London Ontario Real Estate. No Fluff. No Sales Pitch. Just the Truth.

 Written by Ty Lacroix — Real Estate Strategist & Broker, London Ontario 

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Selling or Buying a Home in London, Ontario This Summer? Here's the Real Picture

Summer in London, Ontario is a quieter real estate season — and that quiet creates real opportunity for both sellers and buyers who know how to use it. According to current LSTAR data, the market sits at 5.0 months of inventory with homes selling at 97.4% of asking in a median of 26 days. Serious buyers are still active. Serious sellers are still transacting. The difference between a summer sale that goes well and one that doesn't comes down to preparation, pricing, and whether you have a plan before you start — not after. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has helped London sellers and buyers navigate every season of this market for 24 years.

For Sellers: The Summer Reality

What's working in your favour.

Serious buyers don't take the summer off. The buyers who are actively searching in July and August are there because they need to be — a job transfer, a closing date on a home they've already sold, a family change that doesn't wait for September. That motivation matters. A focused pool of serious buyers is often more productive than a large pool of casual ones.

Pricing is also holding. According to LSTAR data, London's average sale price is $633,844, with homes selling at 97.4% of asking — a 2.6% negotiating gap that has been consistent. Detached homes in established neighbourhoods continue to hold their value relative to the rest of the province.

What you're working against.

With 5.0 months of inventory currently sitting on the market, buyers have choices. Your home isn't competing against a handful of listings — it's competing against everything available in your price range, right now, on the same screen a buyer is scrolling at 10 PM. That means coasting, testing the market, or hoping someone overlooks a flaw isn't a strategy. It's a way to sit.

Days on market matter more in summer. A home that doesn't get traction in its first two weeks goes stale faster when the buyer pool is smaller. The first week of a listing is still your highest-traffic window, and wasting it on a price that doesn't hold up against the comparables is expensive.

Seller game plan: Price with the market — not ahead of it. Fix visible flaws before the listing goes live. Insist on a launch that creates real demand in week one: professional photography, accurate listing details, direct outreach to buyer agents actively working with qualified clients in your price range. The goal is showings in the first seven days, not hope.

For the complete seller framework: How Selling Your Home Actually Works in London, Ontario →

For Buyers: The Summer Reality

What's working in your favour.

Higher inventory means more choice and less pressure. The frantic bidding-war conditions of a few years ago are not the current reality. With 5.0 months of inventory, you have time to look carefully, compare properly, and negotiate thoughtfully — without the fear that every home you consider will be gone by morning.

Fewer competing buyers in summer means the sellers who are genuinely motivated are more reachable. A well-structured offer on a home that's been sitting for 30-plus days carries real negotiating room. That's the opportunity this market offers a prepared buyer.

What you're working against.

More choice creates decision fatigue. Buyers who arrive without a clear picture of what they actually need — as opposed to what would be nice — end up shopping forever, missing the right home while waiting for a perfect one that doesn't exist. Having your financing confirmed, your priorities ranked, and your threshold price set before you start looking is what prevents this.

Rate movements also matter. Mortgage affordability still depends on the Bank of Canada's policy backdrop, and rate changes ripple through your carrying costs faster than most buyers expect. A rate hold or pre-approval removes that uncertainty before you're sitting across from a seller with a deadline on the offer.

Buyer game plan: Get fully pre-approved — not just pre-qualified — before you look at a single property. Lock in your rate hold where possible. Focus on the fundamentals that actually hold value: location, condition, layout, and light. When the right home appears, act with confidence rather than hesitation. The buyers who do best in this market are prepared to move decisively when it's right — not rushed, but ready.

For the complete buyer framework: How Buying a Home in London Ontario Actually Works

Should You Act This Summer?

The case for acting now.

A smaller pool of active buyers means less competition for sellers who show well. For buyers, motivated sellers with homes that have been sitting since spring are the most negotiable they'll be all year. Both conditions are real, and both expire when the fall market picks up in September.

The honest caution.

If you're selling to buy simultaneously — which most move-up and downsizing buyers are — the timing coordination matters more in a slower market. Homes can take longer to firm up, which affects bridge financing timelines and the sequencing of your two closings. Having that plan mapped out before you list or offer protects you from making rushed decisions under deadline pressure.

The Bottom Line

Summer isn't the best time to sell or buy in London — and it isn't the worst. It's a season with specific conditions that reward preparation and punish guesswork. The sellers who do well price correctly, prepare thoroughly, and launch with a real strategy. The buyers who do well arrive informed, financed, and clear on what they're looking for.

Whether you're thinking about selling this summer, buying, or navigating both at once — the conversation worth having is the one that maps out your specific plan before anything is listed or offered.

Ready to turn this summer into a move that actually works for you? Reach out for a private conversation — no pressure, no pitch.

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What the Averages Aren't Telling You About London Ontario Real Estate

London, Ontario's June 2026 market is being reported as "slow" because averages are up only modestly — but averages hide a $200,000 to $500,000 spread within a single neighbourhood. Sellers who understand their specific pocket and price accordingly are moving. Buyers who are waiting for a signal that never comes are already behind. Broker Ty Lacroix breaks down what June actually shows across ten London neighbourhoods — and what it means before you decide anything.

Every week, someone reads a headline that says London home sales are up 2% — and concludes the market is slow. That's not analysis. That's a number without a neighbourhood.

Here's what actually matters: within a single London neighbourhood, there can be a $200,000 to $500,000 spread between one street and the next. A bungalow backing onto green space in Byron is not the same market as a comparable footprint two blocks inland. An executive townhome in Sunningdale is not the same market as a resale detached home in the three subdivisions over. Averaging them together and reporting the result as "the London market" tells you almost nothing useful.

The June 2026 numbers across London's established neighbourhoods tell a more honest story. More homes are on the market — sellers and their realtors know it, and the ones pricing to that reality are selling. Buyers who understand the same thing are acting on it. The ones sitting on the fence waiting for prices to drop further, or for some cleaner signal from the news, are making a decision by not making one — and they'll feel it.

This is what the market looks like right now in the ten neighbourhoods I track every month. Not the average. The actual picture, area by area.

See all ten London neighbourhood updates →

If you're a seller trying to understand what your specific home is worth in this market — not the average, your home — or a buyer trying to read where the real value is before someone else does, that's the conversation I have every day.

Call me, Ty Lacroix, directly at 519-435-1600 or reach out here.

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You Haven't Bought a Home in 15 Years. The Closing Costs Are Not What You Remember.

In London, Ontario, home buyers in 2026 should budget between 2.5% and 4% of the purchase price in closing costs beyond their down payment. For a $850,000 home — typical in established neighbourhoods like Byron, Westmount, or Sunningdale — that's $21,000 to $34,000 in costs that don't appear in a mortgage approval. Move-up buyers and downsizers who last purchased 15 to 20 years ago are routinely underprepared for how much these costs have shifted. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has guided London buyers and sellers through this gap for 24 years.

The last time you bought a home, things were different.

Interest rates were different. The market was different. And the number that showed up on your lawyer's statement the week before closing — the one that required a bank transfer you hadn't fully planned for — was smaller than it will be this time.

If you're a move-up buyer, a downsizer, or someone who last went through this process somewhere between 2004 and 2010, the closing cost picture in London, Ontario in 2026 looks different than what you remember. Not dramatically different in structure — the same categories apply. But significantly different in dollar amounts.

Most buyers focus entirely on the purchase price and the down payment. Those are the numbers in every conversation, every mortgage pre-approval, every weekend of open houses. The closing costs sit quietly in the background until about ten days before possession, when your lawyer sends a statement and asks for a wire transfer.

That's a bad time to be surprised.

What's Actually Waiting at Closing

Here's what a move-up or downsizing buyer in the $750,000 to $1.2 million range should expect in London, Ontario in 2026.

Legal Fees
Your real estate lawyer handles the title search, mortgage registration, adjustments, and closing documentation. Budget $3,500 to $4,500, depending on complexity. If you're selling and buying simultaneously — which most move-up and downsizing buyers are — the combined legal work is more involved, and fees reflect that.

Ontario Land Transfer Tax
This is the one that consistently surprises buyers who haven't purchased recently. Land Transfer Tax is paid to the Province of Ontario by the buyer on closing, calculated as a percentage of the purchase price on a sliding scale. On an $850,000 purchase, the Ontario Land Transfer Tax is approximately $12,950. First-time buyers receive a rebate, but move-up and downsizing buyers do not. If you bought your current home in 2006 for $340,000, the Land Transfer Tax you paid then was a fraction of what you'll pay now.

Home Inspection
Budget $500 to $700 for a qualified inspector. In a market where conditions are negotiable again, a home inspection is worth every dollar. No licensing is required in Ontario — ask for the inspector's professional background and sample report before hiring.

Title Insurance
Standard on virtually every transaction today. Protects you and your lender against title defects, survey issues, and certain types of fraud. Typically, $300 to $1,000 on a residential purchase. Your lawyer arranges this at closing.

Property Tax and Utility Adjustments
If the seller has prepaid property taxes — which is common when sellers pay their annual taxes in full by April — you will reimburse them for the prepaid portion at closing. For an $850,000 home in London with annual taxes of approximately $6,000, closing in September means reimbursing roughly $1,500 for the prepaid portion covering October-to-December. This number appears on your closing statement and catches buyers off guard more often than almost anything else.

Interest Adjustment
If your mortgage payment cycle begins on the first of the month and your closing date falls mid-month, your lender charges interest from the closing date to the first payment date. Close on June 18th with a $600,000 mortgage at 4.5%, and the interest adjustment is approximately $1,150. Not large — but unplanned.

Mortgage Appraisal
Lenders frequently require an independent appraisal confirming the property value supports the mortgage amount. Budget $300 to $500. In a market where some neighbourhoods are moving quickly, and others are sitting, appraisals occasionally come in below the purchase price — a situation worth understanding before it happens to you.

Moving Costs
Avoid closing at the end or beginning of the month. That is peak moving season, and movers charge accordingly. A mid-month closing in an established London neighbourhood typically saves $300 to $600 on moving costs alone.

The Number That Matters

Add it up on an $850,000 purchase in London, Ontario, in 2026:

Land Transfer Tax: $12,950
Legal fees: $4,000
Title insurance: $350
Home inspection: $600
Property tax adjustment: $1,500
Interest adjustment: $1,000
Appraisal: $400
Moving: $2,500

Total: approximately $23,300 — before any unexpected items.

That number is not in your mortgage approval letter. It doesn't appear in any of your conversations with your bank. It shows up ten days before you get your keys.

The buyers who are prepared for it move through closing without stress. The ones who aren't spend the last two weeks of the transaction scrambling.

If You're Buying and Selling at the Same Time

Most move-up buyers and downsizers are doing both simultaneously — selling one home and purchasing another — with closing dates that must be coordinated. That adds legal complexity, timing risk, and a second set of closing costs on the sale side.

Understanding both sides of that transaction before you start — what your current home will realistically net after costs, and what your next purchase will actually cost to close — is the difference between a transition that works financially and one that creates unexpected pressure at the worst possible moment.

That conversation is worth having before any offer is written.


How Buying a Home in London, Ontario Actually Works — From First Conversation to Keys in Hand

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How to Price Your Home for Sale in London Ontario — And What It Costs You to Get It Wrong

Pricing a home for sale in London, Ontario is the single most consequential decision a seller makes — and it has to be right on day one. Price it correctly, and your home sells faster, attracts more qualified buyers, and nets more money. Price it too high and the consequences compound quickly: fewer showings, stale-listing stigma, price reductions that signal desperation, and a final sale price below what the home was worth when it first hit the market. In London's current market, where buyers are informed and have choices, there is no such thing as "leaving room to negotiate" — there is only priced correctly or priced wrong. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has spent 24 years helping London sellers understand the difference before it costs them.

Deciding what to list your home for in London, Ontario is one of the most important financial decisions you'll make in the entire selling process. Get it right, and everything that follows goes more smoothly. Get it wrong and the consequences stack up faster than most sellers expect.

Here's what the data shows — on both sides.

What Happens When You Price It Right

Your home sells faster. The right price attracts the right buyers immediately — which means fewer weeks paying mortgage, property tax, insurance, and utilities on a home you're trying to leave. Every extra month on the market is money leaving your pocket before the sale even closes.

Fewer showings, less disruption. Preparing your home for showings — keeping it clean, arranging for children and pets, adjusting your daily routine — takes real energy. Accurate pricing shortens the time you live under those conditions. A well-priced home in London's current market is moving around the 24-day median. An overpriced one can sit for 60, 90, or more.

Better agents bring better buyers. When a home is priced correctly, buyer agents are motivated to show it — because they know their clients will take it seriously and they won't waste a showing. An overpriced home gets quietly deprioritized. Agents know before they arrive that their buyer won't be interested, so they don't go.

More qualified buyers come through the door. Pricing at market value attracts buyers who have been pre-approved at that level — buyers who can actually close. Overpricing attracts curiosity seekers and filters out people with the means to buy.

Higher inquiry conversion. When price isn't a deterrent, buyer inquiries turn into showings. Buyers today know the market. They've seen the comparables. If your price looks out of step, they don't call — they scroll to the next listing.

Stronger offers. Buyers are far less likely to make a low offer on a home that's priced correctly, because they know other buyers can see the same value. The fear of missing out is real — but it only works when the price earns it.

What Happens When You Price It Too High

Activity stops almost immediately. Buyers and their agents compare your home against everything else available in its price range. If yours offers less for the money, they move on. You don't get low offers — you get silence.

Your competition looks like a bargain. Every overpriced listing is a gift to the neighbours who priced correctly. Buyers who might have considered your home instead visit the one down the street that offers more for the same money — and often buy it.

You lose the buyers who could actually afford it. Serious, pre-approved buyers at your target price point expect a certain level of home for that number. If yours doesn't match what they can get elsewhere, they feel they're being asked to settle — and they don't.

Price reductions signal trouble. When a home drops its price after weeks on the market, buyers notice. They don't think "opportunity" — they think "what's wrong with it?" and "how low will they go?" The negotiating leverage you were trying to preserve by pricing high is exactly what you lose when the reduction hits.

Appraisal problems can kill the deal. Even if a buyer agrees to an above-market price, their lender's appraiser may not. If the appraisal comes in below the agreed purchase price, the lender won't fund the full mortgage — and the deal either falls apart or you reduce the price anyway, under far worse conditions than if you'd priced correctly on day one.

You net less money. This is the one that matters most. An overpriced home almost always sells for less than it would have if priced accurately from the start — and incurs extra costs for every week it sat. The "room to negotiate" strategy consistently produces a lower final number, not a higher one.

The One Decision That Drives Everything Else

Every other variable in your home sale — the marketing, the photography, the timing, the negotiation — depends on the price being right. A well-marketed, beautifully presented home at the wrong price still sits. A modestly presented home at the right price still moves.

If you're thinking about selling in London and you want a straight, data-backed read on what your home is actually worth in today's market — before you commit to a number — that's the conversation to have first.


Price it right before the sign goes up. Reach out for a private conversation about what your home is worth in today's London market — no pressure, no pitch.

For the complete selling framework: Selling Your Home in London, Ontario →

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The Best Time to Downsize Your Home in London, Ontario, Was Before You Needed To

In London, Ontario, the best time to downsize is before health, finances, or family pressure forces the decision. Research shows homeowners who begin planning their move well in advance consistently achieve stronger sale outcomes — and in the $700,000 to $1.2 million range where most established London homeowners are positioned, that difference is measured in tens of thousands of dollars. Waiting until the decision is urgent compresses the timeline, shortens preparation, and hands the buyer negotiating leverage. The conversation that starts early costs nothing and commits you to nothing. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has guided London homeowners through downsizing transitions for 24 years — and the ones who move well almost always started the conversation before they had to.

I want to tell you about two people I knew.

They loved their home. Thirty-plus years in the same neighbourhood — they knew every neighbour, every crack in the sidewalk, every corner of the garden they had built with their own hands. The backyard was their pride. The house was their identity.

For years, their adult children suggested it was time. A bungalow. A townhome. Something without stairs, without the maintenance, without the weight of a property that had grown larger than two people needed.

Stubbornness said no. Pride said no.

Then the body started making the decision for them.

The stairs became a problem. The garden became a burden. Snow clearing, repairs, upkeep — they hired it out, but it was never done to their standards. Managing the house took more energy than they had left to give it.

Eventually, they listened. They sold. They moved to a lovely two-bedroom plus den in a nearby retirement building. New neighbours. Less worry. More time.

"I wish we had done this sooner," was all I heard after they moved.

Within two months, one of them was gone.

The Cost of Waiting

That story isn't unusual. It plays out in London, Ontario, every year — families managing a transition under pressure, in grief, or against a health timeline that doesn't wait for market conditions to improve.

What makes it painful isn't just the emotional weight. It's that waiting almost always costs money, too.

When the decision is made under pressure — a fall, a diagnosis, a family intervention — the timeline compresses. Preparation gets cut short. The home goes to market before it's ready. Pricing decisions get made in a hurry. Buyers sense urgency and negotiate accordingly.

That sale money belongs to the family. Whether it goes to the next chapter of their life or gets left behind at closing depends almost entirely on when the conversation started.

What "Too Late" Actually Looks Like

There is no single moment when it becomes too late. It arrives gradually, then all at once.

It looks like a home that needs $40,000 in updates before it shows well — updates that nobody has the energy or time to manage properly. It looks like an accepted offer, conditional on finding suitable housing, with no clear plan for where suitable housing actually is. It looks like a buyer who senses the seller needs to move and offers accordingly.

Most of the London homeowners I've worked with in this situation say the same thing afterward: they knew, for at least a year before they called, that the conversation was coming. They just weren't ready to have it.

The conversation itself doesn't commit anyone to anything. It's just information — what the home is worth in today's market, what the realistic options are, what a transition on their own terms actually looks like. That information is worth having before the decision is urgent.

What Moving on Your Terms Looks Like

When the timing is yours to control, everything changes.

You choose when the home goes to market — ideally spring or early fall, when qualified buyer activity in established London neighbourhoods like Byron, Riverbend, and Sunningdale is strongest. You have time to address the two or three things that affect presentation and pricing without rushing. You can search for the right next home without a closing date forcing your hand.

Most importantly, you make the decision from a position of clarity — not crisis.

The homeowners who move well in this market are almost always the ones who started the conversation six to twelve months before they needed to. Not because they were more organized. Because they gave themselves room to think.

If You're Thinking About This Right Now

You don't need to be ready to move to have this conversation. You just need to be thinking about it.

That's enough to start. And starting while the timing is still yours is the single most protective thing you can do.

Talk to Ty About Your Situation →

More Tips and Insights on Downsizing

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12 Costly Real Estate Investor Mistakes in London, Ontario

Ty Lacroix, a London, Ontario real estate broker with 50 years of personal investment experience, outlines 12 mistakes that cost real estate investors money, time, and equity — mistakes made by both novices and experienced investors alike.

According to the Real Estate Investment Network, inadequate due diligence and unexpected maintenance are the leading drains on working capital, with tenant turnover costing investors an average of $1,500 to $3,000 per vacancy. Every mistake on this list is preventable. Most are the result of moving too fast, trusting the wrong numbers, or underestimating what owning an income property actually requires.

Real estate investing is a business, not a passive hobby. It creates wealth for those who approach it with discipline and preparation — and expensive problems for those who do not.

I have been investing in real estate personally for over 50 years and have brokered these transactions in London, Ontario, for 24 of those years. The mistakes below are not theoretical. I have watched every one of them play out in real transactions, with real consequences for real people. Some were recoverable. Some were not.

The good news is that every mistake on this list is preventable — if you know what to look for before you buy.

1. Failure to Determine the Big Picture

Before you buy a single property, you need to answer a fundamental question: why are you investing, and what will it actually demand of you in terms of time, energy, and management?

Investors who skip this step buy properties that do not fit their lives, schedules, or financial situations. A duplex 45 minutes from your home that requires hands-on management is not a passive income stream — it is a second job you did not fully apply for. Clarity on the big picture before you commit saves you from making a decision that looks sound on paper and feels wrong every day after closing.

2. Not Verifying the Seller's Numbers

Claims of exceptional returns are everywhere in investment real estate. Sellers and their realtors present the best possible version of a property's financial performance — and sometimes, that version is not accurate.

Check everything independently: current rents against comparable active leases, payment history, property taxes, operating expenses, tenant deposits, and any planned capital expenses. The most common discrepancies I encounter are overstated rental income, understated vacancy rates, and missing maintenance costs. Each one individually shifts the investment analysis. Together, they can turn a property that looks profitable into one that loses money from the day you take possession.

3. Forgetting You Are Buying a Business

An income property is not a financial instrument you set and forget. It is a business with tenants, maintenance obligations, regulatory requirements, and the occasional crisis that does not wait for a convenient time.

Investors who treat it as a passive asset are consistently caught off guard by eviction timelines, unexpected capital expenses, and the time required to manage tenant relationships. Ontario's Landlord and Tenant Board process alone can take months to resolve a non-payment situation. If you have not budgeted for that reality — financially and emotionally — the business will remind you that it did not agree to be ignored.

4. Misunderstanding Negative Cash Flow

A property that runs at a modest negative cash flow is not automatically a bad investment — but negative cash flow you did not plan for, and cannot sustain, is one of the fastest ways to force a premature sale at the wrong time.

The distinction matters. Experienced investors evaluate the full return: debt reduction, appreciation, and tax considerations alongside monthly cash flow. What they do not do is absorb negative cash flow they cannot afford, hoping the market bails them out. Know your number before you buy. How much monthly shortfall can you carry without it affecting your financial stability or forcing a decision you are not ready to make?

5. Failure to Do a Thorough Inspection

A surface-level inspection on an income property is not an inspection — it is a brief visual tour of the problems you are about to inherit.

Tenant-occupied properties present specific inspection challenges: restricted access, furniture blocking walls and floors, and tenants who may not volunteer information about recurring issues. Ask tenants directly about pest problems, structural concerns, and anything that has been repeatedly repaired. Hire an inspector who has experience with income properties specifically, not just residential homes. The cost of a thorough inspection is trivial compared to the cost of discovering a foundation problem, a knob-and-tube wiring issue, or an unpermitted renovation after you own the building.

6. Failing to Have Adequate Insurance

Standard homeowner's insurance does not cover an income property. The liability exposure is fundamentally different — tenants, their guests, parking areas, common spaces, and the property itself all represent risk that requires specific coverage.

Investors who carry inadequate insurance discover the gap at the worst possible moment — during a claim. A tenant injury, a fire in a multi-unit building, or a liability dispute can produce financial consequences that dwarf the annual premium difference between adequate and inadequate coverage. Get a quote specific to the property type before you close, not after.

7. Failing to Inspect, Approve, and Confirm All Documents

The document list for an income property transaction is significantly longer and more complex than a standard residential purchase. Building permits, zoning compliance, rental and lease agreements, health licenses, laundry leases, underlying loan documents, condominium by-laws, title policies, inspection reports, and insurance certificates — each one has the potential to surface a problem that materially affects the value or viability of the investment.

Investors who do not review every document thoroughly — or who rely on the seller's representations without independent verification — regularly discover after closing that something was missing, misstated, or non-compliant. At that point, the problem is yours. Do not attempt to manage this alone. A real estate lawyer and an experienced investment real estate broker are not optional expenses — they are the people who catch the things you do not know to look for.

8. Failing to Get a Bill of Sale for All Personal Property

Investment property sales frequently include personal property — appliances, laundry equipment, furniture in furnished units, fixtures, and mechanical equipment. If it is not specifically itemized in the agreement of purchase and sale, its inclusion is not guaranteed.

I have seen transactions in which appliances disappeared between the accepted offer and closing, in which laundry equipment the buyer assumed was included turned out to be leased, and in which fixtures the buyer counted on were removed by the seller. Be specific. List everything. Confirm ownership before you assume it transfers.

9. Charging Above-Market Rents

Vacancy is your single largest expense — not in theory, but in practice. A property sitting empty for two months while you hold out for a rent that is $100 above market costs you $4,800 in lost income annually, plus the carrying costs of the vacancy period itself.

Charge fair market rent, treat your tenants with respect, and respond promptly to maintenance requests. Long-term tenants in well-maintained properties are the foundation of a profitable portfolio. Investors who chase top-of-market rents at every turnover consistently experience higher vacancy rates, faster tenant turnover, and greater wear on the property than those who price accurately and manage professionally.

10. Failing to Select Qualified Tenants From the Start

Most evictions trace directly back to an inadequate screening process. A tenant who looked fine at the viewing, whose references were not checked, whose credit was not pulled, and whose previous landlord was not contacted — that tenant is a risk you chose to accept.

Take the time. Check previous landlord references, employment verification, credit history, and any prior judgments. If there are red flags in the screening process, investigate them fully before proceeding. The cost of a thorough tenant screening is measured in hours. The cost of a problematic tenancy is measured in months — and sometimes in significant legal fees, property damage, and lost income.

11. Failing to Obtain Tenancy Confirmation Letters

When you purchase a tenant-occupied property, you are inheriting existing tenancy agreements — and the obligations that come with them. What the seller tells you about those tenancies and what the tenants understand to be true are not always the same thing.

Obtain written confirmation from every existing tenant before closing: the agreed monthly rent, the lease start date, the security deposit held, and any side agreements or verbal arrangements with the current owner. Discrepancies between the seller's representation and the tenant's understanding do not resolve themselves after closing — they become your problem to manage under the Residential Tenancies Act. Find out before you own the building, not after.

12. Spending Positive Cash Flow

The investors who build significant wealth through real estate over time share one habit: they reinvest positive cash flow to accelerate mortgage amortization rather than spend it.

Every dollar applied to principal reduces your debt load, increases your equity, and shortens the path to owning your properties free and clear. A portfolio of unencumbered income properties generating rent with no mortgage payments is the end goal for most serious long-term investors. Spending the cash flow along the way delays that outcome by years — sometimes decades. The discipline to reinvest when you do not have to is what separates the investors who get there from those who perpetually hold leveraged assets.

A Final Thought

Investment property in London, Ontario, can be one of the most reliable wealth-building vehicles available to a private investor. It can also be an expensive, time-consuming lesson in what happens when preparation is skipped and due diligence is rushed.

Every mistake on this list is preventable. None of them requires extraordinary knowledge or resources to avoid. They require time, discipline, the right professional team, and the willingness to ask hard questions before you commit — not after.

If you are considering buying an income property in London, Ontario and want a direct conversation about what the process actually looks like — including the questions most investors do not think to ask — I am available.

519-435-1600 

Please discuss any investment decisions with your professional advisors, including your accountant and your lawyer. Real estate investment is not guaranteed, and results depend on individual circumstances, market conditions, and the quality of your decisions.

More on Investment Property Strategy in London, Ontario

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Someone Asked You to Be Their Power of Attorney. Here's What That Actually Means for Their Home.

In London, Ontario, being named power of attorney (POA) for a parent, spouse, or family member means you may become legally responsible for decisions about their home — including whether to sell it, when, and for how much.

According to the Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General, a POA for property grants broad authority over real estate decisions while the principal is living.

When that responsibility arrives without warning, most families are unprepared. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has guided families through POA-related real estate transitions in London for 24 years.

Someone you love and trust just asked you to be their power of attorney.

Maybe it was your mother, sitting at the kitchen table after a doctor's visit. Maybe it was your spouse, updating their paperwork before a surgery. Maybe it came in a letter from a sibling you haven't spoken to in years.

You said yes — because of course you did. But now you're wondering what you actually agreed to, especially if a home is involved.

What Power of Attorney Actually Means

A power of attorney is a legal document that authorizes you — the attorney — to make decisions on behalf of another person, called the principal, while they are still living. The moment they pass away, the POA ends entirely. At that point, the estate takes over, and a different process begins.

For property specifically, a continuing power of attorney for property in Ontario gives you the authority to buy, sell, manage, or make decisions about the principal's real estate. That includes their home.

This is not a small responsibility.

Where Families Get Into Trouble

The most common mistake is assuming the POA document alone is enough to move forward. It isn't.

In Ontario, before any real estate transaction can proceed under a POA, the document must be in registrable form — meaning it meets specific legal standards for execution and witnessing. A title insurer, lender, and the Land Registry Office will each review it. If the document was downloaded from the internet or prepared without a lawyer, there is a real chance it will be rejected at closing.

According to the Law Society of Ontario, POA documents used in real estate transactions must be carefully reviewed by a real estate lawyer before any listing agreement is signed or an offer is accepted. Getting this wrong can delay a sale by weeks or invalidate a transaction entirely.

What This Looks Like in Practice

Here's a situation that happens more often than most families expect.

A parent moves into assisted living. The adult child holding the POA decides it's time to sell the family home in Byron or Riverbend — the home that's been in the family for 30 years. They call a realtor, sign a listing agreement, and accept an offer.

Then the purchaser's lawyer flags the POA. The document has a springing clause — meaning it only activates if the principal is declared medically incapacitated, which was never formally documented. The sale stalls. The buyer walks. The family is left managing an empty home, carrying costs, and starting over.

This is not a rare outcome. It is predictable and almost entirely avoidable.

The Three Questions to Ask Before Anything Else

If you're holding a POA and a home is involved, these are the questions that matter before any real estate conversation happens:

Is the POA document in registrable form in Ontario? Have a real estate lawyer confirm this — not a general lawyer, not the family's estate lawyer from another province. A lawyer familiar with Ontario land registration requirements.

Does the document have any conditions or springing clauses? If the POA only activates under specific circumstances, confirm that those circumstances are documented and can be proven.

Are there other attorneys named? If two people hold the POA jointly, both must sign every document. One signature is not enough and will not be accepted.

Where a Broker Fits In

A realtor does not determine whether a POA is valid. That is a lawyer's job, and any broker who tells you otherwise is creating liability for themselves and risk for you.

What a broker does is help you understand what the property is worth in today's London, Ontario market, how current buyer behaviour in your neighbourhood affects timing and pricing, and what a realistic sale looks like given the specific circumstances — a home that may be vacant, estate-condition, or carrying deferred maintenance from years of a parent living alone.

In the $700,000 to $1.2 million range, where most of these family homes sit in established London neighbourhoods, the difference between a well-positioned sale and a poorly timed one can be $40,000 to $80,000. That gap belongs to the family — or it doesn't, depending on the decisions made in the first 30 days.

If You're in This Situation Right Now

You don't need to have everything figured out before reaching out. Most people in this position are managing a parent's health, a family's emotions, and a legal document they've never seen before — all at the same time.

What helps is a straight read on where the property actually stands in today's market, before any decisions are made. That conversation costs nothing and takes 20 minutes.

Contact Ty Directly →

Learn more about being an executor and your responsibilities.

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Navigating the New Balance in London, Ontario, Real Estate
  • The London, Ontario real estate market has shifted into a balanced state, prompting some buyers to expect unrealistic discounts of up to 20% on properly priced homes.

  • Data proves these lowball tactics are unwarranted; in May 2026, homes in the London area sold for an average of 97.8% of their asking price.

  • Successfully navigating a home sale today requires a skilled, experienced Realtor who knows how to hold firm on value, manage complex conditions, and filter out unqualified buyers.

The London, Ontario, real estate market has officially balanced out. After years of rapid price growth, in which multiple offers were the norm, we have entered a phase in which both buyers and sellers are recalibrating their expectations.

However, a new challenge has emerged for homeowners planning their next move: the overzealous buyer. In today's market, even when a property is accurately priced, some buyers operate under the misconception that they can secure a home for 80% to 85% of the asking price.

The Reality of Market Value vs. Buyer Expectations

Recently, a well-priced $1,300,000 listing attracted buyers who offered $950,000 simply to reserve funds for their closing and moving costs. Another inquiry came in at $1,050,000, sight-unseen, loaded with 120-day closing conditions and financing contingencies.

These aggressive negotiation tactics might seem intimidating, but the numbers tell a different story. In May 2026, the average home price in the London-St. Thomas market was $662,292, and properties successfully sold, on average, for 97.8% of their listing price. The data confirms that giving away 15% to 20% of your home's value is entirely unnecessary.

Why You May Need a Skilled, Experienced Realtor, Not Just a Sign

The days of putting a sign on the lawn and waiting for immediate, over-asking offers have passed. Navigating this environment requires a disciplined approach. You need a professional who understands how to protect your hard-earned wealth and prevent buyers from taking advantage of the market shift.

Proper representation means having an experienced Realtor who will:

  • Have the hard conversations with buyers' agents about your property's true value.

  • Filter out offers padded with unreasonable or excessive conditions.

  • Ensure your final sale price reflects the market, not a buyer's wishful discount.

The market change is ultimately positive—it ensures buyers are financially capable and prevents unsustainable price spikes. For homeowners preparing to downsize or sell a high-value property, achieving your goal simply requires relying on facts, not opinions, to manage the sale.

Find Out Now!

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The Decision to Downsize Was Already Made. You Just Needed the Right Conversation to Confirm It.

Most London homeowners who downsize have been thinking about it for longer than they'll admit. The moment that moves them forward isn't a market report or a financial calculation. It's a conversation where, for the first time, someone listens without an agenda — and the path forward suddenly feels possible.

You haven't said it out loud yet. Not to your kids, not to your friends, maybe not even to your spouse.

But the thought has been there. Sitting with you on a Sunday morning, when you walk past the rooms nobody uses anymore. Showing up quietly when the furnace needs replacing, or the gutters need cleaning, or the driveway needs sealing — again.

The house that fit your life perfectly twenty years ago has started to feel like a job.

That's not a complaint. It's just true. And recognizing it doesn't mean you're ready to leave. It means you're ready to think.

Most London homeowners who reach this point spend months — sometimes years — gathering information. They read about the market. They watch what their neighbours sold for. They calculate equity on a napkin at the kitchen table. They tell themselves they'll do something about it when the time is right.

What they're really waiting for isn't the right market, the right price, or the right neighbourhood to move to.

They're waiting for a conversation where they don't feel sold to.

Where someone sits across from them and asks what they actually want — and then listens. No clipboard. No listing agreement on the table. No pressure to decide anything today.

In my experience, the downsizers who move well — who sell for what their home is worth, buy the right next home, and land in a life that fits — almost never made a fast decision. They made an early one. They had the conversation before they felt ready, and that conversation gave them the clarity to move on their own terms.

The ones who struggled waited. Not because they were wrong to wait — but because waiting quietly, without a clear picture of what the move actually looks like, costs more than most people realize. Not just financially. In the options that quietly disappear while you're still deciding.

There is a window of time when this decision is entirely yours.

You are healthy. Your home is in good shape. You have the mental space to think clearly, choose carefully, and move at a pace that suits you. That window doesn't stay open indefinitely — and it rarely announces when it's closing.

A health change. A shift in the market. A family conversation that takes on its own momentum. Any one of these can quietly move the decision out of your hands before you realize it's happening.

The homeowners who moved well didn't time it perfectly. They simply started while they still had full control — over the price, the pace, the next home, and the moving date.

Here is what that first conversation actually looks like.

No sales pitch. No pressure to sign anything. A straightforward discussion about where you are, what you want the next chapter to look like, and whether the numbers make the move you're imagining possible right now.

If they do — there's a clear path forward. If they don't — you'll know exactly what needs to change before they will.

Either way, you leave with clarity instead of questions.

Most people who have that conversation say the same thing afterward: they wish they'd had it sooner.

If you've been thinking about this longer than you'd admit — here is what you may want to know before you decide anything.

Your Next Chapter Starts Here →

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What a Buyer Will Pay for Your London Home and What You Think It's Worth Are Two Different Numbers

Every London home sale begins at a kitchen table where a seller and their realtor decide on a price. That number — and the ten days that follow — determines everything. Not the market. Not the neighbourhood. The decision  made in that room.

Picture the moment.

You're sitting at your kitchen table with your realtor. You've lived in this home for twenty years. You know every corner of it. You've watched the neighbourhood change, watched similar homes sell, watched the market move up and then soften. You have a number in your head — the number that makes the next chapter of your life possible.

Your realtor has a number too. It came from the data — recent sales, days on market, what buyers in London are actually paying right now for a home like yours on a street like yours.

Sometimes those two numbers are the same. Often they aren't.

What happens in that room — and in the ten days after your home goes live — decides whether you walk away with what your home is worth, or whether you spend the next sixty days finding out the hard way that the market dHere's what nobody tells sellers before that kitchen table conversation:

A buyer has never seen your renovation receipts. They don't know what you paid for the Dacor range or the heated floors or the landscaping you spent three summers perfecting. They weren't there when you made those decisions, and they don't factor into what a buyer will offer on a Tuesday afternoon in London, Ontario.

What a buyer will pay is determined by one thing: what comparable homes on MLS sold for recently, filtered through how your home makes them feel when they walk through the door.

That's it. That's the entire equation.

The seller who understands this goes into those first ten days with a price that attracts buyers and a listing that makes them feel something. The seller who doesn't spend day 9 staring at a phone that isn't ringing, wondering what went wrong.

The first ten days are not like the rest of the listing period. Buyer attention in London peaks the moment a new listing appears. Realtors are watching. Buyers are watching. The first weekend generates the most showings your home will ever see.

A home priced at what a buyer will pay, with a listing description that makes someone think I can see myself living there — that home creates competition in the first weekend. Competition protects your price.

A home priced at what the seller hopes to get, described like every other listing on MLS — "3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, updated kitchen, must see" — generates silence. And silence by day 9 is expensive.

By day 10, the market has delivered its verdict. The question is whether you were ready to hear it on day one — at that kitchen table — or whether you're hearing it now, when your options are fewer, and the cost of waiting is already accumulating.

The best thing a great realtor does at that kitchen table isn't to tell you what you want to hear.

It shows you exactly what a buyer will pay — and then builds everything around protecting that number. The description, the photography, the timing, the pricing strategy. All of it is designed so that when the right buyer finds your home in that first weekend, they feel something strong enough to act on.

That feeling doesn't happen by accident. And it doesn't happen when the price and the presentation aren't working together from day one.

If you're thinking about selling in London and you haven't yet had that kitchen table conversation — the honest one, with real numbers — that's where it starts.

Talk to Ty About Your Home →

Why the First 10 Days Determine Your Sale Price →

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 What Killed the Transaction Before We Ever Wrote an Offer?

London, Ontario, real estate broker Ty Lacroix outlines the most common mistakes made by income property sellers and their realtors — including failure to return buyer calls, tenant access issues during showings, inflated or inaccurate rental income figures, incorrect condo fee disclosures, and non-compliant property configurations.

These errors routinely kill offers before they are even written. Lacroix argues that investment property sales require a different skill set from standard residential listings, and that an accurate, organized financial presentation is the baseline expectation for any serious buyer.

 There are income property seller mistakes that some owners may not even realize are occurring! Or, if so, they may stick their heads in the sand and plead, “There’s nothing I can do!”

I have been fortunate to help buyers who wanted to purchase a condo or a 4-6-bedroom house near Western for investment, for their son or daughter, or for friends to move in. That way, it helps build equity or cover some of the costs of education.

Two wanted a medium— to high—end condo near Western for one of their children, and they could have a friend move in.

I have seen these mistakes before, but these buyers had not, and the most common comment I heard was :

“Do they want to sell this building (condo)?”

The most significant reasons we did not submit, or even consider submitting, an offer.

  • The listing Realtor never called us back! Wow, as an owner, you and your Realtor have a $677,000 property, and they still don’t call you back after three attempts? (By the way, that building is still listed for sale!)

  • My clients and I arrive but can’t get into the rooms. The tenants say they were not notified or given enough notice. Whether the tenant is correct or not, it would behoove you, as a landlord or a Realtor, to ensure that ALL tenants are notified and reminded before a showing. Either by email, text, in person, smoke signals, notice on the door, telegram, fax, Morse code, or even Pokémon!

  • In some 4-6-bedroom houses, we can only see one or two bedrooms because our keys don’t work!

  • The stated rental income or the comment “If fully rented, the potential rent is” is unrealistic. In my experience, tell it like it is. Someone willing to buy your property is not dumb or lazy, and they want real numbers, no B.S.

  • In one condo we saw, the fees were off by $113.00. There was one parking spot, not two, as indicated!

  • Some will not cooperate with a Fire Marshal’s report or ESA Certificate. Some are not legal duplexes or triplexes. A Realtor or owner tries to tell me, “Don’t worry. It’s been like that for years; nobody will ever find out.” Yeah, right!

  • Most Realtors had little experience with investment properties. Residential listings, investment listings, and even condo listings are pretty different. They can be more complex, and they require a different skill set to handle.

Diligence Should Not Be Difficult!

The above are just a few challenges. I haven’t even reached the offer stage yet!

Also, incorrect information was provided regarding property size, room sizes, taxes, outstanding work orders from the city, city code violations, and three mortgages and liens on the building!

My clients and I cannot change the condition or situation we are dealing with, so it is unlikely any emotion will be helpful. I can’t change the obstacles; that part of the equation has already been set. However, how I approach them to find a solution is something that my clients and I can control!

So, ultimately, my clients found what they were looking for at a price point they were happy with.

If it sounds like I am ranting against the disorganized, lazy, and unwashed people who represent property sellers, I am. I also praise and thank the professional who is organized, diligent, has accurate information, and is willing to make the effort to ensure a transaction is completed. 

Preventing and fixing mistakes by income property sellers should not be a hassle!

More Income Property Tips & Prudent Things To Think About

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The Critical 10-Day Countdown: Maximize Your Home To Sell in London, Ontario

The journey of selling your home in London, Ontario, often feels like a long process, but the truth is, the success of your entire sale hinges on just a handful of critical days. In a competitive market, you don’t get a second chance to make a first impression. That’s why every seller needs to master the 10 most important days—from initial preparation to the final offer.

By focusing your effort, time, and resources on these key moments, you can significantly reduce your time on the market and secure the highest possible price for your property.

Days 1-5: The Strategic Preparation

These are the days when money is made. Buyers in London are looking for move-in-ready homes, and meticulous preparation pays off.

Day 1: The Valuation & Strategy Meeting. This is when you hire your Realtor. This is more than just getting a price estimate; it’s about creating a hyper-local strategy. Your Realtor should come prepared with:

  • A comparative market analysis (CMA) of recently sold properties in your neighbourhood.

  • A clear, data-driven pricing recommendation.

  • A detailed timeline of all necessary pre-listing activities (cleaning, staging, photography).

Day 2: Declutter, Depersonalize, and Repair. Buyers need to envision themselves in the space, not you. Spend this day ruthlessly removing personal items (photos, trophies, collections) and minimizing furniture. Perform small, high-impact repairs, such as fixing leaky faucets, patching holes in drywall, and replacing burnt-out light bulbs.

Day 3: Deep Cleaning and Staging. A professional deep clean is non-negotiable. Focus on kitchens (appliances, cabinets) and bathrooms. After cleaning, apply simple staging principles: fresh towels, organized pantries, and a clean, neutral aesthetic. Staging helps showcase the room’s potential and makes photos pop.

Day 4: Professional Photography & Video High-quality listing photos are your most powerful marketing tool. This is not the time for amateur phone pictures. Professional photos and a 3D virtual tour or video walkthrough are essential for capturing buyers who start their search online.

Day 5: Write the Compelling Listing Description. Work with your Realtor to craft a description that tells a story, highlights key features (e.g., proximity to parks, specific school zones, upgrades), and focuses on the emotional benefits of living in the home.

Days 6-9: The Critical Launch Period

The first week your home is on the market dictates the momentum of your sale. This is where demand is highest.

Day 6: The Official Launch (Go-Live Day). Your home is added to the London & St. Thomas Association of Realtors (LSTAR) MLS system. Every marketing element—photos, video, description—is flawless. All your Realtor’s pre-marketing efforts (social media previews, “coming soon” signs) pay off today.

Day 7 & 8: Showings and Open Houses. These days are designed for maximum visibility. The goal is to generate as many showings as possible. Keep the home immaculate, ensure all lights are on, and consider leaving for the day. An optional weekend open house can capture potential buyers who are not actively working with a Realtor.

Day 9: The Brutal Truth. There is no indication of any offers. Or, only one or a low-ball.

Day 10: The Negotiation and Acceptance

This is the day you convert interest into equity.

Day 10: Strategic Negotiation A strategic negotiation comes into play! This is not just about the highest price; it’s also about the best terms:

  • Closing Date: Does it align with your next move?

  • Conditions: Are the offers firm (no financing or inspection conditions)?

  • Deposit: Is the deposit substantial?

Your Realtor’s negotiation skills and financial integrity are paramount in ensuring you get the maximum value while protecting you from contingencies.

The Takeaway

The bulk of your effort needs to be front-loaded. But here's what this page doesn't tell you: the sequence matters as much as the steps. Most London sellers do all ten things — in the wrong order. That single mistake is what separates a sale in 10 days from a home that sits for 60.

There are three specific decisions made in Days 1 and 2 that determine everything that follows. Most realtors don't raise them. Most sellers don't know how to ask.

If you're thinking about selling in the next 6 months, it costs nothing to find out where your home stands right now.

WHAT WOULD YOUR HOME SELL FOR IN THIS MARKET?

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This website may only be used by consumers that have a bona fide interest in the purchase, sale, or lease of real estate of the type being offered via the website. The data relating to real estate on this website comes in part from the MLS® Reciprocity program of the PropTx MLS®. The data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed to be accurate.