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How We Navigate Representation with Integrity and Compliance

How We Handle It:

 

  1. Identify the Status Early

    During listing or when showing a property, ask the right questions:

     

    • “Is the basement apartment registered with the municipality?”

    • “Can you provide documentation or permits for the second suite?”

     

  2. Disclosure is Key

     

    • If you’re listing the property: you must disclose if the basement apartment is not legal or not registered — even if it’s currently tenanted.

    • Use language like:

      “Basement apartment currently tenanted. Seller does not warrant retrofit or legal status.”

     

  3. Represent, Don’t Certify

     

    • You are not a building inspector or a by-law officer.

    • Don’t guess or guarantee the legal status — always encourage the buyer to verify zoning and compliance directly with the local municipality.

     

  4. Document Everything

     

    • Add notes to your file (email confirmations, MLS remarks, status disclosure, etc.).

    • If the seller is unsure, put that in writing.

     

  5. Protecting Buyers

     

    • Advise buyer clients to do their own due diligence.

    • Recommend speaking to a lawyer or the municipality before closing.

     

  6. Working with Tenanted Units

     

    • If the basement is rented, understand tenant rights under the Residential Tenancies Act (RTA).

    • Illegal unit or not, a buyer cannot evict a tenant without proper notice or valid reason.

     

Agent Note:

 

We’re not here to pass judgment or enforce the law — but we do need to represent our clients with full transparency and professional care. If we hide or ignore the legal status of a basement apartment, we’re putting our clients — and ourselves — at risk.