The $40K question every Ontario move-up buyer asks
You want to move up. The market is uncertain. Do you list your current home first and risk being homeless, or buy first and risk carrying two mortgages? Get this wrong and the cost is $20-50K in penalties, bridge interest, and rushed decisions.
Here’s the framework I use to decide buy or sell first in Ontario, plus the bridge-financing math for 2026.
The three options on the table
Option A: Sell first, then buy
You list, you sell, you close — and only then do you start house hunting. Pro: you know your exact budget. Con: you might rent for 6-18 months waiting for the right property, or panic-buy.
Option B: Buy first, then sell
You buy your next home with a longer close, then list your current home. Pro: no homelessness risk. Con: if you don’t sell in time, you carry two mortgages and possibly bridge financing.
Option C: Conditional offers (buy with a sale condition)
You make an offer conditional on selling your current home. Pro: low risk. Con: sellers reject these in any market tighter than 4 months of inventory.
Bridge financing — how the math works
Bridge loans cover the gap between your new home’s closing date and your current home’s closing date. Most major lenders will offer 30-120 days of bridging if you have a firm sale agreement on your current home.
The formula
Bridge amount = your equity from the sale (down payment portion needed for new home). Bridge rate = prime + 2% to 4% — typically 8-10% in 2026. Bridge fee = $250-$750 one-time.
Example: $1.4M new home, $1.1M current home selling, $400K mortgage on current. Equity = $700K. You need $280K (20%) down on new home. Bridge for 45 days at 9% = roughly $3,100 of interest. Plus $500 fee. Total cost: $3,600. Acceptable.
The decision matrix for 2026
Sell first if:
- Local MOI is above 3 months for your property type
- Your home is unique (will take time to find a buyer)
- You have flexibility to rent for 6-12 months
- You’re moving to a different city/region
- You have less than 30% equity
Buy first if:
- Local MOI is below 2 months for your sale property
- You have 50%+ equity (bridge math works)
- You’ve identified specific target properties
- You can absorb 60-90 days of double carry if needed
- The market trend is rising
Conditional offer if:
- Local buyer MOI is above 3 months (sellers will accept)
- You’re patient and willing to lose on bidding wars
- You need certainty more than upside
The bridge trap to avoid
Bridge financing requires a firm sale agreement on your current home before the new home closes. “Firm” means all conditions waived. If your buyer falls through, your bridge collapses and you’re scrambling for emergency financing at much worse rates.
Mitigation: list your current home before your new home’s closing date, accept a slightly lower offer for a strong buyer with proof of funds, and never waive financing condition until your sale buyer waives theirs.
The Bottom Line for Ontario Move-Up Buyers
In a 2026 market where most Ontario neighbourhoods are running 2-3 months of inventory, sell first is the safer play for the unique or higher-end home and buy first is the smarter play for the easy-to-sell starter or middle-market property.
Either way, start with your current home’s real value. Run the equity math, then run the bridge math, then decide.
Read the full bridge financing breakdown for the lender mechanics, and use Should I Offer to test offers on your target homes.
I help RE/MAX Your Community Realty, Brokerage clients sequence move-up transactions every month — the math is always different, the framework is always the same.
Curious what your current home is worth — and what the bridge math looks like? Get a free range backed by real MLS sold data → instantcalculator.ca/home-value/
— Alex Goodman, Sales Representative, RE/MAX Your Community Realty, Brokerage
