zoning (e.g., home office in residential zone)
Survey/boundary defectsYesProperty boundaries differ from what was represented
Errors in public recordsYesMistake in the land titles office records
Missing or undisclosed heirsYesAn heir of a previous owner claims partial ownership
Easements not disclosedYesUtility company has a right-of-way across your yard not shown on title
Property tax arrearsYesPrevious owner left unpaid property taxes that become your liability
Municipal work ordersYesOutstanding city work orders (repair sidewalk, remove tree, etc.)
Gap coverageYesIssues that arise between closing and title registration (registration gap)
Condo status certificate errorsYesInaccurate information in the status certificate about fees or special assessments

What title insurance does NOT cover

Not CoveredWhy
Known defects (disclosed before purchase)You accepted the risk by buying
Aboriginal/Indigenous land claimsGenerally excluded
Environmental contaminationSeparate environmental insurance needed
Physical condition of the homeThat is what a home inspection is for
Future changes in zoningOnly existing zoning issues are covered
Builder warranty defects (new construction)Covered by Tarion or provincial new home warranty
Normal wear and tearNot an insurance risk

Cost breakdown by province and scenario

ScenarioLender PolicyOwner PolicyCombinedTotal
$400,000 condo$200–$300$50–$100$250–$400
$600,000 detached house$250–$350$75–$125$325–$475
$1,000,000 property$300–$450$100–$175$400–$625
Refinancing (lender policy only)$250–$400N/A$250–$400

Per closing, title insurance costs less than one month of property tax in most cities.

Title insurance vs property survey/real property report

FeatureTitle InsuranceProperty Survey / RPR
Cost$250–$500 (one-time)$500–$3,000 (one-time)
What you getFinancial protection against title defectsPhysical map of property boundaries and structures
Identifies encroachments?No — but covers the financial lossYes — shows exactly where they are
Shows property lines?NoYes
Required by most lenders?Yes (lender policy)Depends — some lenders accept title insurance in lieu of survey
Useful for building fences/structures?NoYes
Ongoing protection?Yes — as long as you own the propertyNo — a snapshot in time

Do you need both?

SituationRecommendation
Standard residential purchaseTitle insurance is sufficient for most buyers
Planning to build a fence, addition, or poolGet a survey AND title insurance
Rural property with unclear boundariesGet a survey AND title insurance
New subdivision with builder surveyTitle insurance may be sufficient
Lender requires one or the otherAsk which they accept — most accept title insurance

The claims process

How to file a title insurance claim

StepAction
1Contact your title insurance company (phone number on your policy)
2Describe the issue — they assign a claims adjuster
3Provide documentation (purchase agreement, title search, survey if available)
4The insurer investigates the claim
5If covered, the insurer either resolves the problem (pays legal costs, settles the lien) or compensates you financially

Common claim scenarios

ClaimWhat HappensTypical Resolution
Contractor lien from previous ownerPrevious owner’s unpaid contractor files a lienInsurer pays to discharge the lien
Neighbour claims your fence is on their landBoundary dispute arisesInsurer pays legal costs to resolve; compensates you if fence must be moved
City discovers unpermitted renovationOrders you to bring to code or removeInsurer covers costs of compliance
Title fraud discoveredSomeone registered a forged transferInsurer pays legal costs to restore your title and covers losses
Property tax arrears surface after closingPrevious owner’s taxes create a lienInsurer pays the tax arrears

Claim timeline

StageTypical Duration
Initial reportImmediate
Claims adjuster assigned1–5 business days
Investigation2–8 weeks
Resolution1–6 months (depends on complexity)
Title fraud claims3–12 months (complex legal process)

Title insurance for condos

Condo-Specific CoverageDetails
Status certificate errorsIf the certificate was inaccurate about fees, special assessments, or reserve fund
Common element encroachmentsIf the condo’s common elements encroach on other properties
Condo lien from previous ownerUnpaid condo fees that create a lien
Zoning issues with the condo buildingNon-compliance that affects your unit

Condo buyers need title insurance too. The most common condo claim is status certificate errors — especially regarding special assessments that were not properly disclosed.

Title insurance for refinancing

SituationInsurance Needed?
Refinancing with the same lenderLender may require new lender policy
Refinancing with a new lenderNew lender will require a lender policy
Owner policy statusYour existing owner policy remains valid — no new one needed
Cost at refinancing$250–$400 (lender policy only)

Choosing a title insurer

InsurerKey Features
FCT (First Canadian Title)Largest market share in Canada; broad coverage; widely used
Stewart TitleGlobal insurer; strong in commercial and residential
Chicago TitlePart of Fidelity National Financial; strong in Ontario
TitlePLUSOffered through provincial law society programs; includes legal services coverage

Your lawyer typically recommends and arranges title insurance. If you have a preference, ask your lawyer whether they work with that insurer.

Tips for buyers

TipDetails
Always get an owner policyThe additional $50–$150 is the best insurance value at closing
Keep your policy documentStore it with your important papers — you need it to file a claim
It does not replace a home inspectionTitle insurance covers title problems, not physical defects
Ask about enhanced coverageSome policies offer additional protection (identity theft, forced removal of structure, etc.)
It transfers if you inheritIf you inherit property, you may be covered under the previous owner’s policy

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