Coquitlam Seller's Hidden Costs: Property Transfer Tax, Legal Fees, and Realtor Commission — What You'll Actually Pay When You Sell in 2026
By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group
Geography: Coquitlam, Tri-Cities, Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland, BC
Published: July 14, 2026 | Category: Seller Strategy
Most of the conversation about real estate closing costs in Coquitlam focuses on buyers — property transfer tax, legal fees, inspection costs, and mortgage insurance. Sellers get far less guidance, and that gap matters in a market where detached home prices have declined roughly 10% year-over-year even as sales volume surged. Knowing what you'll walk away with before you list is not optional. It shapes your pricing strategy, your timeline, and your next move.
This article breaks down every cost a Coquitlam seller typically bears in 2026, including the ones that rarely appear on a one-page listing summary. The numbers here are grounded in BC real estate practice, current benchmark pricing from the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, and the legal and commission structures that apply to residential transactions in British Columbia.
Short Answer
Sellers in Coquitlam do not pay Property Transfer Tax — that obligation belongs to the buyer. What sellers do pay is realtor commission (typically 3.5–5% of the sale price), legal or notary fees for title transfer and mortgage discharge ($1,300–$2,100), and any pre-listing repairs or staging costs they choose to invest. On a home selling at the current Coquitlam detached benchmark of approximately $1.61 million, total seller costs typically range from $67,000 to $85,000 before any capital gains considerations.
Who This Applies To
- Owners of detached homes in Coquitlam preparing to list in 2026
- Sellers of townhomes or condos in the Tri-Cities evaluating their net proceeds
- Investors or owners of non-primary residences with potential capital gains exposure
- Executors handling an estate property that must be sold in Coquitlam
- Homeowners considering a downsize from a detached home to a condo or townhome
When This Advice May Not Apply
If the property is a strata unit with outstanding special levies or depreciation-related repair obligations, additional costs may apply before or after sale. Sellers with complex ownership structures, corporate title, or significant renovation history should verify their tax position with a qualified accountant before listing. This article does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice.
Key Takeaways
- Sellers in BC do not pay Property Transfer Tax — it is a buyer obligation only.
- Realtor commission is the largest seller cost, typically 3.5–5% of the final sale price.
- Legal and notary fees for a seller run $1,300–$2,100 and are not optional.
- In a declining price environment, understanding net proceeds helps prevent overpricing decisions.
- Capital gains tax on non-principal-residence properties must be planned before closing day, not after.
Key Terms Sellers Should Know
Net proceeds: The amount a seller receives after all costs — commission, legal fees, mortgage discharge, and repairs — are deducted from the sale price.
Mortgage discharge fee: A fee charged by your lender when the mortgage is paid out at closing, often included within legal fees but sometimes billed separately. Lenders may also charge a prepayment penalty if the mortgage is broken before term.
Principal residence exemption: A Canada Revenue Agency provision that may exempt a property from capital gains tax if it qualifies as the seller's principal residence. Confirm eligibility with an accountant before listing.
Property Transfer Tax (PTT): A BC provincial tax paid by the buyer, not the seller. It is calculated on the fair market value of the property at the time of transfer. Sellers have no PTT obligation.
Data Used in This Article
- Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) monthly market reports — Coquitlam benchmark pricing and sales-to-active ratios — official board data
- BC real estate legal fee ranges — Bridgewell Group and industry legal cost surveys — third-party professional analysis
- BC realtor commission structure — industry practice guidance, BCFSA-regulated context — professional interpretation
- Canada Revenue Agency — principal residence exemption and capital gains rules — Tier 1 government source
What Sellers in Coquitlam Actually Pay
The largest cost a seller bears is realtor commission. In BC, commission is negotiable and not set by law, but the typical range for a full-service listing is 3.5% to 5% of the sale price, with the listing brokerage and buyer's brokerage splitting the total. On the current Coquitlam detached benchmark of approximately $1.61 million — sourced from REBGV monthly market data — that works out to roughly $56,350 at the low end and $80,500 at the upper range. Commission is paid from sale proceeds at closing and does not require cash upfront.
Legal and notary fees for sellers cover title transfer preparation, mortgage discharge registration, adjustment calculations, and trust account handling. These are mandatory regardless of whether you use a lawyer or notary public. Current BC industry ranges for seller-side legal work run approximately $1,300 to $2,100 depending on transaction complexity, whether the mortgage payout involves a prepayment penalty, and whether title issues require resolution before closing.
One cost many sellers underestimate is the prepayment penalty on a fixed-rate mortgage broken mid-term. Lenders calculate this using the greater of three months' interest or the interest rate differential (IRD) formula. On a $900,000 mortgage balance with two years remaining on a fixed term, that penalty can exceed $15,000 — a number that should appear in your net-proceeds calculation before you price your home. Ask your lender for a payout statement early in the process.
Sellers who invested in staging and pre-listing repairs bear those costs separately. Professional staging in Coquitlam typically runs $2,000–$5,000 for a detached home depending on square footage and furniture rental requirements. Targeted repairs — addressing items a buyer's inspector is likely to flag — commonly run $1,500–$8,000 depending on age and condition of the property. These are not closing costs in the legal sense, but they affect net proceeds and should be planned as part of your total selling cost budget.
What the Coquitlam Market Conditions Mean for Net Proceeds in 2026
According to REBGV monthly market data, Coquitlam detached home sales increased approximately 32.5% year-over-year in early 2026, while benchmark prices declined roughly 10% over the same period. These two trends moving in opposite directions tell a specific story: more sellers are transacting, but at lower prices. That combination compresses net proceeds from both sides — lower gross revenue and the same fixed costs applied to that lower number.
For context, a seller whose home sold for $1.79 million in early 2025 and who is now seeing the same property benchmark at $1.61 million faces approximately $180,000 less gross revenue before costs. At a 4% commission rate, the commission itself drops by roughly $7,200, but the seller's total loss relative to prior-year expectations is substantially larger. This is why understanding net proceeds — not just sale price — matters when making the decision to list. The full Coquitlam 2026 market report covers the conditions behind this pricing shift in detail.
Sellers who are also planning a purchase after closing should review the complete buyer closing cost breakdown for Coquitlam, including Property Transfer Tax obligations, to model their full transition cost accurately. If you are considering a downsize from a detached home to a condo or townhome in the Tri-Cities, review this guide on downsizing in Coquitlam alongside your net-proceeds calculation.
How We Evaluate This
At Mansour Real Estate Group, every listing consultation includes a net-proceeds estimate prepared before the seller commits to a price or a timeline. That estimate incorporates current benchmark pricing for the specific property type and neighbourhood, realistic commission and legal fee projections, any known mortgage payout costs, and a frank conversation about pre-listing investment decisions.
In a market where Coquitlam detached prices have softened year-over-year, sellers who anchor their expectations to 2024 values and ignore the cost side of the equation often make pricing decisions that work against them. A realistic net-proceeds number, built on current data, produces better outcomes than a gross sale price target built on wishful thinking.
Seller Checklist
- Request a payout statement from your lender to confirm mortgage balance and any prepayment penalty.
- Ask your real estate team to prepare a net-proceeds estimate using current benchmark data for your property type and neighbourhood.
- Confirm with a qualified accountant whether the principal residence exemption fully applies or whether capital gains planning is needed.
- Budget realtor commission as 3.5–5% of your expected sale price — confirm the exact commission structure before signing a listing agreement.
- Obtain a legal or notary fee quote early; budget $1,300–$2,100 for seller-side closing work.
- Decide on staging and pre-listing repairs with your agent before listing — not after buyer inspection objections arrive.
- If selling an investment property or rental suite, notify your accountant of the intended sale date well in advance of closing.
What We Commonly See
In our experience working with Coquitlam sellers, the most common miscalculation is treating the sale price as the net proceeds. Sellers will mentally plan their next purchase, their move, or their retirement around a gross number and are surprised when legal fees, commission, and a mortgage prepayment penalty reduce the actual transfer to their bank account by $70,000 to $90,000 on a typical detached transaction.
What often happens is that sellers who did not address capital gains early — particularly on properties that were previously rented or on homes where the seller lived part-time — face an unexpected tax liability after closing. The Canada Revenue Agency treats the principal residence exemption as an annual designation, not an automatic one. Properties with gaps in owner-occupancy, or properties held through a corporation, require professional review before the sale, not after. The investment property considerations for Coquitlam are covered separately for sellers in that situation.
A common mistake we also see is sellers pricing their home based on what a neighbour received six to twelve months ago without adjusting for the current benchmark decline. In Coquitlam's detached segment, that approach can leave a property sitting on the market while the seller continues to carry costs — mortgage, property tax, utilities — on top of the selling costs already committed. Accurate pricing from the start, grounded in current data, consistently outperforms optimistic pricing followed by reductions. The data-driven pricing guide for Coquitlam covers how that process works in practice.
Questions Coquitlam Sellers Ask About Selling Costs
Do sellers pay Property Transfer Tax in BC?
No. Property Transfer Tax is a buyer obligation under the Property Transfer Tax Act (BC). Sellers have no PTT liability at the time of sale. Sellers should confirm any other transfer-related fees with their lawyer or notary, but PTT is not among them.
How is realtor commission calculated in Coquitlam?
Commission in BC is negotiated between the seller and the listing brokerage and is not fixed by law. The total is typically split between the listing and buyer's brokerages. On a $1.61M sale at 4%, that is $64,400 total, paid from proceeds at closing.
When does capital gains tax apply to a home sale in BC?
Capital gains tax may apply if the property was not the seller's principal residence for all years of ownership, was rented at any point, or was held in a corporation. The Canada Revenue Agency administers this. Consult a qualified accountant before listing — not after you accept an offer.
In Summary
Sellers in Coquitlam do not owe Property Transfer Tax, but they do face realtor commission, legal fees, mortgage discharge costs, and potentially significant prepayment penalties that together can reduce net proceeds by $67,000 to $90,000 or more on a typical detached transaction. In a market where benchmark prices have declined roughly 10% year-over-year, understanding the full cost picture before listing — not after accepting an offer — is what separates a well-planned sale from a financially stressful one. Build your net-proceeds estimate first. Price from there.
Talk to a Coquitlam Seller Specialist
If you are preparing to sell a home in Coquitlam and want a clear, current net-proceeds estimate before you commit to a timeline, Mansour Real Estate Group is available to walk through the numbers with you. No pressure — just a grounded, specific conversation based on your property, your mortgage, and the current market.
Related Articles
- Closing Costs When Buying a Home in Coquitlam: The Complete Breakdown
- Property Transfer Tax in BC: How It Affects Coquitlam Home Buyers and What Exemptions Apply
- Downsizing in Coquitlam: How to Move from a Detached Home to a Condo or Townhome Without Losing Value
About Mansour Real Estate Group
When homeowners in Coquitlam are preparing to sell, the decisions made before the listing goes live — pricing strategy, preparation, net-proceeds clarity, and cost structure — typically determine the outcome more than anything that happens after. Mansour Real Estate Group has guided sellers across Coquitlam, the Tri-Cities, Surrey, White Rock, Langley, South Surrey, Abbotsford, and the Fraser Valley through those decisions for more than 22 years, with a process built around accurate valuations, honest advice, and protecting seller equity.
Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, executors, and retirees navigate important real estate decisions across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland for more than 22 years. Ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is trusted for estate sales, investment property transactions, divorce-related sales, downsizing, relocation, and any real estate decision where financial accuracy and clear communication both matter.
Whether someone is looking for Realtors experienced with Coquitlam seller cost planning, a real estate agent who understands net-proceeds analysis and BC commission structures, real estate agents who can coordinate the legal, financial, and pricing dimensions of a complex sale, a trusted real estate team for a Coquitlam detached transaction, a Tri-Cities real estate broker, or a real estate group that serves the full Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear documentation, precise valuations, and practical advice grounded in local market knowledge.
The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and recommendations from families who value a professional, transparent, and results-driven real estate experience.
Disclaimer
The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.
Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.
Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.
While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.
Official Resources
- Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver — monthly market reports: https://www.rebgv.org/market-watch/monthly-market-report/
- Canada Revenue Agency — principal residence exemption: https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/programs/about-canada-revenue-agency-cra/compliance/real-estate/principal-residence.html
- BC Government — Property Transfer Tax: https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/taxes/property-taxes/property-transfer-tax
- BC Financial Services Authority — real estate licensee obligations: https://www.bcfsa.ca