Real estate law · Metro Vancouver

Vancouver real estate lawyer. Flat fee.

Boutique BC firm closing residential transactions across Metro Vancouver. Purchase from $1,400. Refinance from $1,500. Same-day quote. Client intake open 24/7.

Boutique BC firm

Based in Vancouver.

Flat fee, published

No bait-and-switch pricing.

Closing in 5 days

From file intake to keys.

24/7 client intake

Reach us any time.

Purchase

$1,400

No mortgage. Standard residential purchase under $2M. Title work, statement of adjustments, registration.

Purchase + mortgage

$1,600

Includes lender instructions and mortgage registration.

Refinance

$1,500

New lender plus one existing mortgage paid out.

Cash sale

$1,200

Selling without a mortgage to discharge.

Above $2 million, on First Nations Lands, or for commercial transactions, we quote on the file.

How it works

From phone call to keys.

  1. 01

    Call or submit the form

    Our client intake line is open 24/7. Most quotes back same day.

  2. 02

    Send us the contract

    We need at least 5 business days from intake to closing for a standard file.

  3. 03

    Closing meeting

    Sign, fund, register. Keys on possession day. Reporting letter after.

Same-day quote

Send us the basics. We'll come back with a number.

A few sentences is plenty. Address, closing date, and whether there's a mortgage.

No solicitor-client relationship is created until a written retainer is signed. Do not include privileged or sensitive information in your initial message.

Prefer to talk now? Call 604 924 8678 — client intake open 24/7.

Quick answers

Three questions we get a lot.

How quickly can you close my file?

Standard residential purchases need at least 5 business days from intake to closing. Refinances are similar. If your timeline is shorter, call us — we evaluate case by case.

Why is the price flat?

Most residential transactions follow a predictable scope, so we charge one flat fee for the legal work. Above $2 million or on First Nations Lands, we quote on the file.

Can you act for both buyer and seller?

No. Acting for both sides is a conflict of interest under Law Society of BC rules. We act for one side only.

More questions on our real estate page.