From helping you understand your budget to strengthening your offer before you start your search, getting
pre-approved gives you a clear advantage when buying a home in the Greater Toronto Area.
With a mortgage pre-approval in place, you’ll know what you can afford, focus on the right properties, and
move forward with confidence when the perfect home becomes available.
We believe every successful home search starts with the right preparation. Whether you’re buying your first property, moving up, or purchasing again, getting pre-approved helps you understand your budget, shop with confidence, and focus on homes that truly fit your goals.
With a pre-approval in place, you’ll be ready to act quickly when the right property comes along, making your buying experience smoother, clearer, and more efficient.

Improving your credit score takes time and effort, but because it results in getting the best terms on your mortgage, it is worth it. Here's how you can improve your credit score:
The first step to rebuilding your credit score is to get a copy of your credit report. You can request a free copy of your credit report from Equifax or TransUnion in Canada. Review your credit report carefully to identify any errors or inaccuracies that may negatively impact your score. If you find any errors, dispute them with the credit bureau.
While having debt - if you are paying it off on time - helps you build your credit score, the amount of debt you have limits the amount you can borrow. If you have high credit card balances or other debts, work on paying them down as quickly as possible. If you're using a significant amount of your available credit, this may suggest that you are overextended and may struggle to make payments. The less debt you have, the better your credit utilization ratio will be, which can help improve your credit score.
Start paying your bills on time with no exceptions. Make this the #1 priority each month. Creating a monthly budget helps you take care of your financial health. You can use a budgeting app or a Google or Excel sheet to plan your expenses.
If you are struggling to rebuild your credit score, consider seeking professional help from a credit counselor or financial advisor. They can help you develop a plan to improve your credit score, manage your debts, and create a budget.

Roof
Leaks are the most common problem with roofs, and are tough to detect from outside. However, from inside an attic, you can often see water marks where there is a leak.

Plumbing System
Make sure you are confident that both water systems: the one that brings fresh water in and the one that takes sewage out are functioning well before signing on the dotted line.

Electrical Systems
Before you agree to buy you should make sure that you can run all of the appliances you want to and even power tools at the same time without having a power failure.

Heating and Cooling Systems
Be sure to thoroughly inspect the heating and air conditioning systems in any home you are considering purchasing.

Bad Paint and Signs of Rotting
The paint inside and outside the house can reveal a lot about the condition of the underlying material. Check several places on several walls, using your eyes and a screwdriver for poking.

Cracks and other important signs
Cracks in walls, doors not closing properly and uneven floors can all be signs that there is a problem with the foundation. If the foundation is not strong, the entire house could literally collapse, so you should carefully check for these signs.
"We found the one"
"Danny negotiated strategically, got the seller to address key repairs, and secured a price that felt like a win without risking the deal. We felt supported, informed, and genuinely cared for the entire time"
- Deklon R.

"Communication was immediate"
"I can’t say enough about how professional, energetic, and effective Danny Macedo’s team is. Communication was immediate and consistent, and we always knew what was happening, what came next, and what decisions mattered most."
- Tony Marquez

"Outstanding Realtor Service"
"Thanks again for everything! We really look forward to ha ving you as a resource and being able to refer friends to you for real estate advice."
- Alex Campagnaro

Copyright 2026. Macedo Real Estate Group, Danny Macedo, Sales Representative, Anthony Rocco Macedo, Sales Representative, Royal LePage Supreme Realty, Brokerage all rights reserved assumes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information shown. The information provided herein must only be used by consumers that have a bona fide interest in the purchase, sale or lease of real estate and may not be used for any commercial purpose or any other purpose.
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If you are wondering, “Should I buy before selling my house in Toronto?”, you are asking one of the most common questions GTA homeowners face when planning a move. Buying before selling in Toronto can give you more control over where you move next, but it can also create timing, financing, and negotiation pressure if your current home takes longer to sell than expected.
The right answer depends on your property, price range, mortgage position, risk tolerance, and local market conditions. A real estate agent can help you compare sale timing, listing strategy, and local demand. For mortgage, legal, tax, or financial planning questions, speak with the appropriate qualified professional before making a final decision.
In March 2026, the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board reported 5,039 GTA home sales, up 1.7% year over year, while new listings were down 16.7% to 14,442. The average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7% from March 2025. That combination tells a nuanced story: sales improved slightly and fewer new listings came to market, but prices were still softer.
For a homeowner who wants to buy before selling, this matters. A softer price environment can create opportunities on the purchase side, especially if you are moving into a segment with more choice. At the same time, your sale price should be based on current comparable sales, not last year’s expectations.
Buying first can work well for some Toronto and GTA homeowners because it gives you time to choose a property that truly fits your next chapter. It can be especially helpful when your next home has specific requirements, such as location, property type, layout, accessibility features, parking, outdoor space, or proximity to work, transit, amenities, or services.
Potential benefits include:
·More time to search without feeling rushed by a firm sale date.
·Greater certainty about where you are moving before listing your current home.
·More flexibility if the type of home you want has limited inventory.
·A better opportunity to prepare your existing home for market after you secure your next property.
Buying first may also make the moving process feel smoother if you can overlap closing dates, arrange renovations, or move in stages. Still, that convenience has to be balanced against the financial and contractual commitments involved.
The biggest risk is carrying two commitments at once. If you buy a new property before your current home is sold firm, you need a realistic plan for your deposit, mortgage approval, closing costs, moving costs, and any overlap between the two homes.
Risks to think through include:
·Your current home may sell for less than expected.
·Your current home may take longer to sell than expected.
·Your lender may require a firm sale before approving certain financing arrangements.
·Bridge financing, if available, may come with conditions and costs.
·A rushed sale can weaken your negotiating position if your purchase closing date is approaching.
The goal is not to avoid all risk. Real estate moves always involve tradeoffs. The goal is to understand the risk before you make an offer, so your buying strategy and selling strategy work together.
Selling before buying can reduce uncertainty because you know your sale price, conditions, and closing date before committing to the next property. This approach can give you a clearer purchase budget and may reduce the pressure to accept a lower offer simply because a closing deadline is coming up.
The tradeoff is that you may have less time to find your next home. If suitable listings are limited, you might need a longer closing, temporary housing, storage, or a flexible plan. For some sellers, that is manageable. For others, especially those with work, caregiving, accessibility, or school-calendar considerations, the uncertainty can feel more stressful than buying first.
Before deciding whether to buy or sell first, review these questions with your real estate agent and your professional advisors:
1.What are recent comparable sales saying about my current home’s realistic value?
2.How many similar homes are currently competing with mine?
3.How long are comparable homes taking to sell in my specific area and property type?
4.What price range am I buying into, and is that segment more competitive or less competitive than the one I am selling in?
5.Do I have a mortgage pre-approval based on current rates, income, debt, and expected sale proceeds?
6.What happens if my current home does not sell before my purchase closes?
7.Can I negotiate closing dates, conditions, or other terms that reduce timing pressure?
A knowledgeable Toronto real estate agent can help you model different move scenarios, while staying within the real estate scope. That includes estimating market value based on comparable sales, reviewing local listing competition, recommending sale preparation steps, coordinating showing strategy, discussing offer conditions, and helping negotiate closing timelines.
An agent should not tell you what you can afford, how to structure your mortgage, whether you will owe tax, or what legal clauses mean in detail. Those questions belong with a mortgage professional, accountant, financial advisor, or lawyer.
Real estate advertising in Ontario should be accurate, current, clear, and not misleading. It should also clearly identify the brokerage where required. When discussing neighbourhoods, buyers, or lifestyle needs, content should avoid language that suggests steering or preference based on protected characteristics. In Ontario, housing-related services must be provided without discrimination on protected grounds under the Human Rights Code.
Commissions and service fees should be discussed as negotiable, not fixed or standard. Sellers should ask direct questions about services, fees, marketing plans, cooperation with other brokerages, and how compensation is handled.
Here is a simple framework: if your current home is likely to attract strong demand, your financing is flexible, and your next-home search is highly specific, buying before selling may be worth exploring. If your current home needs careful pricing, your budget depends heavily on the final sale price, or your comfort level with carrying risk is low, selling first may be the cleaner path.
Neither option is automatically better. The best strategy is the one that reflects your actual numbers, your home’s market position, and the type of property you want to buy next.
Before you make an offer or list your home, get a clear view of both sides of the move. A local selling consultation can help you understand your current home’s likely value, your competition, and the timing options available in your part of the GTA.
If you are planning to buy and sell in Toronto or the surrounding Greater Toronto Area, reach out to schedule a no-pressure selling strategy conversation. You will leave with a clearer sense of your options, timing, and questions for your mortgage, legal, tax, and financial advisors.