When buying a new condo, you need to be aware of the costs involved. Buying a new condo is not the same as buying a resale condo, there are additional costs you will incur on closing day. The sales people at the condo sales centres will NEVER bring any of these items to your attention.
A reader of this blog (not my client) recently emailed me asking for my advice/help after they got the shock of a lifetime when seeing their statement of adjustments on their new condo that they were about to close on. The person in question bought a large unit at Festival Tower a couple years ago when they were offering their 5% deposit program. The price of the unit including some minor upgrades was ~$840K. Imagine how you would feel if your lawyer told you you had to come up with $74K for closing costs (not a cent of which would go towards equity in the unit). The costs that the buyer had to pay on closing included:
Now obviously the BIG expense here is the HST. He purchased the unit shortly after the HST came into effect but shortly before developers universally started to include the HST in the cost of the unit. (If you bought a new condo post June 2009, you better check and see in your contract if HST was included.) Development fees, Tarion enrollment fees, and water/gas hook up fees are all examples of costs that buyers incur when buying pre-construction instead of going resale. This buyer was NOT an investor so this is HST money that he will never get back (see my previous post on the HST debate/question).
The buyer told me he was not expecting these closing costs and had to scramble to get the $74K in funds together just to close on this property and not be in default of his contract. Ouch. How can this happen?
This story once again illustrates what I have been preaching for nearly 4 years on this blog:
Questions or comments? Do you have a story of how you were surprised when you saw your statement of adjustments? I’d love to hear about it. Contact me here.
Continue reading...22. June 2009
The provincial government is proposing to harmonize the GST with the PST. This new tax will be known as the HST. This would underlying principle is to increase efficiencies by having just a single tax, however, some goods (like housing) that have never been subject to the PST, suddenly would be.
This has many people inside and outside the Real Estate industry very concerned. The cost of a new condo or home in the GTA could jump overnight by tens of thousands if this new tax was implemented with no concessions. (Resale properties are not subject to the GST or PST).
The province just announced some new proposed changes to be made to how the HST is implemented as it pertains to new housing. Continue reading for the full press release from TREB.
Continue reading...
27. July 2011
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