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.