Closing Costs and Closing Process
Canadian closing-cost vocabulary, adjustment language, and the practical steps between firm purchase and possession.
Closing is where the file moves from approval to funded ownership. The pages here explain the cost and document language that borrowers usually meet through their lender, lawyer, or notary.
Use This Section When
- the offer is accepted and the file is moving toward possession
- you need to understand what cash is due before keys are released
- you are reviewing lawyer or notary paperwork, adjustments, or tax charges
- you want to know what happens between final approval and funded closing
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Why This Section Matters
Borrowers often underestimate the cash needed to close or assume the lender handles every legal detail. In Canada, closing costs, title work, and adjustment calculations are a major part of the borrowing process.
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In this section
- Closing Costs
What closing costs mean in Canadian mortgage transactions and which legal, tax, and lender-related charges borrowers should expect.
- Closing Date
What the closing date means in a Canadian home purchase and why mortgage funding, legal work, and possession timing all depend on it.
- Deposit
What a deposit means in a Canadian home purchase and how it differs from the down payment at mortgage closing.
- Land Transfer Tax
What land transfer tax means in Canadian residential closings and why it can be a major part of cash needed to close.
- Lawyer Fees
What lawyer fees cover in a Canadian mortgage closing and why legal work is a standard part of the borrowing process.
- Statement of Adjustments
What a statement of adjustments is in a Canadian real-estate closing and how it affects the final cash needed to close.