$100 fee, 10-day production window, what it reveals, and the critical items your lawyer must check before you waive conditions
The status certificate is Ontario's single most powerful tool for condo buyers. This document package — produced by the condo corporation upon request — reveals the financial health, legal standing, and operational status of the building you're considering purchasing into. Missing or ignoring the status certificate is one of the most dangerous mistakes a buyer can make. A $100 investment and a thorough lawyer review can save you from tens of thousands of dollars in unexpected special assessments, or worse, purchasing into a financially troubled building.
Under Section 76 of Ontario's Condominium Act, 1998, any person may request a status certificate from a condo corporation. The corporation has 10 calendar days to produce it and may charge a maximum of $100. The status certificate is a snapshot of the corporation's financial and legal standing at a specific date. Critically, a condo corporation is legally bound by the information in a validly issued status certificate — if they understate a deficit or pending assessment, the buyer is protected.
| Document/Information | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Current monthly common fees for the unit | Confirms what you'll actually pay |
| Any arrears owing on the unit | Unpaid fees become buyer's liability at closing |
| Current fiscal year budget | Shows if fees are adequate for expenses |
| Most recent audited financial statements | Reveals operating surpluses or deficits |
| Reserve fund balance | Shows financial cushion for major repairs |
| Reserve fund study summary | Shows if reserve is adequately funded |
| Any known or anticipated special assessments | Reveals pending owner levy charges |
| Current insurance certificate | Verifies building is properly insured |
| Declaration, bylaws, and rules | Governs what you can/can't do in your unit |
| Any judgments or proceedings against the corp | Reveals pending lawsuits or legal issues |
| Any liens registered against the corporation | Reveals construction or contractor liens |
| Management agreement details | Shows who manages and on what terms |
In Ontario, buyers typically include a condition in their offer: "Subject to the buyer's lawyer reviewing and being satisfied with the status certificate, to be obtained at the buyer's expense, within X days of acceptance." Standard is 5–10 business days. If your lawyer finds unacceptable issues — a depleted reserve fund, a pending $15,000/unit special assessment, ongoing litigation — you have the right to walk away and receive your deposit back during the condition period.
The condo corporation has exactly 10 calendar days to produce the status certificate after receiving the written request and $100 fee. If they fail to produce it within this window, the status certificate is deemed to have been issued on the 10th day and is deemed to state that there are no arrears, no special assessments, and no legal proceedings. This "deemed" certificate can be a powerful protection in rare cases where boards obstruct disclosure, but relying on it is risky — always seek the actual document.
The maximum fee is legislated at $100. In practice, this is almost always paid by the buyer or their agent as part of due diligence. Some sellers proactively obtain a status certificate before listing to speed up transactions — if a seller provides one, verify it's recent (within 30 days) and have your own lawyer review it regardless.
Legal fees, status certificate costs, and condo fees add up. KOHO's free account earns cash back to offset your monthly costs — no fees, no minimums.
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