RSS

The Quiet Deadline Nobody Talks About When You're Thinking of Downsizing in London

The Quiet Deadline Nobody Talks About When You're Thinking of Downsizing in London

There's a window of time when downsizing is entirely your decision. Most London homeowners don't realize how narrow that window is — or that waiting too long means someone else will make the call for them.

Nobody sits down and decides to let someone else control one of the biggest financial moves of their life.

It happens gradually. A health change. A fall. A diagnosis. A family meeting that starts with concern and ends with a timeline you didn't choose. Suddenly, the conversation isn't if you move — it's when, and the answer is soon, and the person driving that answer isn't you.

After 24 years of helping people to downsize,  I've sat across the table from both kinds of homeowners. The ones who planned early and moved on their terms. And the ones who waited, for reasons that made sense at the time, until the decision was no longer fully theirs to make.

The difference in outcome — financial and emotional — is not small.

The window is real, and it closes

There is a period in most homeowners' lives when all of the conditions for a good transition align: you are healthy enough to manage the process, your home is in good condition, the market is workable, and you have the mental bandwidth to make deliberate decisions.

That window doesn't announce itself. It doesn't send a calendar invite. It's just there — and then, at some point, it isn't.

According to Statistics Canada, the average Canadian homeowner over 65 who sells under unplanned circumstances — a health event, family pressure, estate situation — receives measurably less for their home than those who sell on a self-directed timeline. The stress of the situation compresses the process, and compressed processes almost always favour the buyer, not the seller.

In the London market specifically, homes that sit while families sort out logistics tend to present poorly. Deferred maintenance becomes visible. Motivated-seller signals leak into negotiations. Buyers notice.

What "waiting to see" actually costs

I hear this regularly: "We're not ready yet. We'll know when it's time."

That's not a plan. That's a hope.

The homeowners who move well are almost never the ones who timed the market perfectly. They're the ones who made the decision while they still had full control over every part of it — the price, the pace, the next home, the moving date, what stays and what goes.

A 2023 Royal LePage study found that Canadian homeowners who engaged a real estate advisor more than 90 days before listing sold for an average of 3.2% more on their final sale price. On a $750,000 London home, that's $24,000 — simply from having time to make good decisions instead of fast ones.

But the financial gap is only part of it. The homeowners who plan early also get to choose their next home thoughtfully. They're not buying under pressure. They're not settling for whatever is available the week they need to move. They find the right bungalow, the right condo, the right neighbourhood — because they had the time to look.

The conversation nobody wants to have — until they wish they'd had it sooner

I'm not writing this to create urgency for its own sake. I have no interest in pushing anyone into a move before they're ready.

What I am saying is this: there is a version of this transition that is calm, well-sequenced, and entirely on your terms. And there is a version that is reactive, rushed, and shaped by circumstances outside your control.

The only thing that separates those two versions is when you start the conversation.

Not the listing. Not the moving truck. Just a private, honest conversation about where you are, what your home is realistically worth right now in the London market, and what a move on your timeline would actually look like.

That conversation takes about 30 minutes. It costs nothing. And for most of the homeowners I've worked with, it's the moment the whole thing stopped feeling overwhelming and started feeling manageable.

If you've been thinking about this — even quietly, even just in the back of your mind — this is the right time to talk. Not because the market demands it. Because you still get to decide.

Fill out the form at enveloperealestate.com/downsizing-your-home-london-ontario.html or call me directly at 519-435-1600.

Comments:

No comments

Post Your Comment:

Your email will not be published
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.