Spring 2026 Home Buying Plan in Canada: Pre-Approval, Offer Conditions, and RRSP Down Payment Tips

General Jeannie Mongrain 3 Mar

If you’re thinking about buying a home this spring, the biggest advantage you can give yourself is not “timing the market.”

It’s having a plan before you fall in love with a house.

Spring is when listings increase, buyers get more active, and decisions start to feel faster. The buyers who feel calm through the process usually do three things early:

  1. They get a real pre-approval

  2. They understand how the financing condition actually works

  3. They build a down payment strategy (including RRSP options if it fits)

This Spring 2026 home buying plan will walk you through those steps in plain language.

Step 1: Get a Mortgage Pre-Approval Checklist Ready (Not a Quick Calculator)

A true mortgage pre-approval is not a website estimate.

It’s a full review of your income, credit, and down payment so you know what you can realistically afford before you start shopping.

What lenders typically need for pre-approval

Your mortgage pre-approval checklist usually includes:

  • Recent pay stubs

  • Letter of employment

  • Proof of down payment (bank statements or investment statements)

  • Government-issued ID

  • Additional income documents if applicable (bonus, commission, child tax benefit, rental income, etc.)

The “30-day rule” buyers don’t expect

A common friction point in the mortgage approval process is document recency. Many lenders want documents to be current, and employment letters and pay stubs are often expected to be recent (commonly within 30 days).

So if you’re pre-approved today but don’t submit an offer for a few weeks, you may need refreshed documents at offer time. That’s normal. It’s not starting over. It’s the lender verifying the file properly.

Step 2: Financing Condition on Offer: Why You Still Need It

Even if you’re pre-approved, a financing condition on offer is still one of the smartest protections you can include.

Why? Because a mortgage is usually two approvals:

  • You (income, credit, down payment)

  • The property (the home itself)

The home is a major part of the equation. Lenders need to review what you’re buying, not just who you are.

What happens after your offer is accepted

Here’s the typical flow once an offer is accepted:

  1. Updated docs (if needed)
    If documents on file are older, you’ll usually need updated pay stubs, an employment letter, and updated down payment statements.

  2. Submission to the lender
    I structure the file and submit it to the lender for review.

  3. Lender review timeline
    How long does mortgage approval take? Sometimes it can be quick, but it can also take 48 hours or longer depending on lender volume and time of year.

  4. Appraisal (sometimes required)
    If the lender requires an appraisal, it gets ordered and we wait for the results.

“Approval” does not always mean you can remove the condition

This is the part that creates stress.

Even if you receive an approval document, you still need the lender to fully sign off on:

  • income

  • down payment

  • property details

  • any remaining conditions (including appraisal, if required)

Only when the lender confirms everything is satisfied can you safely remove the financing condition.

This is also why timelines matter. If your offer has a financing condition, make sure the timeframe is realistic. Short conditions can create unnecessary pressure and lead to extensions.

Step 3: Down Payment Canada: Use the Tools Available (Including RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan)

If you have the down payment saved, spring can be a strong time to explore buying.

Not because you have to rush.

Because being ready gives you options.

RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP): the key basics

The RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan allows eligible buyers to withdraw funds from their RRSP toward a home purchase, up to $60,000 per person.

You also have up to 15 years to repay the amount you withdrew.

This can be a powerful tool when used properly, especially for buyers who have money in RRSPs but want to keep more cash accessible during the purchase.

Important note: HBP rules have eligibility details and timing requirements, so it’s worth planning this before offer day, not after.

The real goal with down payment strategy

Down payment strategy is not just “how much can I put down?”

It’s also:

  • how much cash you should keep in reserve

  • what payment is comfortable

  • what closing costs look like

  • how to structure the mortgage so you’re not house-poor

Step 4: Your Spring 2026 Home Buying Plan Checklist (Do This This Week)

If you want this to feel simpler, here’s a clean checklist to start with:

  1. Pick your target timeline
    Are you buying in 30 days, 90 days, or later this year?

  2. Get pre-approved properly
    Have your mortgage pre-approval checklist ready, not just a rate quote.

  3. Confirm your down payment plan
    Savings, RRSP HBP, gifts, investments, and what you’re keeping as a buffer.

  4. Plan your offer strategy
    Including a financing condition on offer and a realistic timeline.

  5. Run the numbers for your comfort, not just approval
    Approval amount and comfortable payment are not always the same.

Final Thoughts

Spring buying can be exciting, but it moves faster when you’re unprepared.

If you want a calm, clear plan for Spring 2026, start with the three foundations:
pre-approval, financing condition awareness, and down payment strategy.

If you want, I can send you a simple checklist for:

  • what documents to gather

  • what to refresh at offer time

  • how to think about RRSP HBP properly

Reach out anytime if you’d like a copy of my checklists