Buying your first home in the Greater Toronto Area is a 6–18 month project, not a weekend decision. The buyers who get it right move methodically through 4 stages — financial prep, house hunting, offer + inspection, and closing — without skipping steps. This checklist walks you through each stage with the specific actions, documents, and dollar amounts you’ll actually need in 2026.
The 4 stages — at a glance
| Stage | Typical duration | Key outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Financial prep | 3–6 months before hunting | Pre-approval + down payment ready |
| 2. House hunting | 4–12 weeks | Shortlist of 3 properties you’d buy |
| 3. Offer + inspection | 5–15 days | Accepted offer with conditions cleared |
| 4. Closing | 30–90 days after offer | Keys in hand, mortgage funded |
Stage 1 — Financial preparation
This is the stage 90% of first-time buyers skip — then regret. Spend 3–6 months here before the first showing.
- Pull your credit report. Free from Equifax and TransUnion once per year. A score above 680 unlocks prime mortgage rates. Here’s exactly what counts as a good credit score in Canada.
- Open an FHSA. Even with $0 in it — opening starts your contribution room clock. Full FHSA guide here.
- Calculate your real budget. Use a stress-tested affordability calculator. A $90K household income typically supports a $500K–$600K mortgage at today’s GTA rates.
- Save your down payment. Minimum 5% on the first $500K, 10% on the portion above. For a $750K GTA home, that’s $50,000 minimum. Aim for 20% ($150,000) to avoid CMHC insurance.
- Budget closing costs. Budget 3–4% of the purchase price on top of the down payment. On a $750K Toronto home, that’s $25,000–$33,000.
- Get pre-approved by 2 lenders. Brokers can compare 30+ lenders in one application — usually better rates than going to your bank directly. Lock the rate for 90–120 days.
Documents your lender will ask for
- 2 most recent pay stubs
- Letter of employment (less than 30 days old)
- 2 years of T4 slips and Notices of Assessment
- 3 months of bank statements (showing down payment funds)
- Government-issued photo ID
- Proof of source of down payment (gift letter if family-funded)
Stage 2 — House hunting
Now the fun begins — but stay disciplined. The goal is a shortlist of 3 properties you’d genuinely buy, not falling in love with the first one you tour.
- Make a needs vs. wants list. Needs are non-negotiable (3 bedrooms, walkable to GO station, under $X budget). Wants are nice-to-have (finished basement, south-facing yard, walk-in closet). Be brutally honest about which is which.
- Choose your area. Commute times, school catchments, future transit plans, neighbourhood walk scores. Visit at different times — Saturday morning, Tuesday night, Sunday afternoon all tell different stories.
- Hire a buyer’s agent. The seller pays the buyer’s agent commission in Ontario — there’s no cost to you for representation. Choose someone who closes 30+ deals per year in your target area, not a friend who does 3.
- Tour with intention. 5–10 properties is the sweet spot. Fewer and you don’t know the market; more and they all blur together.
- Inspect informally as you tour. Water stains on ceilings, soft spots in floors, signs of recent repaint (cover-ups for issues), HVAC age, roof age. Take photos and notes.
- Pull recent sold comparables. Your agent should give you actual sold-prices in the building or block from the last 60 days — not list prices.
Stage 3 — Offer + inspection
Once you’ve found the right property, the offer-to-firm-up window is 5–15 days. Move fast but stay protected.
- Decide your offer strategy. Hot listing with offer date? Bid your max with conditions. Sitting listing? Start 3–5% below ask, negotiate. Your agent earns their commission here.
- Set the right conditions. Financing (5–7 days), inspection (5 days), status certificate review (10 days for condos). Here’s what’s in a status certificate.
- Hire a qualified home inspector. $450–$750. Look for CAHPI or InterNACHI certification. They’ll review roof, foundation, HVAC, electrical, plumbing, water damage, and structural issues.
- Add specialty inspections if warranted. Mold testing ($300–$600), thermal imaging ($300–$500), sewer scope ($250–$400), oil tank scan for older homes ($200).
- Review the status certificate with your lawyer (condos only). Red flags: underfunded reserve fund, pending special assessments, active litigation.
- Confirm financing is firm. Submit final lender documents within 48 hours of offer acceptance to lock the conditional period timeline.
Stage 4 — Closing
Between offer firm-up and closing day, your lawyer takes the lead. Your job is to stay responsive and prepared.
- Hire a real estate lawyer. Budget $1,500–$2,500 + HST. Choose someone who handles 50+ residential closings per year, not a generalist.
- Your lawyer conducts the title search by the requisition date — typically 15–25 days before closing. Full guide to title search and the requisition date here.
- Confirm home insurance is in place at least 5 business days before closing. Lenders require proof.
- Arrange utility transfers (hydro, gas, water, internet) for the closing date.
- Schedule final walk-through 24–48 hours before closing — confirm property condition matches the agreement, all included items are present, no new damage.
- Wire closing funds to your lawyer’s trust account 3–5 business days before completion. Includes down payment balance + closing costs.
- On closing day, sign all final documents at your lawyer’s office. Within 24 hours, you’ll receive your keys.
Closing cost breakdown ($750K GTA home)
| Cost | Amount | First-time buyer rebate |
|---|---|---|
| Ontario Land Transfer Tax | $11,475 | Up to $4,000 rebate |
| Toronto MLTT (Toronto-only) | $11,475 | Up to $4,475 rebate |
| Legal fees + disbursements | $1,500–$2,500 | — |
| Title insurance | $350–$650 | — |
| Home inspection | $450–$750 | — |
| CMHC insurance (if <20% down) | 2.8–4.0% of mortgage | — |
| Typical total (Toronto) | $25,000–$33,000 | Up to $8,475 back |
The 5 most common first-time buyer mistakes to avoid
- Skipping the pre-approval — touring homes you can’t afford wastes weeks.
- Forgetting closing costs — $25K–$33K shows up two weeks before completion.
- Waiving inspection to win a bidding war — buying a $40K foundation surprise is worse than losing the bid.
- Maxing your pre-approval ceiling — borrow 15–20% below max for breathing room.
- Falling in love with one property — always keep 3 acceptable alternatives in mind.
For the full deep-dive on each: Top 10 Real Estate Mistakes Ontario Buyers + Sellers Make.
The bottom line
First-time home buying isn’t difficult — it’s just unfamiliar. The buyers who do it best treat it like a project: clear stages, defined tasks per stage, the right professionals on each task, and zero shortcuts. Whether you’re 6 months out or already touring properties, walking this checklist puts you ahead of 90% of GTA first-time buyers.
Ready to start your first home search in the Greater Toronto Area? I’d love to walk you through your specific situation — what’s affordable, which neighbourhoods fit, your FHSA strategy, and the next concrete step. Schedule a free 15-minute call: Contact Tej Thakor, or text +1 (647) 684-1731 on WhatsApp.
Related reading: FHSA Canada Guide · What Is a Good Credit Score? · Title Search Ontario · Mortgage Calculator
