You may need a new certificate of location to sell in Quebec if the existing certificate is outdated, inaccurate, or no longer reflects the property. Common triggers include additions, pools, fences, decks, cadastral changes, renovations, or lender/notary requirements.
A certificate of location helps the buyer, lender and notary understand the legal state of the property. It can reveal encroachments, servitudes, zoning issues, measurements and whether the property matches what is being sold.
Often, yes. If you know your certificate is stale, ordering early can prevent closing delays. In a strong seller’s market, some sellers negotiate alternatives, but you should know the issue before accepting an offer.
Yes. Certificate issues can create buyer hesitation, notary delays, lender questions or last-minute renegotiation. If you want a clean sale, review it early with your broker and notary.
If you are selling in Pointe-Claire, Beaconsfield, Kirkland, DDO or elsewhere in Greater Montreal, pull your existing certificate before you list. Then decide whether to order a new one before launch.
Author expertise: Written by Logan Boyce, team leader of Montreal’s Elite Real Estate Group. Logan has been active in Quebec real estate since 2009 and leads a 25+ broker team handling residential sales across the West Island and Greater Montreal.
Next step: If you are thinking of selling, start with a home valuation and listing strategy review before you go live.