Can buyers back out based on the Status Certificate?
Can buyers kill a condo sale after reading the Status Certificate? Yes — here’s exactly how.
Quick answer
Yes. In Ontario condo sales, the buyer gets a short legal review period to examine the Status Certificate. If the certificate reveals problems you can’t accept, you can terminate the agreement within that review window. If you waive the review or miss the deadline, your ability to back out is limited.
Why the Status Certificate matters for selling condos
The Status Certificate is the single most important document buyers read when buying a condo. It shows:
- condo corporation bylaws and rules
- reserve fund balance and recent budget
- current or pending legal actions
- outstanding common expense arrears and special assessments
Any of those items can change a buyer’s decision. That’s why sellers and listing agents need to disclose and manage this early when selling condos.

Timeline and legal right to back out
- Standard Ontario practice: buyer gets a 5-business-day review period after receiving the Status Certificate (check your Agreement of Purchase and Sale — timelines can vary).
- During that period the buyer can: accept, request changes, or terminate in writing.
- If buyer terminates properly, deposit is returned and sale ends without penalty.
- If buyer waived the review in writing or missed the deadline, backing out later is difficult unless there was a material misrepresentation.
Common red flags buyers use to back out
- Large special assessment (unexpected extra cost)
- Low or depleted reserve fund
- Ongoing or costly legal proceedings against the corporation
- High unit arrears or frequent owner defaults
- Restrictions that affect use (pet, rental rules)
If any of these appear, buyers can usually walk — or use the issue to re-negotiate price or terms.
Actionable steps for sellers (to avoid last-minute cancellations)
- Order the Status Certificate early and share it with buyers promptly.
- Address predictable red flags: plan for special assessments or disclose planned work.
- Have a concise FAQ for buyers covering reserve fund, major contracts, and litigation.
- Work with a lawyer to ensure accuracy — misstatements invite trouble.
- Offer credits or price adjustments where appropriate; transparency keeps deals intact.
What buyers should do (to protect their deposit)
- Read the Status Certificate immediately.
- Hire a condo lawyer to review it quickly.
- Decide within the review window and provide written notice to terminate if needed.
- If you waive the review, get clear legal advice about risk.

Bottom line
Yes — buyers can back out based on the Status Certificate if they act within the review period. For sellers, the smartest move is to anticipate issues and remove surprises before listing. For buyers, quick legal review protects your deposit and your decision.
Need help navigating a Status Certificate or selling condos in Toronto? Contact Tony Sousa for clear, decisive advice: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca



















