Selling and buying a home at the same time in Ottawa means coordinating two major transactions so neither one traps you financially or leaves you scrambling for somewhere to live. This guide walks homeowners across Kanata, Stittsville, Barrhaven and the wider Ottawa area through the real decisions involved: choosing a timing strategy, bridging the financial gap, preparing your current home to sell, and finding your next one without rushing into the wrong purchase.
REALTOR® Jason Polonski has spent more than 15 years coordinating these overlapping transactions for west-end families, and the guidance below reflects what actually works in Ottawa’s current market rather than generic advice. By the end, you should understand the sequence, the tools and the trade-offs well enough to build a plan that fits your situation.
A single move is stressful enough. Selling and buying a home at the same time adds a layer most homeowners have never had to manage: two closing dates, two sets of financing, and two markets that rarely cooperate on your schedule.
The core challenge is a timing mismatch. The right buyer for your current home might not appear the same week you find your next one, and a strong offer on paper can still fall apart if the dates on either end don’t line up. Financial strain follows closely behind, since covering a down payment, closing costs and possibly a short overlap in carrying costs requires planning well before you list.
There’s also an emotional dimension that’s easy to underestimate. Packing, showings, inspections, and negotiations on two fronts at once can wear down even organized families, which is why deliberately sequencing the process, rather than reacting to whichever transaction moves first, tends to produce the calmest outcome.
Every homeowner selling and buying at the same time chooses, whether consciously or not, among three approaches. None is universally correct; the right one depends on your equity, your risk tolerance and current market conditions.
Selling first gives you price certainty and a clear budget for your next home, but you may need interim housing if your purchase takes longer than expected. Buying first secures your next home without time pressure, but it can leave you carrying two mortgages if your sale drags on. Coordinating both closings within days of each other is the middle path most Ottawa homeowners aim for, and it depends heavily on disciplined timelines set by your agent and lawyer.
| Strategy | Best For | Main Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Sell first, then buy | Buyers who want price certainty and clean financing | Possible need for interim housing |
| Buy first, then sell | Buyers in competitive segments who don’t want to lose their next home | Carrying two mortgages temporarily |
| Coordinated closings | Homeowners want both transactions to close together | Tight logistics; one delay affects the other |
A mortgage pre-approval matters regardless of which path you choose, since it accounts for the federal mortgage stress test, which requires you to qualify at a higher rate than your contract rate. The Financial Consumer Agency of Canada explains how this affects your real purchasing power. A sale-of-property condition can also protect a buy-first offer, though the Real Estate Council of Ontario notes this type of condition is less common in competitive segments where sellers favour cleaner offers, and the Canadian Real Estate Association tracks how these dynamics shift across the national market. For a full breakdown of which path suits which situation, see this detailed comparison of selling first versus buying first. If you’re specifically upgrading to a larger property, the move-up buyer guide for Ottawa and Kanata covers the financial side of that transition in more depth.
When your new home closes before your current one sells, bridge financing is the tool that closes the gap. It’s a short-term loan secured against the equity in the home you’re selling, and it covers your down payment and closing costs until your sale proceeds arrive.
Most bridge loans run from a few weeks up to about 90 days, and lenders typically require a firm, unconditional sale on your current home before approving one. Interest is usually charged at the lender’s prime rate plus a premium, alongside a modest setup fee and legal costs for registering the loan. Bank of Canada rate decisions directly influence what that premium ends up costing you month to month.
| Cost Component | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Interest rate | Prime plus roughly 2–4% |
| Lender setup fee | A few hundred dollars |
| Legal fees | Additional lawyer charges |
Major Canadian banks, including TD Canada Trust, offer bridge financing as a standard lending product, generally to clients arranging their new mortgage with the same institution. The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation also publishes worksheets for estimating the full range of closing and carrying costs involved in a move, which is worth reviewing before you commit to a bridge. For the complete mechanics of how these loans work locally, this guide to bridge financing in Ottawa walks through qualifying rules and timing in more detail, and this resource on how to avoid carrying two mortgages outlines the broader strategies for keeping an overlap short or avoiding one altogether.
Your sale price funds your next purchase, so preparing your current home properly has a direct effect on your upgrade budget. Decluttering, neutral paint, minor repairs and professional photography consistently return more than they cost, and they shorten the time your home sits on the market.
Pricing accuracy matters more than cosmetic upgrades. A home priced against recent comparable sales tends to generate stronger early interest than one listed ambitiously and left to sit, and a faster, firmer sale is exactly what makes a bridge loan smaller and simpler. Monthly statistics from the Ottawa Real Estate Board on average days on market and sales activity are a useful reality check before you commit to a list price. Local conditions vary by community, too, so it helps to understand current demand in your specific area; this guide to navigating the housing market in Kanata and Stittsville breaks down what buyers are looking for in those neighbourhoods right now.
While your current home is being prepared or shown, the search for your next one should already be underway. Trying to compress both a sale and a search into the final weeks before a closing date is where most avoidable mistakes happen.
Start by defining what actually matters: location, school catchment, commute and must-have features, in that order of flexibility. If part of your motivation is simply needing more space, it’s worth working through the full financial picture first, since a bigger mortgage, higher property taxes and increased utility costs all change your monthly math. This guide on whether you should buy a bigger house walks through those trade-offs, so the decision is based on numbers rather than excitement over square footage.
Not every simultaneous sale and purchase follows the same pattern. Families relocating to Ottawa from another city or province face a compressed timeline for finding a home here while still managing a sale elsewhere, and the coordination challenge is often tighter than a typical local move. Canadian Armed Forces members posted to the region face an especially firm deadline, and this guide to Ottawa military relocation services explains how the Integrated Relocation Program’s rules interact with a simultaneous buy and sell.
Downsizers, by contrast, often have more flexibility since they’re typically moving into a lower-cost property and can absorb a short overlap more comfortably. Investors weighing a simultaneous transaction should factor in rental income timing, land transfer tax and financing qualification rules; Ontario.ca outlines the provincial costs and consumer protections that apply to any Ontario real estate transaction, and carrying a second property briefly affects debt-service ratios differently than it does for an owner-occupied move.
Selling and buying a home at the same time works best when one person is managing the whole sequence rather than two separate transactions handled in isolation. Jason Polonski, a full-service Ottawa REALTOR®, has spent more than 15 years guiding homeowners across Kanata, Stittsville, Barrhaven, Nepean, Manotick and Carp through exactly this kind of coordinated move.
His background combines a Bachelor of Commerce in marketing and finance with hands-on construction and electrical trades experience, which gives him a practical read on a property’s condition alongside the financial mechanics of timing a sale and purchase together. That combination matters most when a bridge loan, a firm sale condition or a tight closing date has to be negotiated the first time correctly.
Jason’s approach treats timing as the priority and price as the second consideration, since a well-sequenced move protects your equity in ways a slightly higher sale price never fully makes up for. You can read Jason’s verified client reviews or learn more about his background on his About Jason Polonski page. If you’re weighing how to sequence your own sale and purchase, reaching out early gives you the most room to plan the transition properly.
It’s manageable, not inherently risky, provided you choose a clear timing strategy before you list or make an offer. The real risk comes from letting the two transactions happen without a plan — for example, buying before your current home is firm and getting stuck carrying two mortgages.
There’s no single right answer: selling first gives you price certainty but may require interim housing, while buying first secures your next home but can mean carrying two mortgages if your sale takes longer than expected. The better choice depends on your equity, your risk tolerance, and how quickly homes are moving in your specific Ottawa neighbourhood at the time.
Bridge financing is a short-term loan, typically lasting a few weeks up to about 90 days, that uses the equity in your current home to cover your down payment and closing costs before your sale proceeds arrive. You’ll need it if your new home’s closing date falls before your existing home’s sale completes, and most lenders require a firm, unconditional sale agreement on your current property to qualify.
Bridge loans generally carry interest at the lender’s prime rate plus roughly 2% to 4%, along with a lender setup fee of a few hundred dollars and additional legal fees to register the loan. Because interest is charged daily, the total cost depends far more on how long the bridge period lasts than on the rate itself, so a short, well-timed bridge keeps costs modest.
The most reliable approach is to sell your current home before closing on your new one, or to coordinate both closing dates so any gap lasts only a few days. When a short gap is unavoidable, bridge financing lets you access your home’s equity early so you’re not paying two full mortgages for an extended period.
Yes, this is called a sale-of-property condition, and it protects you from being locked into two homes if your current one hasn’t sold. It’s less common in competitive segments of the Ottawa market, where sellers tend to prefer cleaner offers without conditions, so its usefulness depends on how much competition you’re facing on the home you want to buy.
If you don’t have bridge financing or another funding source in place, you could end up responsible for two mortgage payments at once. This is exactly why lenders require a firm sale before approving a bridge loan, and why building a short cash buffer before you list is a smart precaution even with a solid timing plan.
Selling and buying at the same time involves aligning your sale, your purchase, your financing, and your closing dates into a single plan, which is a different skill set than handling either transaction alone. Jason Polonski has spent more than 15 years guiding Ottawa and west-end homeowners through this exact coordination, treating timing as the priority and price as the second consideration so a move strengthens your finances rather than straining them.