For Buyers

Buying a home in Fredericton, the clear-eyed way.

A house is the largest purchase most of us will ever make. The process should not feel like flying blind. Here is how I work with buyers, what to expect at each step, and the New Brunswick specifics that catch people off guard.

The process

From first call to keys in hand.

Discovery call

Twenty minutes on the phone or over coffee. We talk about why you are moving, your timeline, what is non-negotiable, and what you can take or leave. I will not push you to sign anything. The goal is to figure out whether we are a fit.

Pre-approval and budget reality check

I will introduce you to two or three local mortgage brokers I trust. We compare rates and conditions, and we agree on a maximum that includes property tax, heat, insurance, and a buffer. The pre-approval becomes the budget. The budget does not move.

Search and shortlist

Active MLS, off-market leads, and the occasional pre-list tip. I send curated options, not a flood of links. You tell me what works and what does not. The shortlist tightens fast.

Showings

I attend every showing with you. I bring a flashlight, a moisture meter, and a checklist. You will leave knowing what you loved and what you would have to live with.

Offer strategy

We discuss conditions, deposit, closing date, and price in writing before we send anything. You approve every line. I handle the negotiation directly with the listing agent.

Due diligence

Inspector, lawyer, lender. I coordinate the timeline, attend the inspection with you, and walk you through any concerns. If something needs to be renegotiated, we do that calmly and in writing.

Closing and beyond

We do a final walkthrough together. I bring you to the lawyer's office. After closing you still have me on speed dial for contractor questions, refinance timing, and the occasional housewarming.

Local specifics

What buyers from out of province usually miss.

Property transfer tax

New Brunswick charges 1% of the purchase price as a one-time land transfer tax, paid at closing. Easy to forget when you are budgeting.

Oil tank rules

If a home has an oil tank, age and material matter for insurance. A 20 year old steel tank is a problem. Many insurers refuse coverage entirely. Always ask before falling in love.

Well and septic

A surprising number of homes inside city limits are still on private well or septic. We test water and inspect the system as part of due diligence, not after.

Heat pump vs. baseboard

Operating costs vary wildly. A 1,800 sqft home on baseboard electric runs very differently from one on a ducted heat pump with a wood backup. Always pull a year of utility bills.

Spring flooding

The St. John River runs through Fredericton. Some streets flood in freshet. I know which ones, and we factor it into both insurance cost and resale value.

School catchments

Catchment lines move. If schools matter, we verify with Anglophone West School District directly, not from a listing description. I have done this dance before.

First-time buyer?

The Fredericton-specific guide is on the blog.

I wrote a long-form first-time buyer guide that covers pre-approval, RRSP home buyer plan, the First Home Savings Account, the GST rebate on new builds, closing cost ranges, and what to budget for utilities by neighbourhood. Free, no email gate.

Read the guide

Curious where to start? Start here.

A short call, no commitment. We will figure out where you stand and what to do next.