Real estate law

Real estate, from contract review to keys in hand.

We close residential and commercial transactions for buyers, sellers, lenders, and borrowers across Metro Vancouver. Flat-fee pricing on most files.

What we cover

Six places we add value on a real estate file.

Most clients come to us for one of the items below. Many come back for the next one a few years later.

The price up front

Flat fees for the most common files.

Most home purchases and refinances under $2 million run on a flat fee. Above that, or for First Nations Lands, we quote on the file.

  • Purchase, no mortgage $1,400
  • Purchase with one mortgage $1,600
  • Sale (cash) $1,200
  • Refinance, one payout $1,500
  • Each additional mortgage discharge +$100

Government fees, title insurance, and other third-party charges (typically $750 – $1,000) are billed at cost and are not hidden in our fee.

How a typical purchase runs

What we actually do between subject removal and closing.

  1. 01

    Contract review

    Once you have an accepted offer, we read the contract end to end. Anything unusual — assumed mortgages, unfunded deposits, holdback clauses, pre-sale assignment terms — gets flagged before subject removal where possible.

  2. 02

    Title and document order

    We pull the current title from the Land Title Office and order tax certificates, strata documents, and any insurance binders the lender requires. If anything turns up — a pending charge, a wrong legal description, a strata restriction — we deal with it before closing.

  3. 03

    Mortgage instructions and statement of adjustments

    Your lender (if any) sends instructions a few days out. We prepare the statement of adjustments — purchase price, deposit, property tax adjustments, strata fee adjustments, our fee, government charges, third-party costs — and send it for your review.

  4. 04

    Signing meeting

    You come in (or sign electronically where the file allows) one to three days before closing. We sign the land title documents, mortgage documents, statutory declarations, and the trust conditions for releasing funds.

  5. 05

    Closing day

    We receive your funds and any mortgage advance, register the transfer and new mortgage at the Land Title Office, send the purchase price to the seller's lawyer, and confirm registration. Your realtor releases the keys on possession day, usually the next business day.

Frequently asked

Real estate questions we get most.

Do I need a real estate lawyer to buy a home in BC?

You need either a lawyer or a notary public. Both are authorised to close a real estate transaction in British Columbia. The difference is what each can do when something on the file goes sideways: a lawyer can advise on contract terms, dispute issues with the other side, and represent you in court if needed; a notary in BC is limited to non-contested conveyancing.

How much time should I give you before my purchase or sale closes?

For purchases and sales, we usually need at least 5 business days from the day the file lands with us. For First Nations Lands matters, we typically need 3 days. These aren't set in stone — the timeline shifts with the complexity of the file and the lender's requirements. If your timeline is shorter, please call us so we can evaluate the file on a case-by-case basis.

Can you act for both the buyer and the seller?

No. Acting for both sides of a real estate transaction is a conflict of interest under the Law Society of BC rules. We act for one party only. The exception is a transfer between parties who already share property (for example, adding a spouse to title), where joint representation is permitted.

What is a Property Transfer Tax certificate, and do I need one?

Property Transfer Tax (PTT) is the BC tax payable when title to real property changes. We calculate it, claim any exemptions you qualify for, and remit it on your behalf at closing. There is no separate certificate — the tax is paid as part of the closing transaction.

What happens on closing day?

On closing day we receive funds from your lender (if any) and your deposit, register the transfer of title and any new mortgages at the Land Title Office, send the purchase price to the seller's lawyer, and arrange for keys with your realtor. You usually get keys the day after closing, on the possession date set in your contract.

How much does it cost?

For homes or mortgages under $2,000,000, our flat fees are: $1,400 for a purchase without a mortgage, $1,600 for a purchase with a mortgage, $1,200 for a cash sale, $1,500 for a refinance with one payout, and $100 for each additional mortgage discharge. Above $2 million, on First Nations Lands, or on complex multi-title files, we quote on the matter. See our full fee schedule.

Got a contract you'd like a second pair of eyes on?

Send it over with the closing date. We'll come back with a fixed quote and a clear next step.