Are there disclosure requirements for sellers
in Ontario?
Must-Know: Are sellers in Ontario required to disclose property defects? Here’s the blunt truth.
Quick answer
Yes. Ontario sellers must disclose known material defects and cannot hide problems that would affect a buyer’s decision. There is no single government “seller disclosure” form required across the province, but the legal duty to be honest is real — and the cost of hiding issues can be severe.
What Ontario law actually requires
- Common law duty: Sellers must not fraudulently conceal latent defects (hidden problems that affect safety, use, or value). If you know about a structural issue, mould, sewage backup, illegal additions, or contamination, you must disclose it.
- REBBA and registrant duties: Real estate professionals in Ontario must disclose material facts to buyers and sellers. If an agent knows a problem, they must pass it on.
- “As-is” clauses don’t excuse fraud: Advertising a sale “as-is” won’t protect a seller who actively hides known defects.
- New homes and Tarion: New home buyers are covered by Tarion warranty rules. That’s separate from resale seller duties.
Examples of material issues to disclose
- Structural cracks, foundation problems, water penetration
- Past or present mould or pest infestations
- Illegal or unpermitted additions
- Sewage, septic, well problems
- Environmental contamination or prior remediation
- Outstanding municipal work orders or zoning violations
Practical implications for sellers
If you’re selling in Ontario, follow this checklist:
- Be honest about what you know. Don’t wait for a buyer to uncover it.
- Keep records: inspection reports, repair invoices, permits, receipts.
- Consider completing a Property Disclosure Statement (PDS) even though it’s optional — it reduces disputes.
- Allow reasonable access for buyer inspections and consider pre-listing inspections.
- Consult a real estate lawyer on complex issues (title defects, easements, encroachments).
Consequences of non-disclosure
Buyers can sue for misrepresentation, rescission (contract cancelled), or damages. A seller who hides defects risks having a sale reversed or paying large settlements. Criminal fraud charges are rare but possible in extreme cases.

How an expert simplifies this mess
You don’t have to navigate disclosure laws alone. I (Tony Sousa) handle the legal and documentation side for sellers so you can sell with confidence. I’ll:
- Identify what needs disclosure and how to document it
- Recommend whether to complete a PDS or order a pre-listing inspection
- Coordinate lawyers and trades to clear municipal or permit issues
- Draft accurate listing remarks and disclosure language to reduce risk
My approach keeps deals clean and defensible. I protect your sale, your timeline, and your net proceeds.
Next step
Want straight answers and a clean closing? Email tony@sousasells.ca or call 416-477-2620. Visit https://www.sousasells.ca for tools and sample disclosure forms. I’ll give you a clear action plan in one call.



















