What’s Included When You Buy a Home in Ontario?

Most buyers don’t lose sleep over the offer price alone. It’s the little surprises that do it.

You walk through a home twice, picture your life in it, and mentally “claim” the kitchen lighting, the custom blinds, and the tidy backyard shed. Then someone asks a simple question right before you firm up the deal: Are those included?

In Ontario, that question matters more than people expect, because the answer is rarely “whatever is shown in the photos.” What’s included comes down to the Agreement of Purchase and Sale, and the legal difference between fixtures and chattels. If you understand those two words, you can avoid most post-offer headaches, and you can negotiate with a lot more confidence.

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Where to Escape the City This Holiday Season

By early January, the glow of holiday lights begins to dim and the pace of life in Toronto starts to feel heavy again. Invitations, traffic, and noise begin to crowd the margins of your mind, leaving you quietly craving something slower, quieter, and more expansive. That moment when your thoughts drift toward snow-covered forests, frozen lakes, and time that feels softer around the edges is the exact point most Ontarians start searching for a winter escape.

Whether it’s a cabin in Muskoka, a vineyard retreat in Prince Edward County, or a ski weekend at Blue Mountain, Ontario offers a range of winter destinations that are just far enough from the city to feel like a real break — yet close enough for a…

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Holiday Budgeting for First-Time Buyers: Balancing Gifts, Travel, and a Down Payment

December has a way of pulling you in two directions at once. On one hand, there is the pull of family, flights, and festive generosity. On the other, there is the quiet, stubborn goal of a first home—money you have promised yourself you will not touch. If you are buying in the Greater Toronto Area or anywhere in Ontario, the difference between staying on track and starting over in January often comes down to what you decide in the next few weeks.

The 2025 reality: holiday spending vs. home savings

Canadians came into the season planning to keep gift budgets tight. Multiple national surveys pegged average planned gift spending around $975, with shoppers stretching…

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Holiday Décor That Won’t Hurt Your Listing Photos

Buyers in the Greater Toronto Area scroll fast, and your listing photos have mere seconds to win a save, a showing, or a silent swipe. The right seasonal touches can make a home feel welcoming, yet too much, the wrong colour temperature, or decor that timestamps the images can undermine hard-won attention. The goal isn’t to cancel holiday cheer. It’s to stage it so your photos feel aspirational, universal, and—crucially—timeless beyond December. As professionals, we can report that well-executed staging helps buyers visualise the property, shortens time on market, and can nudge offers higher.

The golden rule: photograph first, decorate second

If you are listing in November or December, schedule…

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Happy Holidays From The Johnson Team

Some years feel like a blur of calendars, keys, showings, and quick conversations at the front door. Others feel like a collection of small moments that stick with you, like handing keys to a first-time buyer who is equal parts excited and nervous, watching a seller exhale when the right offer finally comes together, or getting a referral from a past client who simply says, “You will take great care of them.”

Before the year wraps, we wanted to pause for a moment and say thank you.

Thank you for choosing The Johnson Team, for reading our weekly blogs, for sharing our newsletter with family and friends, and for trusting us with decisions that are never “just real estate.” They are big life choices, and we never…

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5 Backyard Tips Every New Homeowner Should Know

The key to a great backyard is not the biggest deck or the flashiest fire feature—it is the quiet groundwork that keeps everything safe, legal, low-maintenance, and beautiful through our freeze-thaw cycles. The first year in a new home is when small choices compound: a locate request before you dig, a grading tweak that steers rain away from the foundation, a native plant list matched to your microclimate. Do those right, and your yard becomes a four-season asset that you enjoy now and buyers notice later.

1) Start by mapping what you cannot see

Before the first fence post or garden bed, book utility locates. In Ontario, requesting a locate through Ontario One Call is free, and required before any…

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Should You List Your Home During the Holidays in Ontario?

December in Ontario can feel like a pause button. Kids are on winter break, calendars fill with work wrap-ups and family plans, and the daylight window shrinks. Yet behind the twinkle lights, housing decisions keep moving. Relocations don’t wait, pre-approvals expire, and some buyers are determined to start the new year with keys in hand. The question isn’t whether people buy and sell over the holidays—they do. The question is whether listing now, in late December and early January, is the right strategic move for your property in the Greater Toronto Area and across Ontario.

What the latest data says about late-2025 market conditions

Rates set the tone for demand, and they’ve eased…

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Top 10 Reasons to Visit a Home Show in 2026

If you own a home in the Greater Toronto Area—or you’re planning to—2026 is a golden year to walk the floor of a home show. You get the kind of hands-on, straight-from-the-source learning that no scroll or short video can replicate, and you can do it without driving all over the city for months. In fact, the GTA has a full slate of major shows on the calendar: the Home + Backyard Show at the International Centre in Mississauga from January 30 to February 1, 2026, the National Home Show from March 6 to 15, 2026, and the Fall Home Show from October 2 to 4, 2026. Together, they bring hundreds of vendors, stage presentations, and new-product demos under one roof, primed for exactly the decisions GTA homeowners…

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What to Do if a Landlord Is Not Fixing Repairs in Ontario

When something breaks at home, it is more than an inconvenience. A failing furnace in January, a leak creeping across a bedroom wall, or a broken fridge that spoils a week’s groceries can push anyone past their limits. The good news for renters across the Greater Toronto Area and Ontario is that the law is clear: landlords must keep rental homes safe, habitable, and in good repair. The trick is knowing how to turn that right into action, quickly and cleanly, without risking your tenancy.

First principles: what the law actually requires

Ontario’s Residential Tenancies Act (RTA) puts the responsibility squarely on landlords to maintain both the rental unit and the broader complex in a good…

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How to Buy a House with Bad Credit in Ontario

You can buy a home in the Greater Toronto Area even if your credit file isn’t perfect—so long as you know how lenders actually underwrite, what “bad credit” means in Canada, and which levers you can pull to offset a lower score. This guide cuts through wishful thinking and doom-scrolling, and shows you what works, from insured-mortgage rules and stress testing, to down payments, alternative lenders, and practical ways to strengthen your application fast—all tailored to Ontario buyers.

What “bad credit” means in Canada right now

In Canada, scores generally run from 300 to 900. Equifax classifies 600–659 as “fair,” and 300–599 as “poor,” while 660+ is typically considered “good” or better. If you’re…

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