What legal documents are required to sell a home in Ontario?
Want to close fast and avoid legal headaches? Here are the exact legal documents required to sell a home in Ontario — don’t list without them.
Quick answer: what legal documents are required to sell a home in Ontario
You need a clear, practical file. The essential legal documents required to sell a home in Ontario are: Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS), proof of title (deed/transfer/title certificate), mortgage discharge or payoff statements, property disclosure (SPIS), municipal tax and utility statements, land transfer tax forms, any survey or legal description, and a condo status certificate for condo units. A real estate lawyer will package closing documents like the deed/transfer, statement of adjustments, and registration forms.
Step-by-step: gather these documents now
- Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS): The legally binding sale contract. It sets price, closing date, conditions.
- Proof of Title / Certificate of Title: Confirms you legally own the property. Your lawyer pulls this from the land registry.
- Mortgage discharge / Payoff Statement: Essential if there’s a mortgage — gives exact amount to satisfy the lender at closing.
- Seller Property Information Statement (SPIS) / Property Disclosure: Not always legally mandatory but expected. Disclose known defects to avoid future disputes.
- Survey or legal description: If you have a recent survey, include it. If not, your lawyer will use the legal description from the land registry.
- Municipal tax bill & utility statements: For adjusting property taxes and utilities at closing.
- Land transfer tax forms: Your lawyer files these. Sellers should be ready with any rebate or statement details.
- Condo status certificate: Mandatory for condo sales. Shows common expense arrears, bylaws, reserve fund status.
- Identification & Power of Attorney: Photo ID for signing; POA if someone signs on your behalf.
- Title search for encumbrances: Any easements, liens, or charges must be disclosed and cleared or addressed before closing.
- Building permits & renovation records: If you performed renovations, provide permits and receipts — helps prevent surprise demands later.

Why a real estate lawyer matters
A lawyer prepares the deed/transfer, completes the statement of adjustments, registers documents with the land registry, handles mortgage payoffs, and files land transfer tax forms. Trying to DIY increases risk. I recommend hiring a local real estate lawyer before firm offers arrive.
Action plan (do this today)
- Request your mortgage payoff statement from your lender. 2. Gather tax bills, utility invoices, and any survey or permit documents. 3. Fill out the SPIS honestly. 4. Contact an Ontario real estate lawyer and give them your file. 5. Share documents with your listing agent so offers move fast.
I help sellers in Ontario close clean, fast, and for top dollar. I’ve guided dozens of homeowners through complex title issues, condo status problems, and last-minute lawyer requests. If you’re selling, get your documents sorted before you list — it shortens time on market and prevents costly delays.
Contact Tony Sousa — local Ontario real estate expert. Email: tony@sousasells.ca | Phone: 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















