The Moves Nobody Tells You About
The Moves Nobody Tells You About
Bridge loans, HELOCs, and leaseback — explained like you're a smart adult.
Most people think they have two choices: sell first, or buy first. It's a very tidy binary — and it's also not quite true.
There are financial tools and contractual strategies that let you navigate both sides of this transition with far more flexibility than you probably realize. These aren't exotic or risky. They're just underexplained. Let's fix that.
■ Bridge Financing: Buy Before You Sell
A bridge loan covers the financial overlap when your purchase closing comes before your sale closing. It's short-term lending against your home's equity — and when you sell, the proceeds pay it off.
Quick Example
Bridge amount: $400,000 | Duration: 60 days | Rate: ~prime + 2.5%
Total cost: approximately $5,500–$6,500 including setup fees.
Compare that to two months of temporary housing plus a second move.
For many families, the bridge is actually cheaper — and significantly less exhausting.
The catch: Most lenders require a firm, unconditional sale agreement before they'll advance the bridge. You need a sold home — not just a listed one.
■ Rent-Back: The Art of Staying in Your Own Home
You've seen this in Part 2 as a gap-management tool. Here's the fuller picture: a seller leaseback is a legitimate, documented part of the Agreement of Purchase and Sale. You sell, close, and rent from your buyer for an agreed period — typically 30–90 days.
Buyers in today's Etobicoke market are often open to this when the home is priced well. They get the house. You get time. Everyone gets a story to tell at dinner parties.
■ HELOC: Your Equity, On Standby
A Home Equity Line of Credit lets you borrow against your home equity at prime rate — lower than bridge loan rates — and use it as your down payment on your next purchase. When your home sells, you pay it off.
The one thing most people don't know: Apply for your HELOC before you list. Most lenders will decline new applications once your property is actively listed. This is a planning step — do it 4–6 weeks before you go to market.
■ Co-ordinated Closings: The Free Strategy Everyone Forgets
Before we even get to financial products, there's this: negotiate your closing dates to line up cleanly. Your sale closes 5–10 days before your purchase. Your proceeds clear. You move once. No bridge loan. No storage unit. No drama.
■ Which Tool Fits You?
| Your Situation | Best Tool | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Equity 600K+, no rush | HELOC + co-ordinated closings | Set up equity access early. Buy when ready. Dates aligned — no debt needed. |
| Firm sale in hand, need bridge | Bridge loan | Quick to arrange once you have a firm agreement. Your lawyer handles the mechanics. |
| Want to stay put post-sale | Rent-back leaseback | Sell with certainty. Keep living there. Shop without pressure. |
| Flexible on next home type | Sell first, long closing | 90 days gives you real options. No financial products needed. |
| Estate property | Sell first. Full stop. | No gap to manage. Certainty and clean accounting matter most here. |
Coming up: Part 4 — Your complete decision checklist. We'll help you figure out which path is actually yours.
Call or text: 416-570-8405
Visit: etobicokehomes4sale.com | Email: [email protected]
Real people. Real answers. No robots were harmed in the making of this conversation.

