Difference between revisions of "Buying a Home"

From Clicklaw Wikibooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
{{DEMOWARNING}}
{{Dial-A-Law Blurb}}
{{Dial-A-Law Blurb}}



Revision as of 17:14, 16 December 2014

This script covers buying a house. If you’re buying a condominium or townhouse, also check script 407, called “Buying a Condominium”.

Should you have a lawyer?[edit]

A house is probably the most expensive thing you’ll ever buy. And buying a house is complicated. The potential for disaster is great – one mistake could cost a lot. As well, there are risks in real estate, and when buying or selling, you should be careful. For example, people can:

  1. use a false identity to pretend they are the true owner of a property and sign documents fraudulently.
  2. flip the same property through back-to-back transactions to falsely inflate the asking price of the property.

These are just two examples of many possible types of real estate fraud. To protect yourself, you should use a lawyer, instead of trying to do it yourself.

Be careful – there are many other costs besides the purchase price[edit]

There are many extra costs when you buy a house. One is the property purchase tax (or PPT), though you may not have to pay this tax if this is your first home. For more information, call the Property Transfer Tax office of the BC government in Victoria, at 250.387.0604. Outside Victoria, call Enquiry BC at 604.660.2421 in Vancouver and 1.800.663.7867 elsewhere in BC and ask for the Property Transfer Tax office. Or check the website, at www.gov.bc.ca/sbr. Click on “Individuals”, then on “Property Taxes” and finally on “Property Transfer Tax”.

Another cost is the 12% Harmonized Sales Tax (or HST). It applies to the legal fees and some of the other costs you pay. It also applies to the whole purchase price if you’re buying a new house or one that’s been substantially renovated. You may be able to get an HST rebate if you’re buying a new home. There are also registration fees in the Land Title Office, and usually legal fees to prepare and register the conveyance (the transfer of title) and the mortgage.

So you may have to pay several thousand dollars more than the purchase price. Before you make an offer to buy a house, decide if you can afford both the purchase price plus all the other costs.

Do you need a realtor? Who pays the realtor?[edit]

You may decide to look for a house yourself or you may use a professional to help you. If you decide to use an agent, pick one that you trust and who you’re comfortable with. The seller pays both real estate agents, the one for the seller and the one for the buyer. If there’s no sale, there’s usually no commission paid to the agent. If you don’t use an agent, good places to start looking for houses are local newspapers and the multiple listing website at www.mls.ca.

You have to make a written offer[edit]

If you find a house you want to buy, you have to make a written offer to buy it. Oral agreements for land may not be valid. The realtor provides the form, usually from the local real estate board. It’s called a contract of purchase and sale. Read it carefully, because this contract is legally binding. If there’s anything in it that you don’t like or doesn’t apply, cross it out. Then initial the change and get the seller to initial the change too.

What should you include in the offer?[edit]

  1. Give the seller a time limit to accept your offer – normally a day or so. If the seller doesn’t accept it by then, your offer expires.
  2. If there are things in the house you want the seller to include in the price – such as appliances, curtains, mirrors or chandeliers – add a sentence that the purchase price includes these items and make sure each item is listed.
  3. You might want to make your offer conditional on the house passing an inspection by a professional building inspector. Use a “subject to” clause to do this – a real estate agent or a lawyer can help you with the wording. While the seller usually gives you a “Disclosure Statement” listing any potential problems the seller knows about, you might still want your own inspector.
  4. If you have to sell your own home before you can buy the new one, make your offer conditional on selling your current house by a date that you set.
  5. If you need a mortgage, make your offer “subject to” (or conditional on) getting satisfactory financing, even if the bank has already “pre-approved” a mortgage amount.
  6. Include a statement saying the offer is “subject to” your lawyer’s approval, so your lawyer can check the offer before it becomes a binding contract.

How much should you pay as a deposit?[edit]

When you make an offer, you’ll have to make a deposit, which you’ll want to keep as low as possible. The normal deposit is 5% to 10% of the purchase price, which should be paid to the realtor in trust, not the seller.

What if the seller makes a counteroffer?[edit]

The seller may accept your offer, or may cross out some of your terms and add new ones. Once the seller changes your offer in any way, it becomes a counteroffer, or a new offer, by the seller. That cancels (or revokes) your original offer. Then you must decide if you want to accept the new offer or make another counteroffer of your own. You do not have to accept a new offer or a counteroffer.

What do you need to get a mortgage?[edit]

As soon as you and the seller have signed an offer or counter-offer, you should start to get a mortgage. Shop around to get the best terms, and promptly give the mortgage company any documents and information it needs. Usually, a mortgage company will need an appraisal of the house (that you have to pay for) before it promises to give you the mortgage. And it may need a survey certificate showing that the house is within the property boundaries, or “title insurance”, before the completion date (when the property transfers from the seller to you and you become the owner).

Once you’ve arranged your financing, ask the mortgage company to give you a written commitment letter promising to give you the mortgage. The lawyer doing the mortgage can often do your legal work for the purchase too.

What about title searches and insurance?[edit]

Your lawyer will do a title search. It shows the registered owner of the property and any charges, such as mortgages, liens, or easements, registered against it. Any existing mortgages and liens will have to be paid off by the seller before you buy the house.

Also, talk to your lawyer about when you should get fire and liability insurance on the house and how much you should get. The mortgage company will require proof of this insurance.

When do you remove the “subject-to” clauses?[edit]

When you’re satisfied with the results of the subject-to clauses or conditions – for example, the house inspection is fine and you’ve arranged a satisfactory mortgage – you should give written notice to the seller that you’re removing the conditions. Once you do this, the offer or counter-offer becomes a legally binding contract. If you can’t meet the conditions and don’t remove them, the contract ends and you don’t have to buy the house.

What is the “statement of adjustments”? Before the completion date, your lawyer will give you a document called the statement of adjustments. This document shows all money coming in and going out. It covers things that you and the seller share, like property tax. The most important figure for you is the amount you need by the completion date. This is the money you have to pay, in addition to your mortgage.

How do you finish the purchase?[edit]

Normally, your lawyer prepares the transfer documents and sends them to the seller’s lawyer. The seller signs the documents and the seller’s lawyer returns them to your lawyer. Then, when your lawyer has your cash and the promise of the mortgage money, your lawyer registers the transfer documents and the mortgage with the Land Title Office. When the Land Title Office confirms the registration, and the mortgage company has given your lawyer the mortgage money, your lawyer gives the money to the seller’s lawyer. The realtor usually gives you the keys to the house once the registration is finished.

More information[edit]

Read the booklet called “Buying a Home in BC Information Booklet” prepared by the Real Estate Council of British Columbia. For a free copy, call them in Vancouver at 604.683.9664 or toll-free 1.877.683.9664 elsewhere in BC. Or go to their website at www.recbc.ca and click on “Consumer Info” and then “Publications”. For more information on mortgages, check script 408, called “Mortgages and Financing a House Purchase”.


[updated February 2013]





Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence Dial-A-Law © People's Law School is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence.