Buying your first home is exciting, terrifying, expensive, emotional, and somehow involves more paperwork than applying to university, getting a passport, and filing your taxes combined.
If you’ve ever found yourself scrolling through listings at 11:30 PM thinking, “Wait… how do people actually buy a house?” you’re not alone.
The truth is, nobody really explains the process from start to finish. You’re just expected to magically know what a pre-approval is, why everyone keeps talking about conditions, and whether you’re supposed to cry when you sign the paperwork. (Spoiler alert: some people do.)
Honestly, buying your first home can feel like everyone else got a handbook that you somehow missed. Your parents bought their first house for what feels like the price of a modern-day parking spot, your friends all seem suspiciously confident, and the internet is either telling you to buy immediately or that you’ll never afford a home again.
The good news? It doesn’t have to be that complicated.
When you break the process down step-by-step, buying a home becomes a lot less scary and a lot more exciting. So whether you’re actively saving, already browsing listings every night, or just wondering if homeownership is even possible for you, here’s the real breakdown of what buying your first home in Ontario actually looks like.
Step 1: Figure Out Your Budget
Aka: Find out what you can afford before falling in love with a house you definitely cannot.
We know. Looking at houses is the fun part. Budgeting is not. But trust us, there’s nothing more heartbreaking than finding your dream kitchen and discovering your budget only covers the front porch.
Before you start house hunting, you’ll want to understand exactly what you’re comfortable spending every month. And no, it’s not just the mortgage payment.
You should also factor in:
Property taxes
Home insurance
Utilities
Closing costs
Legal fees
Moving expenses
Emergency savings for when the furnace decides to retire unexpectedly
Furniture, window coverings, and all the random things nobody tells you you’ll suddenly need
This is also a great time to speak with a mortgage professional and get pre-approved. A pre-approval gives you a realistic budget and shows sellers you’re serious when it’s time to make an offer.
A lot of first-time buyers are surprised to learn that just because a bank approves you for a certain amount doesn’t mean you should spend every dollar of it. Sure, you could max out your budget, but future you might appreciate still being able to order takeout, go on vacation, or buy a couch that isn’t from Facebook Marketplace.
Take a good look at your actual lifestyle. Do you like traveling? Going out for dinner? Buying concert tickets? Getting a morning coffee that costs more than it probably should? All of those things matter when deciding what monthly payment you’re truly comfortable with.
Pro tip: Homeownership is much more enjoyable when you’re not stressed about every single bill that arrives in your mailbox.
Step 2: Find a Realtor
Aka: Please don’t try to navigate this alone.
Could you buy a home without a Realtor? Technically, yes.
Could you also cut your own hair? Also yes.
Should you? That’s a separate conversation.
A good Realtor isn’t just there to unlock doors and send listings. They’re there to:
Explain the process
Connect you with trusted professionals
Help you avoid expensive mistakes
Negotiate on your behalf
Keep track of important deadlines
Answer your questions, even the ones you think sound silly
Talk you off the ledge when you become convinced you’ve done everything wrong
Buying a home involves contracts, negotiations, inspections, financing, lawyers, insurance, deposits, deadlines, and approximately twelve moments where you’ll wonder if you accidentally missed something important.
Having someone in your corner who does this every day makes a huge difference.
Your Realtor should feel like part advisor, part educator, part negotiator, and part therapist. Because while buying a home is exciting, it’s also emotional. You’re making one of the biggest purchases of your life, and it’s completely normal to have moments of excitement immediately followed by moments of panic.
A good Realtor won’t pressure you into making decisions you’re uncomfortable with. They’ll help you understand your options, explain what everything means, and make sure you’re protected throughout the process.
And yes, they will probably answer at least one text from you that starts with, “Sorry, this is probably a dumb question, but…”
Step 3: Start House Hunting
The part you’ve actually been waiting for.
Now comes the fun part: touring homes.
At first, everything feels exciting. You’ll save 87 listings. You’ll convince yourself that you absolutely need a farmhouse sink. You’ll suddenly have very strong opinions about quartz countertops and black window frames.
Then you’ll start figuring out what actually matters to you.
Maybe you thought you wanted a century home until you discovered what “century home maintenance” actually means.
Maybe you wanted a condo until you learned about condo fees.
Maybe you thought you wanted an open concept floor plan until you realized you actually enjoy having walls.
Maybe you thought you needed four bedrooms and a huge backyard, but after touring a few homes, you realize location matters more than square footage.
This stage is all about learning your priorities.
And honestly? Don’t be surprised if those priorities change.
One of the biggest things first-time buyers learn is that there is no such thing as a perfect house. There is only the house that checks the boxes that matter most to you.
You’ll probably walk into homes that looked incredible online and wonder who approved those listing photos. You’ll probably also walk into a home you almost didn’t book and immediately know it’s special.
Some buyers find their home after seeing three properties. Others see thirty.
Both are completely normal.
Step 4: Make an Offer
Where strategy officially enters the chat.
Making an offer isn’t always as simple as offering the asking price and hoping for the best.
Depending on the market, your Realtor will help you decide:
What price makes sense
Whether conditions should be included
What deposit amount to offer
How flexible closing dates need to be
Whether there are competing offers
How to make your offer as strong as possible while still protecting yourself
This is where experience matters.
Because while your emotions might be saying, “We HAVE to have this house,” your Realtor’s job is to make sure you’re making a smart financial decision and not accidentally overpaying because the living room had really good lighting.
This is also the point where things can suddenly feel very real.
You’re signing paperwork. You’re discussing large sums of money. You’re trying to stay calm while simultaneously imagining where your Christmas tree will go.
It’s exciting. It’s stressful. It’s completely normal.
Sometimes your first offer gets accepted.
Sometimes it doesn’t.
And while losing out on a home can feel devastating in the moment, almost every homeowner will tell you the same thing: eventually, they ended up exactly where they were supposed to.
Step 5: Conditions Are Your Safety Net
Read this part carefully.
Conditions protect you.
They’re essentially saying:
“Yes, we want to buy the house… provided everything checks out.”
Some of the most common conditions include:
Financing Condition
This gives your lender time to fully approve your mortgage and confirm everything is in order financially.
Home Inspection Condition
This allows a professional inspector to evaluate the property and identify any major issues before you’re locked into the purchase.
Insurance Condition
This confirms that you’ll be able to obtain insurance coverage for the property.
There can be additional conditions depending on the property and situation, which is why having a Realtor guide you through this part is so important.
Can conditions sometimes make an offer less competitive? Yes.
Can they also save you from buying a home with a failing foundation, an aging roof, or a furnace that’s one cold winter away from retirement? Also yes.
We’re big fans of protecting your future self.
Conditions aren’t there to complicate the process. They’re there to provide peace of mind.
And trust us, peace of mind is a pretty valuable thing when you’re making the biggest purchase of your life.
Step 6: Closing Day
The best day.
After weeks of paperwork, emails, signatures, waiting, stressing, refreshing your inbox, and wondering if you’ll ever sleep peacefully again…
Closing day arrives.
Your lawyer finalizes everything, funds are transferred, documents are registered, and eventually, the moment happens:
You get the keys.
And suddenly, you’re standing in a home that’s actually yours.
It’s exciting. It’s surreal. It’s emotional.
You might walk through the front door and immediately start planning furniture layouts. You might sit on the floor of an empty room and just take it all in. You might cry. You might order pizza and eat it off a moving box.
There is no wrong way to celebrate becoming a homeowner.
It’s also the moment you realize you now have opinions about lawn maintenance, garbage schedules, and where the electrical panel is located.
Welcome to homeownership.
Final Thoughts
Buying your first home doesn’t have to feel overwhelming, confusing, or impossible.
Yes, there are a lot of steps.
Yes, there are a lot of moving parts.
And yes, you’ll probably Google at least one real estate term at midnight.
But with the right team guiding you through the process, buying your first home can actually be exciting instead of stressful.
There will be moments of excitement. There will be moments of uncertainty. There will probably be moments where you wonder if everyone else secretly knows something you don’t.
They don’t.
Every homeowner was once a first-time buyer too.
So if you’re thinking about buying your first home in Ontario and have absolutely no idea where to start, that’s okay.
Honestly, that’s exactly what we’re here for. 💙🏡💕