Why a Section 98 Agreement Matters When Buying a Condo Resale in Ontario

Importance of Section 98 Agreements in Toronto

When buying a condo resale, most buyers focus on price, status certificates, and mortgage approval. But thereโ€™s a quieter document that can have serious legal and financial consequences if itโ€™s missing:

๐Ÿ‘‰ The Section 98 Agreement.

If the unit youโ€™re buying has any alterations beyond the original builder layout, a Section 98 Agreement can be the difference between a smooth ownership experience โ€” and inheriting a costly problem.

Letโ€™s break down why this agreement matters and what every Ontario condo buyer should know.

What Is a Section 98 Agreement?

Under Ontarioโ€™s Condominium Act, a Section 98 Agreement is required when a unit owner makes alterations to common elements that are for their exclusive use.

Common examples include:
โ€ข Enclosing a balcony or terrace
โ€ข Installing new flooring that affects sound transmission
โ€ข Modifying plumbing, electrical, or HVAC systems
โ€ข Altering walls that impact common elements
โ€ข Installing exterior doors, windows, or structural features

Even though these changes may appear to be โ€œinside the unitโ€, many condos legally treat them as common elements.

A Section 98 Agreement:
โ€ข Approves the alteration
โ€ข Confirms it complies with condo rules
โ€ข Transfers ongoing responsibility for the alteration to the unit owner
โ€ข Is registered on title and binds future owners

Why This Matters in a Condo Resale Purchase

When you buy a condo resale, you inherit the legal position of the seller โ€” including any problems they failed to fix.
If an alteration was done without a Section 98 Agreement, the condominium corporation can:

โŒ Demand that the alteration be removed
โŒ Require the owner to pay to restore the unit
โŒ Refuse to insure damage related to the alteration
โŒ Charge legal fees back to the owner
โŒ Enforce compliance years after the work was done
And yes โ€” that means you, not the seller.

Common โ€œRed Flagโ€ Alterations Buyers Miss

Buyers often assume these are harmless upgrades:
โ€ข A โ€œnice enclosed balconyโ€
โ€ข Heated floors
โ€ข Soundproofing or new flooring
โ€ข Custom plumbing or electrical work
โ€ข Unit layout changes

But if the work touches common elements and thereโ€™s no Section 98 Agreement, the condo corporation can still step in โ€” even if the work was done years ago and approved โ€œinformally.โ€
Verbal approvals and emails are not enough.

Why Status Certificates Donโ€™t Always Save You

Many buyers think:

โ€œIf itโ€™s not flagged in the status certificate, Iโ€™m safe.โ€
Not always.

Status certificates:
โ€ข May not fully describe unauthorized alterations
โ€ข Rely on information disclosed by the seller
โ€ข Donโ€™t replace the need for proper registration on title

A missing Section 98 Agreement can easily slip through unless your lawyer specifically looks for it.

Who Is Responsible for Fixing the Problem?

If a Section 98 Agreement should exist but doesnโ€™t, responsibility usually falls on:

โžก๏ธ The current owner of the unit

That means buyers can be forced to:
โ€ข Negotiate a last-minute agreement with the condo corporation
โ€ข Pay engineering or legal costs
โ€ข Reverse renovations entirely
โ€ข Delay closing โ€” or worse, inherit the risk after closing

How Buyers Can Protect Themselves

Before waiving conditions or closing on a condo resale, buyers should ensure:

โœ” Any alterations are disclosed
โœ” A registered Section 98 Agreement exists (where required)
โœ” The agreement properly transfers obligations to the unit owner
โœ” Maintenance, repair, and insurance responsibilities are clear

This review should be done by your real estate lawyer, not guessed at.

The Bottom Line

A Section 98 Agreement isnโ€™t just a technicality โ€” itโ€™s a risk management tool.

When itโ€™s missing, buyers can unknowingly take on:
โ€ข Legal exposure
โ€ข Repair obligations
โ€ข Enforcement actions from the condo corporation
โ€ข Unexpected costs long after closing

If youโ€™re buying a condo resale in Ontario, confirming whether a Section 98 Agreement exists (or is needed) is just as important as reviewing the status certificate.

Call Capulli Law LLP – we know the ins and outs of condo purchasing and what to ask and look for. A simple call can save you in the long run.