GTA Real Estate Blog

RSS

First-Time Home Buyer Guide Ontario 2025 — Everything You Need to Know

Buying your first home in Ontario in 2025 involves more steps, more paperwork, and more decisions than most people expect — but with the right preparation, it is entirely manageable. This guide covers everything a first-time buyer in Ontario needs to know, from getting pre-approved to picking up the keys, including Ontario-specific programs that can save you thousands.

Rutul Vadadoriya has guided hundreds of first-time buyers through this process across the GTA. Every section of this guide includes the specific insight he shares with clients before their first offer.

Step 1 — Know What You Can Actually Afford

Before you look at a single listing, you need two numbers: your maximum purchase price and your comfortable monthly payment. These are not the same thing.

Your lender will approve you for a maximum based on your income, debt, and down payment. That number is often higher than what you should spend. A first home that stretches your budget to the limit leaves no room for property tax increases, maintenance costs, or a change in income.

Rutul's standard advice to first-time clients: take the maximum your lender approves, subtract 10 to 15 percent, and use that as your actual search ceiling.

Key costs to budget for beyond the purchase price:

  • Land transfer tax (Ontario) — up to 1.5% of the purchase price above $400,000

  • Toronto land transfer tax (if buying in the City of Toronto) — additional charge on top of provincial

  • Legal fees — typically $1,500 to $2,500

  • Home inspection — $400 to $600

  • Title insurance — approximately $200 to $400

  • Moving costs — $1,000 to $3,000

  • Immediate repairs or appliances — budget a minimum of $2,000 as a buffer

Step 2 — Open a First Home Savings Account (FHSA)

The First Home Savings Account is one of the most significant financial tools available to Ontario first-time buyers and it is underused. If you have not opened one yet, do it before you do anything else.

How the FHSA works:

  • Annual contribution limit: $8,000

  • Lifetime contribution limit: $40,000

  • Contributions are tax-deductible (like an RRSP)

  • Withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase are tax-free (like a TFSA)

  • Unused annual room carries forward once (maximum $16,000 in a single year)

To qualify, you must be a Canadian resident, at least 18 years old, and a first-time home buyer (meaning you have not owned a home you lived in at any point in the current year or the preceding four calendar years).

Open an FHSA at any major bank or investment institution. The sooner you open it, the more contribution room you accumulate.

Step 3 — Get Pre-Approved (Not Just Pre-Qualified)

Pre-qualification is an estimate based on a conversation. Pre-approval is a verified commitment based on your actual financial documents. In a competitive market like the GTA, sellers and their agents take pre-approved buyers seriously. Pre-qualified buyers are not in the same position.

To get pre-approved, your lender will need:

  • Proof of income (T4s, pay stubs, Notice of Assessment)

  • Proof of employment (letter from employer)

  • Bank statements showing your down payment

  • Credit history

  • List of debts and monthly obligations

The pre-approval locks in an interest rate for 90 to 120 days (depending on the lender), protecting you from rate increases while you search.

Rutul's tip: Get pre-approved by at least two lenders — your bank and a mortgage broker. Brokers access multiple lenders and often find better rates than a single bank can offer.

Step 4 — Understand the Ontario Land Transfer Tax Rebate

First-time buyers in Ontario qualify for a land transfer tax rebate of up to $4,000 on the provincial tax. If you are buying in the City of Toronto, you also qualify for a separate Toronto land transfer tax rebate of up to $4,475.

Combined, these rebates can reduce your closing costs by up to $8,475 — money that stays in your pocket.

To qualify for both rebates, you must:

  • Be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident

  • Be at least 18 years old

  • Have never owned a home anywhere in the world

  • Occupy the home as your principal residence within 9 months of closing

If you are buying with a partner who has owned a home before, your rebate is reduced proportionally. A real estate lawyer handles the rebate application at closing — it is not something you apply for separately.

Step 5 — Find the Right Neighbourhood for Your Budget

The GTA has enormous variation in price by neighbourhood. A detached home in Bridle Path can cost $5M+. A semi-detached in Brampton can be found under $900,000. Neither is inherently better — they serve different buyers with different priorities.

Questions to answer before choosing a neighbourhood:

  • How important is commute time versus square footage?

  • Do you need to be in a specific school district?

  • Is walkability or parking access more important?

  • Are you buying with future resale in mind, or is this a long-term home?

Rutul's approach: map your top three priorities, then identify which GTA neighbourhoods satisfy all three within your budget. That narrows the search from 50 areas to three or four.

A breakdown of what your budget buys in key GTA areas is available in the average home prices by neighbourhood guide.

average home prices by neighbourhood guide

Step 6 — Make a Smart Offer

When you find the right property, the offer stage is where preparation pays off. A strong offer is not just about the price — it is about terms.

Key decisions in any offer:

  • Offer price — based on comparable sales, not the list price

  • Deposit — typically 5% of purchase price, paid within 24 hours of acceptance

  • Closing date — sellers often prefer a specific timeline; flexibility can win deals

  • Conditions — financing condition (strongly recommended for first-time buyers), home inspection condition, status certificate condition (for condos)

Rutul's tip: In a competitive offer situation, a clean offer with fewer conditions is stronger — but removing a financing condition without being 100% confirmed by your lender is a risk no first-time buyer should take. Know your boundaries before you sit at the table.

Step 7 — Get a Home Inspection

A home inspection is not required in Ontario, but skipping it on a resale property is a mistake most experienced buyers will tell you they regret. An inspector costs $400 to $600 and can identify issues that cost ten times that to fix.

What an inspector checks:

  • Foundation and structure

  • Roof condition and expected life

  • Electrical system and panel

  • Plumbing and water pressure

  • HVAC system and age

  • Windows, insulation, and ventilation

  • Signs of water damage or mold

The inspection report gives you negotiating leverage if issues are found, and it protects you from surprises after you take possession.

Step 8 — Close the Deal

Closing in Ontario typically takes 30 to 90 days from the accepted offer date. During this period, your lawyer reviews the title, manages the transfer of funds, and registers the property in your name.

Rutul's tip: Do not make any major financial changes between the accepted offer and closing — no new loans, no large purchases, no job changes. Lenders re-verify your financial status before releasing funds.

What happens on closing day:

  • Your lawyer registers the transfer and title

  • You pay the remaining down payment, land transfer taxes, and closing costs

  • Keys are released once funds clear — typically mid-afternoon

After closing, update your address with the CRA, set up property tax payments with the municipality, and register for Ontario's home warranty program if applicable.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need for a down payment in Ontario in 2025?

The minimum down payment in Ontario is 5% for homes under $500,000. For homes between $500,000 and $999,999, it is 5% on the first $500,000 and 10% on the remainder. For homes $1M and above, the minimum is 20%.

Can a newcomer to Canada get a mortgage and buy a home in Ontario?

Yes, with conditions. Many lenders offer newcomer mortgage programs that use alternative income verification. Permanent residents and those with valid work permits may qualify. Rutul works with many newcomer buyers — contact him for specific guidance.

What is the First Home Savings Account annual contribution limit?

The FHSA annual contribution limit is $8,000 per year, with a lifetime maximum of $40,000. Unused room carries forward once per year.

Do first-time buyers pay land transfer tax in Ontario?

Yes, but a rebate of up to $4,000 reduces the provincial land transfer tax for qualifying first-time buyers. Toronto buyers receive an additional municipal rebate of up to $4,475.

Ready to Buy Your First Home in Ontario?

Every first-time buyer's situation is different. Speak with Rutul directly to get a clear picture of what you qualify for, which neighbourhoods match your budget, and what the buying process will actually look like for you.

Speak with Rutul

explore homes in your budget

Read
This website may only be used by consumers that have a bona fide interest in the purchase, sale, or lease of real estate of the type being offered via the website. The data relating to real estate on this website comes in part from the MLS® Reciprocity program of the PropTx MLS®. The data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed to be accurate.