Offer to Purchase in Canada (2025)

What's in an APS, how deposits work, and what happens after your offer is accepted.

What Is an Offer to Purchase?

In Canada, an offer to purchase a home is formalized through an Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS). This is a legally binding contract that specifies the purchase price, closing date, deposit, conditions, and all other terms of the transaction. Once both parties sign and any conditions are met, the deal is firm.

Each province has its own standard APS form developed by the local real estate association. In Ontario, it's the OREA form; in BC, it's the BCREA Contract of Purchase and Sale. Your real estate agent will prepare the offer using this form.

Key Elements of a Canadian Purchase Offer

1. Purchase Price

The amount you're offering for the property. In competitive markets, offers often exceed the list price. Your agent will provide comparable sales data to help you determine a fair offer price.

2. Deposit

The deposit (typically 5% of the purchase price) is paid after offer acceptance and held in trust by the listing brokerage. It forms part of your down payment at closing — it is not an extra cost, but it must be available in cash quickly (usually within 24–48 hours of acceptance). Losing your deposit is one of the consequences of breaching the contract.

3. Closing Date

The date you take possession. Most closings happen 30–90 days after offer acceptance. Your closing date must align with your lender's availability and your lawyer's schedule.

4. Irrevocability

The period during which your offer cannot be withdrawn. Typically 24–48 hours. This gives the seller time to review and respond.

5. Conditions

Conditions allow you to exit the deal if certain criteria aren't met. Common conditions in Canada include financing, home inspection, and status certificate review. See our conditional offer guide for full details.

6. Chattels and Fixtures

The APS specifies what stays with the home (fixtures) and what the seller is including or excluding (chattels — like appliances, light fixtures, window coverings). Disputes over chattels are surprisingly common; ensure everything is documented.

Counter-Offers and Negotiation

If the seller doesn't accept your offer as written, they'll issue a counter-offer. The counter-offer may change the price, closing date, conditions, or other terms. You then have the option to accept, reject, or counter again. This back-and-forth continues until both parties agree or one party walks away.

Multiple Offers: In competitive markets, sellers may set an "offer night" — all offers are submitted simultaneously on a specific date and time. You don't know what others are offering. This is where buyers often waive conditions and escalate prices significantly above asking.

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After Your Offer Is Accepted: What Happens Next

  1. Pay the deposit (certified cheque or wire transfer within 24–48 hours)
  2. Hire a real estate lawyer immediately
  3. Schedule the home inspection (if conditional)
  4. Apply for final mortgage approval with your lender
  5. Fulfill or waive all conditions by the stated deadline
  6. Sign off on the firm agreement
  7. Work with your lawyer through the closing period
  8. Conduct final walkthrough before closing day

Related guides: home buying timeline, Ontario closing costs, first-time buyer credits.