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What Does a Real Estate Lawyer Do in Canada? Complete Guide (2026)

Updated

A real estate lawyer (or notary in Quebec) is one of the most important professionals in your home buying or selling process. They protect your legal interests, ensure the title is clean, handle the transfer of funds, and register the mortgage. This guide explains exactly what they do at each stage, what it costs, and how the process differs by province.

What a Real Estate Lawyer Does: Step by Step

When Buying

StageWhat the Lawyer Does
Before the offerReviews the Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS); advises on conditions, clauses, and legal risks
After the offer is acceptedOpens the file; orders a title search; contacts the lender’s lawyer for mortgage instructions
Title searchSearches the land registry to confirm the seller owns the property, identifies any liens, encumbrances, easements, or issues on title
Title insuranceArranges title insurance (protects against title defects, survey issues, fraud) — typically $250–$500
Review of documentsReviews status certificate (condos), survey/RPR, property tax account, utility accounts, condo bylaws
Mortgage documentationReceives mortgage instructions from the lender; prepares mortgage documents for your signature
Closing preparationPrepares the transfer/deed, statement of adjustments, statutory declarations
Signing appointmentYou meet the lawyer to sign all documents (typically 1–5 days before closing)
Closing dayRegisters the transfer and mortgage on title; releases funds to the seller’s lawyer; you receive the keys
Post-closingSends you a reporting letter with copies of all registered documents; remits land transfer tax

When Selling

StageWhat the Lawyer Does
Before closingReceives the APS and verifies terms; requests mortgage payout statement from your lender
Closing preparationPrepares the transfer/deed; statement of adjustments (prorated taxes, rent, utilities)
SigningYou sign the transfer documents
Closing dayReceives funds from buyer’s lawyer; pays off your mortgage; remits commissions and fees; deposits net proceeds to your account
Post-closingSends reporting letter; confirms mortgage discharged
What It ChecksWhy It Matters
Current registered ownerConfirms the seller actually owns the property
Mortgages / liens on titleAny existing mortgages, tax liens, construction liens, or court judgments must be cleared before closing
EasementsRight of way, utility easements — these survive the sale and may restrict how you use the property
Restrictive covenantsRules on title about what you can and cannot build (e.g., height restrictions, usage)
Property tax statusConfirms taxes are paid; any arrears become your problem
Zoning complianceConfirms the property’s use matches municipal zoning
EncroachmentsStructures crossing property lines (fences, garages, decks)

Statement of Adjustments

The statement of adjustments calculates the final amount the buyer pays, accounting for prepaid or owing items.

AdjustmentWho PaysExample
Property taxes (prepaid by seller)Buyer reimburses seller for the portion after closing dateSeller prepaid full year ($4,800); closing July 1 = buyer owes $2,400
Property taxes (in arrears)Seller credits buyerSeller hasn’t paid current year taxes; buyer gets credit
Condo fees (prepaid)Buyer reimburses sellerSeller paid current month; closing mid-month = proportional credit
Fuel/oil tankBuyer reimburses sellerSeller filled the oil tank; buyer pays current value
Rent (if rental property)Seller credits buyerIf tenant already paid rent for the closing month, buyer gets the post-closing portion
DepositCredited to buyerDeposit held in trust is applied against purchase price

Title Insurance

FeatureDetails
Cost$250–$500 (one-time, at closing)
What it coversTitle fraud, forgery, liens discovered after closing, survey defects, zoning violations, encroachments
What it doesn’t coverIssues you knew about before closing; future environmental contamination
Who provides itFCT, Stewart Title, Chicago Title, TitlePLUS
Is it required?Most lenders require it; highly recommended even if lender doesn’t
AlternativeSurvey / Real Property Report — but title insurance is cheaper and covers more
ProvinceLegal Fees (Typical Range)DisbursementsLand Transfer TaxTotal Legal Cost (Excl. LTT)
Ontario$1,000–$2,000$300–$7000.5–2.5% (+ Toronto municipal LTT)$1,300–$2,700
BC$1,000–$2,000$300–$7001–3% (Property Transfer Tax)$1,300–$2,700
Alberta$800–$1,500$200–$500No land transfer tax (registration fees only)$1,000–$2,000
Quebec (notary)$1,000–$2,000$300–$6000.5–1.5% (Welcome Tax / droits de mutation)$1,300–$2,600
Manitoba$800–$1,500$200–$5000–2%$1,000–$2,000
Saskatchewan$800–$1,500$200–$500No LTT (registration fees only)$1,000–$2,000
Nova Scotia$800–$1,500$200–$5001.5% (Deed Transfer Tax)$1,000–$2,000
New Brunswick$800–$1,500$200–$5001%$1,000–$2,000
PEI$800–$1,500$200–$5001%$1,000–$2,000
Newfoundland$800–$1,500$200–$500No LTT (registration fees only)$1,000–$2,000

Common Disbursements

ItemCost
Title search$50–$150
Title insurance premium$250–$500
Registration fees (transfer + mortgage)$100–$300
Courier / delivery$30–$100
Software / e-registration$50–$100
Tax certificate$30–$75
Name search (if applicable)$20–$50
Photocopies / administration$25–$75

How to Choose a Real Estate Lawyer

FactorWhat to Look For
SpecializationPrimarily real estate — not a family lawyer who “also does” real estate
VolumeHandles 100+ transactions per year (experienced with standard and complex deals)
AvailabilityResponsive to calls/emails; can meet your closing timeline
FeesGet a fee quote in writing upfront — including estimated disbursements
LocationShould practice in the province where the property is located
ReviewsGoogle reviews, referrals from your agent or mortgage broker
CommunicationExplains things clearly; doesn’t rush you at the signing appointment
Red flagsWon’t provide a fee estimate; unreachable by phone; not familiar with your type of transaction

When You Need a Lawyer vs When You Don’t

SituationLawyer Required?
Buying a home (any province)Yes (practically mandatory — lender requires it)
Selling a homeYes
RefinancingYes (new mortgage registration on title)
Mortgage renewal (same lender)Usually no — same mortgage continues
Mortgage switch/transfer (new lender at renewal)Yes — new lender registers their mortgage
Private sale (no agent)Definitely yes — even more important without agent guidance
New construction / pre-buildYes — additional complexity with builder agreements, Tarion warranty (ON), deposit protection
Buying a condoYes — additional status certificate review required
Buying an investment propertyYes — may need additional lease reviews
Selling and buying simultaneouslyYes — coordination of two closings on the same day is critical
IssueWhat HappensHow the Lawyer Helps
Title defect (lien, judgment)Seller can’t provide clear titleLawyer identifies the issue early; seller must clear it or deal may collapse
Survey shows encroachmentNeighbour’s structure crosses your property line (or vice versa)Title insurance covers most survey issues; lawyer advises on risk
Mortgage not funded on timeLender hasn’t released funds by closingLawyer coordinates with lender; may need to delay closing
Seller can’t close on timeSeller’s purchase falls through; seller needs an extensionLawyer negotiates extension or enforces the contract
Condo status certificate issuesSpecial assessment pending, litigation, or reserve fund issuesLawyer reviews and advises whether to proceed or walk away
Missing discharge of previous mortgageSeller’s old mortgage still shows on title after they paid it offLawyer arranges discharge before or at closing
FraudSomeone impersonating the seller; forged documentsTitle search and ID verification catch most fraud; title insurance covers the rest

Lawyer’s Role in Different Transaction Types

TransactionAdditional Lawyer Tasks
First-time buyerConfirms eligibility for land transfer tax rebates; ensures FHSA/HBP requirements are met
New constructionReviews builder’s APS (often non-negotiable but lawyer explains risks); Tarion enrollment; occupancy vs closing
Private saleDrafts or reviews APS (normally prepared by agents); additional advisory role
Investment propertyReviews existing tenancy agreements; advises on rent assignment at closing
Separation / divorceHandles title transfer between spouses; mortgage assumption or refinance
Estate / probate saleVerifies executor authority; estate trustee documentation
Rent-back agreementDrafts the post-closing occupancy agreement; advises on tenancy law implications
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