Phase 3: Offer & Closing | HomeZen
01 of 06 · Offer Subjects
3 Subjects every first-time buyer must include — no exceptions

Never Waive Your Subjects — Here’s Exactly Why

In a competitive market, sellers pressure buyers to submit “clean” offers with no conditions. This is the single most dangerous thing a first-time buyer can do. Remove a subject and you inherit every risk it was shielding you from.

  • The Financing Condition: Even with pre-approval, your lender must still approve the specific property. Skip this and a failed appraisal costs you your deposit.
  • The Home Inspection Condition: $500–$700 to potentially uncover $30,000 in hidden problems. The math is not complicated.
  • Strata Document Review (BC): A pending special levy or underfunded reserve can cost you thousands you never expected.
  • Title Review Condition: Confirms clear title with no liens, encumbrances, or legal complications registered against the property.
In BC, Removing Subjects Is Permanent
There is no cooling-off period for resale properties. Once subjects are removed, the deal is firm and your deposit is at risk if anything goes wrong.
02 of 06 · Home Inspection
$600 The best money you will spend in this entire process

The $600 Decision That Can Save You $60,000

A home inspection is not a pass/fail test. It is a professional assessment of every visible system in the property — roof, foundation, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, windows, insulation, drainage, and more.

  • What It Covers: Roof, attic, foundation, electrical panel, plumbing, heating, windows, insulation, drainage, and all visible structural components.
  • What It Doesn’t Cover: Anything behind walls, underground drainage, asbestos, mold, or fireplace certification — unless specifically added as extras.
  • The Negotiating Weapon: A written deficiency list gives you a documented basis to renegotiate price downward or request repairs. Most sellers concede rather than lose the deal.
  • Hire a Licensed BC Inspector: Home inspectors in BC must be licensed. Ask for their licence number and a sample report before booking.
03 of 06 · Bidding Wars
−$40K The premium buyers pay when emotion overrules math

How Bidding Wars Are Designed to Make You Overpay

Multiple-offer situations are strategies, not accidents. Offer review dates, artificial deadlines, and competing buyers are all designed to trigger urgency and override rational thinking.

The Appraisal Gap Problem
If you bid $40,000 over asking and the bank appraises at asking, that $40,000 comes entirely out of your pocket — on top of your down payment. The lender will not cover it.
  • Set Your Maximum Before Offer Night: Write the number down before the deadline. When emotions run high, that number is the line you do not cross.
  • Price Is Not Your Only Lever: A larger deposit, flexible possession, or fewer conditions can win over a marginally higher competing offer.
  • Walk Away When the Math Breaks: There is always another home. Losing a bidding war is never the worst outcome.
04 of 06 · Closing Costs
+$18K The call your lawyer makes three days before possession

The Closing Costs That Blindside Every First-Time Buyer

Your down payment gets all the attention. Closing costs get none — until your lawyer calls with $18,000 you weren’t expecting. Budget an extra 2%–4% of the purchase price in liquid cash, completely separate from your down payment.

  • BC Property Transfer Tax: 1% on the first $200K, 2% on the rest. On a $700K home — $12,000, due on closing day. First-time buyer exemptions apply under $500K.
  • Legal and Notary Fees: $1,500–$2,500. Not optional. Every title transfer in Canada requires a lawyer or notary.
  • Title Insurance: $300–$500. Protects against fraud, unknown liens, encroachments. Most lenders require it as a condition of funding.
  • Property Tax Adjustment + Moving: Another $2,000–$6,000 depending on timing and your moving situation.
05 of 06 · Closing Day
2–4 PM When the keys usually arrive — if everything goes smoothly

What Actually Happens on Closing Day — Step by Step

You do not sign papers at the front door. You sign at your lawyer’s office days before possession, then spend possession day waiting for a call that the keys are ready.

  • The Signing Appointment: 1–3 business days before possession, at your lawyer’s office. Bring two pieces of government photo ID.
  • Fund Transfers: Closing funds must land in your lawyer’s trust account at least two business days before possession. Wire transfers take a full day — don’t leave it to the morning of.
  • The Final Walkthrough: You’re entitled to one in BC, 24–48 hours before possession. Use it. Confirm same condition as your offer date.
  • Book the Moving Truck for the Afternoon: Keys are released after title registration. Plan for noon at the earliest — not 8 AM.
06 of 06 · The Blackout Period
freeze Your finances. From subjects removed to keys in hand.

The Financial Moves That Collapse Deals at the Last Minute

Your lender re-verifies your financial profile before funding. Any meaningful change to your income, debt, or credit file can void your mortgage commitment — and put your deposit at risk.

  • No New Credit — At All: No car loan, no credit card, no buy-now-pay-later. Every new application is a hard inquiry your lender will see before releasing funds.
  • No Large Unexplained Transfers: Unusual deposits or withdrawals flag your account and can delay or kill funding.
  • No Job Changes: Switching employers or going self-employed before closing can void your mortgage commitment. Many lenders verify employment within 48 hours of funding.
  • Do Not Touch the Closing Cost Fund: It is legally committed. It cannot be used for movers, furniture, or anything else until keys are yours.
Treat This as a Complete Financial Blackout
From subjects removed to keys in hand — make zero significant financial decisions. Lenders can and do pull mortgage commitments at the last minute when your profile changes.
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01 of 06 · Offer Subjects
3Subjects every first-time buyer must include
Never Waive Your Subjects. Not for Any Seller. Not for Any Home.

A subject is your legal right to walk away with your deposit. Give it up and you absorb every risk it was protecting you from.

  • Financing Condition: Even with pre-approval, a failed appraisal costs you your deposit without this.
  • Inspection Condition: $500–$700 to potentially uncover $30,000 in hidden problems.
  • Strata Docs (BC): A pending special levy or underfunded reserve can cost thousands unexpectedly.
In BC, Removing Subjects Is Permanent
No cooling-off for resale. Once subjects are removed, the deal is firm and your deposit is at risk.
next
02 of 06 · Home Inspection
$600The best money you will spend in this entire process
Think of It as a Full Physical Examination for the Building You Are Mortgaging.

Not a pass/fail test. A professional look at every system a 20-minute showing will never give you.

  • Covers: Roof, foundation, electrical, plumbing, HVAC, windows, insulation, drainage.
  • Doesn’t cover: Hidden walls, underground drains, asbestos, mold — unless added on.
  • Negotiating weapon: Written deficiency list = documented basis to renegotiate price or request repairs.
next
03 of 06 · Bidding Wars
−$40KThe premium buyers pay when emotion overrules math
Bidding Wars Are Not Accidents. They Are Designed to Make You Overpay.

Offer review dates and competing buyers are tactics designed to trigger urgency and override rational thinking.

  • Set your ceiling before offer night. Write the number down. That number is the line you don’t cross.
  • Price is not your only lever. Larger deposit, flexible possession, fewer conditions can win.
  • Walk away when math breaks. There is always another home.
The Appraisal Gap
Bid $40K over asking, bank appraises at asking — that $40K comes entirely out of your pocket, on top of your down payment.
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04 of 06 · Closing Costs
+$18KThe call your lawyer makes three days before possession
You Saved the Down Payment. Did You Save an Extra $15,000–$30,000 on Top of It?

Budget 2%–4% of the purchase price in liquid cash, completely separate from your down payment, before closing day.

  • BC Property Transfer Tax: On a $700K home = $12,000, due on closing day.
  • Legal and Notary Fees: $1,500–$2,500. Not optional.
  • Title Insurance + Tax Adjustments + Moving: Another $2,000–$6,000.
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05 of 06 · Closing Day
2–4 PMWhen the keys usually arrive
You Don’t Sign at the Front Door. Here Is What Actually Happens.

You sign at your lawyer’s office days before possession. Then you wait for a phone call that title has transferred.

  • Signing Appointment: 1–3 business days before possession. Bring two pieces of government photo ID.
  • Fund Transfers: Closing funds must land in trust at least two business days before. Wire transfers take a full day.
  • Final Walkthrough: Entitled to one in BC, 24–48 hours before. Use it.
  • Book movers for the afternoon. Keys released after title registration — plan noon earliest.
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06 of 06 · The Blackout Period
freezeYour finances. From subjects removed to keys in hand.
Deals Die in This Window More Than Any Other. Almost Always Self-Inflicted.

Your lender re-verifies your financial profile before funding. Any change can void your mortgage commitment.

  • No new credit — at all. No car loan, no credit card, no buy-now-pay-later.
  • No large unexplained transfers. Flags your account for documentation requests that delay funding.
  • No job changes. Many lenders verify employment again within 48 hours of funding.
  • Don’t touch the closing cost fund. It cannot be used for anything until keys are yours.