How do I terminate my agent’s agreement?
Want out of your agent’s contract — fast, legal, and without paying a surprise commission? Read this first.
Why leaving an agent feels risky
Most sellers fear penalties, sticky clauses, and being stuck with an exclusive listing. Good news: agreements are binding, but they’re not traps. You can end them — if you follow steps that protect you, document the facts, and use the right leverage.
Clear step-by-step: how to terminate your agent’s agreement
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Review the contract now. Look for: type (exclusive vs. open), term length, termination clause, notice requirements, protection periods, and commission triggers. The contract controls what you can do.
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Check for a breach. If the agent fails to perform promised duties — poor marketing, missed showings, no communication, or unauthorized actions — that can be cause for termination. Document dates, missed commitments, emails, and photos.
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Attempt resolution first. Send a short, professional written complaint to the agent and their brokerage. State the issues and give 7–14 days to fix them. This strengthens your case if you need to escalate.
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Ask for mutual termination. If the agent won’t fix the problem, request a written mutual release from the listing agreement. Many brokerages will agree to end a bad fit rather than fight.
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Provide formal written notice. If no mutual release, follow the contract’s termination steps precisely — email plus registered mail if required. Keep copies and delivery receipts.
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Protect yourself financially. Watch for “protection periods” that can still trigger commissions after termination if a buyer you met earlier closes. Negotiate those out in the release if possible.
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Escalate to the brokerage or regulator. If the agent refuses to cooperate, contact their brokerage manager and your provincial real estate regulator. They can mediate and record complaints.
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Get legal help when needed. If the contract is unclear, if the agent claims a commission you think is unfair, or if a sale is imminent, consult a real estate lawyer. A quick legal letter often ends disputes fast.

Quick checklist before you act
- Copy the full listing agreement
- Collect communication proof (texts, emails)
- Note missed performance dates
- Send a fix-it letter (7–14 days)
- Ask for written mutual release
- Save registered mail receipts
Practical, no-fluff advice
Be calm, be precise, and document everything. Don’t cancel verbally. Don’t change locks or block showings without legal advice. A measured, documented approach cuts risk and usually ends the relationship quickly.
If you want direct help, I’ve handled dozens of terminations cleanly and protectively in this market. Call me, and I’ll review your agreement free and tell you the fastest, safest path to canceling the contract.
Tony Sousa — Local Realtor and market authority
Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















