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The honest answer: Tarion warranty covers major structural defects for 7 years, water ingress for 2 years, and most minor defects for 1 year—but only if you file a Notice of Claim within 30 days of discovery. Most Ontario buyers miss this deadline or don’t understand what’s actually covered, which is why knowing the tiers, completing a thorough pre-delivery inspection, and understanding the escalation process can save you tens of thousands in repair costs.
The 7-year structural coverage window: what’s actually protected
Tarion’s most valuable protection is the 7-year coverage for major structural defects. But here’s the critical question: do you know what “structural” actually means to Tarion, or are you assuming it covers everything that feels serious?
In Ontario new home markets, structural claims typically include:
- Foundation cracking or settling that affects home stability
- Load-bearing wall failures
- Roof structural integrity (not shingles or materials)
- Floor system deflection beyond tolerance
What’s not covered under structural protection: cosmetic drywall cracks, minor foundation shrinkage cracks under 3mm, or settling that doesn’t compromise safety. This distinction matters enormously when you’re assessing defects during your pre-delivery inspection.
According to Tarion’s 2025 claims data, structural defects account for approximately 12% of all claims filed by Ontario homeowners—but the average claim resolution time is 18–24 months. That’s why documentation from your pre-delivery inspection becomes your evidence foundation.
The 2-year water ingress deadline: your most time-sensitive window
If you’re buying a new condo or townhouse in Toronto, the 2-year water ingress coverage is often more valuable than the structural tier. Why? Because water damage claims are expensive, they escalate quickly, and the 2-year window closes fast.
Water ingress claims covered under this tier include:
- Leaks through windows, doors, or exterior walls
- Balcony water penetration (condos especially)
- Roof leaks affecting interior spaces
- Basement seepage or foundation leaks
Here’s the strategic question: when would you actually discover these defects? Many water issues don’t surface immediately—they might show up 8–14 months after closing when weather patterns change or the building settles. By the time you notice water staining on a ceiling or dampness in a bedroom wall, you’re already eating into your 2-year window.
The Tarion 2025 annual report notes that water ingress claims in Toronto condos averaged $4,200–$8,500 per claim, making early detection and documentation absolutely critical.
The 1-year minor defects tier: where most buyers lose leverage
The 1-year coverage for minor defects—paint touch-ups, trim gaps, appliance malfunctions, door alignment—sounds straightforward. In practice, it’s where disputes escalate because builders and homeowners often disagree on what constitutes a “defect” versus “acceptable tolerance.”
Common 1-year claims in Ontario new homes:
- Drywall nail pops or tape peeling
- Caulking gaps or poor finishing
- Cabinet door misalignment
- Flooring squeaks or minor separation
- Appliance performance issues within warranty period
The risk here is twofold: first, builders often dispute these claims as “cosmetic” and outside warranty scope; second, homeowners frequently don’t file Notice of Claim until well after the 30-day window has closed. By the time you’re frustrated enough to call, your legal right to claim has expired.
Real Ontario example: A buyer in North York noticed paint peeling in their primary ensuite at 6 months post-closing. They waited 4 months to file their claim (after multiple follow-up requests to the builder went unanswered). By the time they submitted Notice of Claim, Tarion denied it as out-of-time. The 1-year window doesn’t pause while you’re negotiating with the builder—it’s 1 year from discovery, full stop.
The pre-delivery inspection checklist: documenting before the clock starts
Here’s the most actionable leverage point: your pre-delivery inspection (PDI) happens before you take possession, which means defects documented then are treated differently by Tarion and the builder. Once you sign closing documents and take keys, the 30-day countdown begins.
An effective PDI checklist should include:
| Category | What to Check | Why It Matters for Tarion |
|---|---|---|
| Exterior | Caulking seams, door/window frames, balcony edges, soffit/fascia gaps, exterior paint finish | Water ingress claims start here; visible gaps = easier Tarion approval |
| Roof Access | Shingle condition, flashing detail, attic ventilation (if accessible) | Future water claims require proof it wasn’t pre-existing; PDI photo dating is key |
| Windows & Doors | Operation smoothness, seal integrity, weatherstripping compression, locking mechanism | Water ingress covers window/door failures; catching it before closing = 7-year protection |
| Drywall & Paint | Nail pops, tape bubbling, paint coverage, corner bead alignment, popcorn texture consistency | 1-year minor defects; photographic evidence = less dispute during claim process |
| Flooring | Squeaks, gaps, finish consistency, baseboard alignment, threshold transitions | Determines if it’s cosmetic (1-year) or structural (7-year) if underlying support is affected |
| Mechanical | HVAC operation, water pressure, gas line smells, electrical outlet function, thermostat response | Defects discovered at PDI = builder must remediate before closing; after = warranty claim |
| Basement/Foundation | Cracks (note size/direction), dampness, efflorescence, floor levelness, sump pump operation | Foundation issues = 7-year structural coverage; pre-closing discovery = faster resolution |
Pro tip for Ontario buyers: Hire an independent home inspector specifically trained in new home defects, not someone who typically inspects resale properties. A new home inspector understands builder standards, tolerance thresholds, and how Tarion interprets defects. This typically costs $400–$600 but generates documentation that either forces the builder to remediate before closing or creates an unassailable claim record if defects surface later.
The 30-day Notice of Claim requirement: your critical deadline
The single most expensive mistake Ontario homeowners make with Tarion isn’t underestimating repair costs—it’s missing the 30-day Notice of Claim deadline. Tarion’s regulations are explicit: you have 30 days from the date you discover a defect to file Notice of Claim. Miss that window, and Tarion has grounds to deny your claim entirely.
Here’s what many buyers misunderstand: the 30-day clock starts from discovery, not from when the defect actually occurred. So if your window starts leaking in month 18 after closing, your 30-day window opens then—not at month 1. But you need to be able to prove the date of discovery, which is why documentation matters.
What constitutes proper Notice of Claim to Tarion:
- Written notice (email is acceptable) to your builder’s warranty administrator
- Clear description of the defect, its location, and date discovered
- Photographs or other evidence of the defect
- Reference to which warranty tier you believe it falls under (1-year, 2-year, or 7-year)
Real Ontario scenario: A Mississauga buyer noticed a small drywall crack in their basement in September. They texted their builder’s site supervisor informally, but didn’t file formal Notice of Claim with Tarion until November—41 days later. Tarion initially denied the claim as out-of-time. Only after the buyer’s real estate lawyer sent a demand letter did Tarion reverse and accept it, but the 40-day delay cost them negotiating power, and the settlement was lower than it would have been with timely notice.
The solution: the moment you discover any defect covered by Tarion (structural, water ingress, or minor), send formal written notice to both the builder and directly to Tarion within the 30-day window. Don’t rely on informal conversations with site supervisors or expectations that the builder will self-report.
Common claims and resolution timelines: what to expect in 2026
Understanding typical claim categories and how long resolution takes helps you plan financially and psychologically for the warranty process. Tarion 2025 data shows the following claim distribution and average resolution times in Ontario:
| Claim Type | Avg Claim Value (GTA) | Avg Resolution Time | Approval Rate | Most Common in Toronto? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water Ingress | $4,200–$8,500 | 12–18 months | 78% | Yes (condos/townhouses) |
| Structural Defects | $8,000–$45,000 | 18–24 months | 71% | Less frequent |
| Minor Defects (1-yr) | $800–$2,200 | 4–8 weeks | 65% | Very common |
| HVAC/Mechanical | $1,500–$4,000 | 6–10 weeks | 82% | Yes |
| Drywall/Paint Defects | $600–$1,800 | 3–6 weeks | 58% | Very common (disputed) |
Notice the disparity in approval rates? Paint and drywall claims have the lowest approval rate (58%) because builders frequently dispute whether defects exceed “acceptable tolerance.” Water ingress claims have the highest approval rate because they’re harder for builders to dismiss—wet walls don’t tolerate much debate.
In Ontario new build markets where Q1 2026 averages show 22-day median days on market and 99.4% list-to-sold ratio, the supply of new homes remains competitive. This means builders have less incentive to fight warranty claims—they’re already moving inventory. However, this changes builder by builder, so knowing the Tarion escalation process is your backup leverage.
When to escalate to HCRA: recognizing the builder dispute threshold
If your claim is denied by the builder or Tarion, or if you’re deadlocked in dispute for more than 120 days, you have the right to escalate to the Homeowners’ Protection Act Registry Authority (HCRA), which oversees Tarion and can force independent mediation or arbitration.
You should consider escalation when:
- Tarion denies your claim and you have photographic evidence contradicting their decision
- The builder refuses to remediate a documented defect within 30 days of your Notice of Claim
- You’ve been waiting 120+ days for builder response with no timeline commitment
- The repair cost estimate from the builder is significantly lower than independent quotes you’ve obtained
- The defect poses safety or habitability concerns (water damage, foundation movement, electrical hazards)
Strategic consideration: HCRA escalation costs $250–$500 in filing fees but can unlock $5,000–$25,000+ in claims that were initially denied. For Ontario homebuyers, this is often a cost-effective leverage point—the threat of escalation alone frequently prompts Tarion or the builder to reconsider.
A Toronto real estate lawyer experienced in new home warranty disputes can advise on escalation timing, and many work on contingency if the claim value is substantial enough. This is particularly relevant if you have a 7-year structural claim or a water ingress claim exceeding $6,000.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Tarion warranty cover pre-existing defects discovered after closing?
Tarion coverage applies only to defects that occur after closing and become apparent during the warranty period. However, “pre-existing” defects discovered after closing are contested territory. If you document a defect during your pre-delivery inspection (before closing) and the builder hasn’t remediated it by closing day, that defect is explicitly not covered by Tarion—it’s your recourse against the builder in closing negotiations or through legal action. If you didn’t discover a defect until after closing, Tarion will cover it if you file Notice of Claim within 30 days of discovery, even if the defect technically originated during construction. The builder bears the burden of proving pre-existence; Tarion defaults to coverage unless the evidence clearly shows otherwise.
Can I claim the same defect under multiple Tarion warranty tiers?
No. Tarion applies the most relevant coverage tier to your defect, not multiple tiers. For example, if you have a water leak that also causes minor drywall damage, Tarion covers the entire claim under the 2-year water ingress tier, not 1-year minor defects. Conversely, if you have a drywall crack that might be cosmetic (1-year) or structural (7-year), you file a single claim and Tarion determines classification during investigation. Strategic claim filing means describing the defect in language that pushes it toward the longest coverage window—so a window leak claim emphasizes water ingress (2-year) rather than frame damage (might be 1-year). Your Notice of Claim language matters for classification.
What happens if the builder won’t respond to my pre-closing defect list?
Many Ontario builders provide a “defect list” or “punch list” during your pre-delivery inspection. Legally, the builder is not obligated to remediate items on this list before closing—they can choose to address them after you take possession under warranty. However, your documented PDI list becomes your Tarion claim baseline. If an item on your pre-closing defect list w
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