Home Purchase Agreement in Canada
Looking for a clear, commission-free way to handle your home purchase agreement when you buy or sell in Canada?
ComFree Realty (operating as homeFree) gives you the control, MLS® exposure, and legal support partners you need to complete a private deal safely, without percentage commissions. You stay in charge of negotiations and timing while our flat-fee packages, seven-day-a-week support, and partner lawyers help you move from offer to iSOLD!
If you’re planning a private sale or exploring buying a house without a realtor, this guide shows how the agreement fits into the process, and how ComFree can support you.
What is a home purchase agreement?
A home purchase agreement (also called an offer to purchase, purchase agreement contract, agreement of sale, or sale agreement form) is the legally binding contract that:
- Sets the price and key terms of the deal
- Defines each party’s responsibilities and timelines
- Lists conditions (financing, inspection, sale of buyer’s home, etc.)
- Describes what’s included or excluded (appliances, sheds, window coverings)
- Outlines default and dispute remedies
In a private or commission-free sale, this document matters even more. You’re saving thousands by avoiding commission, so your paperwork needs to be clean, compliant, and lawyer-approved.
ComFree’s model is built to support this: you control the deal, and our partner lawyers provide lawyer-prepared offers to purchase and contract templates, plus e-signature and secure document sharing.
Key parts of an agreement of sale template
Every province has its own standard real estate forms, but most agreement of sale templates cover similar core sections:
Buyer and seller details
Full legal names and contact information for everyone on title or on the mortgage.
Property description
Legal land description, municipal address, and sometimes title reference numbers.
Purchase price and deposit
- Agreed price
- Deposit amount and due date
- Who holds the deposit in trust (usually the lawyer’s trust account)
Conditions (subject-to clauses)
Examples:
- Financing approval
- Home inspection
- Review of condo documents
- Sale of buyer’s existing home
- Lawyer review and title search
Inclusions and exclusions
Appliances, blinds, sheds, garage openers, mirrors, TV wall mounts, spelled out.
Important dates
- Offer expiry time
- Condition-removal dates
- Possession/closing date
Representations and warranties
Statements the seller makes about the property (e.g., no known structural issues, no outstanding work orders, compliance with bylaws to the seller’s knowledge).
Signatures and acceptance
How and when the offer is accepted, rejected, or countered, plus methods for delivery (email, e-signature, etc.).
With ComFree, you stay in control of all these decisions, while our partner legal professionals provide the purchase agreement contract language and legal safeguards you need.
Offer to purchase form vs. purchase agreement contract
In everyday real estate language, an offer to purchase form and a purchase agreement contract are often the same piece of paper at different stages:
- When it’s first written and sent by the buyer, it’s an offer.
- Once the seller signs and all parties agree on terms, it becomes the binding contract.
In a commission-free, flat-fee model like ComFree’s:
- Buyers can draft the offer with their own lawyer or using a lawyer-prepared form.
- Sellers can have their lawyer review any offer before signing.
- E-signature and secure document sharing keep everything fast and trackable.
Result: you avoid commission, but you don’t skip legal protection.
How ComFree supports your home purchase agreement
ComFree is not a law firm, and we don’t replace legal advice. Instead, we connect your private sale to the right professional tools:
- Lawyer-prepared offers to purchase through partner law firms
- Contract templates aligned with provincial standards
- E-signature and digital document management for fast, paperless deals
- Checklists and education so you know what each clause means before you sign
- Seven-day-a-week support for questions about the process and next steps
You control the listing, showings, price, counteroffers, and final decision. Our role is to give you MLS®/REALTOR.ca exposure, structured support, and access to the legal expertise that keeps your agreement solid.
What to expect: Step-by-step from listing to signed agreement
When you list with ComFree using our flat-fee, commission-free packages, your path to a signed home purchase agreement follows a clear seven-step process:
1. Purchase your flat-fee listing package
Choose from BASIC, PREMIUM, or GUARANTEED SALE packages, each replaces percentage commission with a simple flat fee.
2. Get your professional signage
We ship your lawn sign and any additional signage you select so buyers instantly know your property is for sale.
3. Prepare your marketing assets
Use our Seller’s Toolbox to prep for professional photography, virtual tours, RMS measurements (in Alberta), and floor plans. Strong marketing drives more showings and stronger offers.
4. Create your MLS®-ready listing
We guide you through input forms so your MLS®/REALTOR.ca listing is accurate, compliant, and compelling. You control the details; we support and syndicate.
5. Go live and start booking showings
Once live, buyers come directly to you. You schedule showings, answer questions, and highlight your home’s best features.
6. Receive, review, and negotiate offers
When a buyer sends an offer to purchase form, you:
- Review price, conditions, and dates
- Consult a lawyer as needed
- Accept, reject, or counter using our negotiation guidance
- Use digital tools to send and sign documents
7. Finalize your sale and close
After conditions are removed, your signed agreement moves to closing. Lawyers handle title transfer and funds, and you move on, commission-free.
Throughout, our team is available seven days a week to help you understand the next step, line by line.
Home purchase agreements and buying a house without an agent
More buyers are exploring how to buy a house without realtors. Your home purchase agreement is the core of that strategy:
- It replaces handshake understandings with clear, written terms.
- It protects both sides when there’s no traditional buyer agent in the middle.
- It lets you and the seller structure creative terms that work for you.
If you’re planning a home purchase without realtor involvement, our resources on buy house without real estate agent walk through the myths, realities, and protections you should put in place, always with a lawyer reviewing your contract.
Local focus: Commission-free real estate and contracts in Western & Central Canada
ComFree Realty Inc. operates across key Canadian provinces, supporting private sellers and buyers who want to keep their equity while staying legally protected.
Service areas:
- Alberta
- British Columbia
- Saskatchewan
- Ontario
Head office / mailing address:
ComFree Realty Inc.
10807-124 Street
Edmonton, AB
T5M 0H4
Phone: 1-877-888-3131
Wherever you are in these provinces, you can use our flat-fee model, MLS® exposure, and partner legal network to complete your home purchase agreement with confidence, without giving away your equity in commission.
FAQs about home purchase agreements in Canada
Do I need a lawyer to sign a home purchase agreement in Alberta or Ontario?
Technically, buyers and sellers can sign a home purchase agreement without a lawyer present. However, ComFree strongly encourages both sides to obtain independent legal advice. Our partner legal professionals can prepare and/or review offers, perform title searches, and handle closing so your commission savings never come at the cost of legal protection.
Can I use an online agreement of sale template in Canada?
Generic online agreement of sale templates may not match your province’s rules or current industry standards. That’s risky. ComFree connects you with partner lawyers who use up-to-date forms that reflect Canadian and provincial practices, plus any special clauses you need (financing, inspection, condo documents, etc.). Using proper forms helps avoid disputes later.
What’s the difference between an offer to purchase form and a sale agreement form?
In most Canadian markets, an offer to purchase form becomes a sale agreement form once the seller accepts and both parties agree to all terms. It’s one document moving from offer stage to binding contract, with conditions and timelines set out clearly.
How does a home purchase agreement work in a private home sale?
In a private or for-sale-by-owner transaction, the home purchase agreement still sets all the legal terms, price, dates, conditions, inclusions. The only difference is that you’re not paying percentage commission. With ComFree, you still get MLS®/REALTOR.ca exposure, structured guidance, and access to partner lawyers who prepare and review your contract.
Can I buy a house in Alberta or Ontario without a realtor and still be protected?
Yes, if you handle your paperwork properly. Many buyers explore buying a house without a realtor, but protection comes from:
- Using proper provincial forms
- Making your offer conditional on financing, inspection, and lawyer review
- Having a lawyer explain the home purchase agreement before you commit
ComFree’s educational resources help you ask the right questions while your lawyer handles the legal advice.
Who holds the deposit under a Canadian home purchase agreement?
Typically, the deposit is held in trust by the buyer’s or seller’s lawyer (or, in some traditional deals, a brokerage). In a commission-free private sale with ComFree, a lawyer’s trust account is commonly used. The exact holder is written directly into the purchase agreement contract.
Can I change the terms after we sign the agreement?
Only if both buyer and seller agree, then your lawyers can prepare an amendment or addendum. It becomes part of the contract once signed. Never rely on verbal promises; if terms change, have them updated in writing.
What happens if conditions in the sale agreement form aren’t met?
If a condition (like financing or inspection) isn’t met and the condition is properly written, the buyer may be able to exit the deal without penalty by the condition deadline. The exact outcome depends on the wording in your sale agreement form and your province’s rules, which is why lawyer drafting and review are so important.
Ready to protect your equity and still get a rock-solid contract? List with ComFree’s flat-fee, commission-free packages today and take full control of your home purchase agreement from MLS® listing to final signature.