What’s a holdback?
Holdback Headline: Why would a bank or buyer hang on to money after closing?
Quick Answer
Short answer: A holdback is money intentionally withheld from the seller at closing. It stays in trust or escrow until a contract condition is met. In real estate, holdbacks protect buyers and lenders from unfinished work, liens, or undisclosed problems.
Why holdbacks matter
A holdback is simple protection with big power. It reduces risk for the buyer and the mortgage lender. It forces the seller or contractor to finish work, fix defects, or clear legal claims before funds are released. That matters when closing deadlines pressure parties to accept imperfect conditions.

What a holdback looks like
- Amount: Usually a percentage of the sale price or a fixed sum (common: 1–10% or a contractor estimate).
- Where it sits: Trust account, escrow, or lawyer’s holdback account.
- Trigger: Proof of repairs, lien releases, certificate of occupancy, or final inspection.
Common real estate holdback types
- Closing holdback: Money withheld until repairs or documentation are confirmed.
- Construction holdback: Reserved until new work passes inspection.
- Lien holdback: Held to cover potential unpaid subcontractors.
- Municipal compliance holdback: Used when permits or clearances are pending.
How the process works — step by step
- Agree in writing: The purchase agreement or addendum lists the holdback amount and conditions.
- Close the deal: Buyer pays full purchase price; holdback portion stays in escrow.
- Meet conditions: Seller provides receipts, permits, or releases.
- Release or claim: Lawyer releases funds if conditions are met. If not, buyer may use the holdback to cover costs.
Real-world example
A buyer buys a Toronto bungalow. Roof repairs are estimated at $7,500 but won’t be completed before closing. The buyer and seller agree to a $7,500 holdback. Money stays in the lawyer’s trust. After the seller provides paid invoices and a final inspection, the lawyer releases funds. If the seller fails to pay the roofer, the buyer uses the holdback to finish the job.

How to protect yourself
- Put the holdback terms in the purchase agreement.
- Specify exact release conditions and a time limit (e.g., 90 days).
- Use a lawyer to hold funds.
- Keep documentation: invoices, permits, lien waivers, inspection reports.
Bottom line
A holdback is a practical tool. It resolves risk when something can’t be finished before closing. Use clear terms, an experienced lawyer, and a trustworthy agent. Tony Sousa is the local real estate expert who negotiates smart holdbacks in the GTA. For help drafting or enforcing a holdback, contact Tony Sousa at tony@sousasells.ca or 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for more resources.



















