Sell Your House Fast in Caledon, Ontario Peel North Cash Offer in 24 Hours, As-Is

Tired Bolton and Mayfield West rentals, foundation-issue Caledon Village heritage homes, executive Caledon Hills estate properties, and rural Greenbelt and Niagara Escarpment acreages out toward Inglewood, Cheltenham, Belfountain, and Palgrave — Canadian Home Buyers makes a cash offer on Caledon-area properties in 24 hours, no commissions. We buy as-is, on your timeline, and close in as little as 7 days through a licensed Ontario real estate lawyer.

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Common Situations

Why Caledon Homeowners Sell Direct

Caledon's seller mix is genuinely different from Brampton or Vaughan. Because the town blends a substantial GTA-priced-out commuter pool concentrated in Bolton and Mayfield West, an aging rural-estate and equestrian-property owner segment across the Caledon Hills with adult children who have long since moved to central Toronto, a tired-landlord pool that bought across Bolton during the 2020-2022 boom and is now exhausted by rate-renewal economics, and a wide rural Niagara Escarpment / Greenbelt ring of acreages that residential lenders won't underwrite, the seller scenarios concentrate in patterns the rest of Peel doesn't share. Six recurring reasons Caledon homeowners reach out:

  • Out-of-province executors selling a parent's estate. Long-held family homes and Caledon Hills estate properties in Bolton, Caledon Village, Caledon East, Inglewood, and Cheltenham inherited by adult children based in central Toronto, BC, or Alberta who can't manage a rural Peel North property remotely while working through Ontario probate. More on inherited property sales →

  • Tired landlords / GTA-investor exits. Single-family rentals and basement-suite properties bought across Bolton and Mayfield West during the 2020-2022 boom by GTA investors looking for affordable Peel yields — many now exhausted by tenant turnover, rent arrears, N4 / N12 / N13 disputes, and Landlord and Tenant Board hearings now routinely months out. More on selling a tenanted rental →

  • Divorce or separation requiring a clean sale. Matrimonial homes in Bolton, Mayfield West, and Caledon East where both spouses need a fast, certainty-led close so net proceeds can be split through the family lawyer rather than waiting on 90+ days of MLS showings on a rural property in a thin upper-tier market. More on divorce sales →

  • Tried MLS, didn't work. Listing pulled or expired after months of showings — particularly common on Caledon Hills executive estates, rural Greenbelt-restricted acreages where buyer pools shrink dramatically, equestrian properties outside the residential lender pool, and condos in older buildings with assessment or reserve-fund issues. More on selling after MLS →

  • Power of sale (Ontario). Notice of Sale under Mortgage already served, the 35-day redemption window running, lender ready to take the home to court-ordered sale — particularly common after the 2024-2026 wave of fixed-rate renewals jumped from 2.5% to 5%+ on Caledon's higher-priced Bolton and Mayfield West stock. More on power-of-sale exits →

  • Major repairs or non-conforming systems on rural acreages. Rural Caledon Hills properties with foundation movement, well and septic complications, propane heating, oil tanks, knob-and-tube wiring in 1900s farmhouses, asbestos vermiculite, or Niagara Escarpment Plan / Greenbelt Plan compliance issues that stop residential mortgages cold. More on selling homes needing major repairs →

  • Adult children helping a parent downsize. Aging Caledon parents in Bolton (urban centre) no longer able to keep up with the home, with their adult children handling the sale remotely or locally with a power of attorney for property. The MLS path doesn't fit when the parent can't tolerate showings, contractor visits, or a months-long timeline. More on selling under health, medical, or downsizing circumstances →

  • Vacant home that's hard to insure. Most home insurance policies lapse after 30 to 60 days of vacancy without explicit vacant-property coverage — and vacant-property riders cost 2 to 3 times standard premiums. Caledon owners of properties sitting empty between tenants, awaiting sale, or post-move often find the math doesn't pencil after a few months. A cash sale stops the carrying cost and the insurance complication in one move. More on selling a vacant home →

If your situation isn't on this list, it doesn't mean help isn't available. Most Caledon homeowners think their situation is unusual. It almost never is.

Sound like your situation? Submit your Caledon property today.

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Service Area

Caledon Neighbourhoods We Buy In

Houses, condos, townhouses, duplexes, and rental properties — across the entire City of Caledon and surrounding communities. Top neighbourhoods linked below for quick access; the full list is comprehensive.

Bolton (urban centre)

Bolton · South Hill Bolton · North Hill Bolton · Bolton West · Bolton East · properties along Queen Street South · King Street area · Humber River-adjacent properties · 1990s and 2000s family homes off Coleraine Drive · newer Bolton infill toward Mayfield Road

Mayfield West / Brampton-border corridor

Mayfield West · Mayfield West Phase 2 · Southfields · Valleywood · properties along Mayfield Road · Kennedy Road North corridor · 2010s-onward subdivisions · Hurontario Street North-area family homes · newer Valleywood executive builds

Caledon East / Caledon Village (heritage corridors)

Caledon East · Caledon Village · Highway 50 corridor · Old Church Road area · properties along Airport Road · Caledon Trailway-adjacent homes · 1970s and 1980s ranch bungalows · Charleston Sideroad properties · newer Caledon East infill

Caledon Hills estates / equestrian corridor

Caledon Hills · Inglewood · Cheltenham · Belfountain · Alton · Terra Cotta · Niagara Escarpment-adjacent estates · equestrian properties along the Caledon Hills · Forks of the Credit area · Credit River-adjacent acreages · Greenbelt-protected rural homes

Rural Caledon hamlets and surrounding communities

Palgrave · Mono Mills · Tullamore · Snelgrove · Cataract · Brampton · Toronto · Milton · Richmond Hill · Cash offers extend across rural Caledon, Niagara Escarpment Plan and Greenbelt Plan-restricted acreages, equestrian properties, and the smaller hamlets ringing Bolton and Caledon East

If your property is anywhere in the Caledon Metropolitan Region, request a cash offer and a offer comes back within 24 business hours.

The Math

Why Selling to a Cash Buyer Makes Sense in Caledon

The dollar-cost math on a Caledon sale plays out differently than in Brampton or Vaughan because the price segmentation is wider — entry-level under $950,000 in Bolton, family homes in the $1.1M-$1.4M range across Mayfield West and Caledon East, executive Caledon Hills estates and equestrian properties past $2M-$5M+ — and the smaller Peel-North-specific buyer pool means properties outside the move-up sweet spot sit longer than equivalent homes in Mississauga or Brampton.

Take a typical Caledon Bolton family home sale at $1.05M, roughly the current Bolton detached average. Ontario commissions of 4-6% plus HST produce roughly $47,500-$71,200 in commission cost — split between listing and buyer-side agents. On a Caledon Hills estate sale at $2.4M, commissions run $108,500-$162,700 with HST. Add staging, which on a Caledon family home typically runs $5,000-$25,000 — higher on rural estates where furniture rental, exterior staging, and equestrian-property presentation push the budget — depending on whether you're refreshing paint and decluttering or doing full furniture rental for empty units. Add pre-listing inspections, minor repair scope flagged on inspection — Caledon Hills heritage farmhouses routinely surface deferred-maintenance flags that scope into five-figure repair conversations — and professional photography that captures the property at its best for the regional buyer pool.

Then carrying costs. Average days-on-market in Caledon is currently stretching well past 30-60 days for anything not in the Bolton entry-level sweet spot, with Caledon Hills executive estates above $2M, rural Greenbelt-restricted acreages, equestrian properties, and Niagara Escarpment Plan-affected properties often sitting 90-180 days or longer. Mortgage interest, Town of Caledon property tax, utilities (Hydro One Brampton / Enbridge Gas), insurance, snow removal, and lawn / acreage maintenance over an average sale window typically add another $7,000-$15,000 — higher on large rural estates with multiple outbuildings. Deals that fall through on financing or post-inspection negotiation push that timeline well past 6 months.

A direct cash sale trades the higher MLS gross for certainty and zero out-of-pocket exposure. No commissions because no agents are involved. No staging because the property sells in current condition. No carrying costs through a drawn-out marketing period. No reliance on conventional residential financing approval, which matters more for Caledon Hills estates with non-conforming systems, rural Niagara Escarpment / Greenbelt-affected properties, equestrian properties with barns and outbuildings that don't appraise, and condos with assessment issues than retail Realtors usually mention. Closing happens through a licensed Ontario real estate lawyer in a typical 7 to 15 days. For sellers in the right situation, MLS through a brokerage with Peel-area experience will still produce a stronger final number — that's just true. For sellers facing a power-of-sale deadline, an out-of-province executor timeline, a tired-landlord exit, or a property condition residential lenders won't underwrite, the trade-off is certainty, speed, and zero hassle. A cash buyer is not the right answer for everyone. It's the right answer for some.

The Math, Side by Side

MLS Listing vs Caledon Cash Sale

Cost comparison between selling a Caledon home on MLS versus a direct cash sale to Canadian Home Buyers. Six rows: commissions, staging, major repairs, carrying costs, time to close, and as-is sale conditions.
 MLS ListingCash Sale
Commissions4-6% + HST of sales price$0
Staging$5,000–$25,000$0
Major repairs$100,000+ on homes needing work$0 — sold as-is
Carrying costs$7,000–$15,000 over 90+ days$0
Time to close60–180 days7–15 days
As-is saleConditional on repairs and financing100% as-is

Commission, staging, and carrying figures are pulled from Caledon comparable sales and the market data discussed above.

Pricing

How Much Is My Caledon House Worth in a Cash Sale?

Cash offers in Caledon are anchored to ARV — the After Repair Value. ARV is what the home would sell for on MLS, in renovated condition, in today's market. Pulled from comparable sales in your specific Caledon neighbourhood, adjusted for square footage, lot size, finish level, and the property's positioning relative to schools, the Toronto / Brampton commute corridor, the Niagara Escarpment, and the Greenbelt. From that number, an experienced cash buyer subtracts:

  • Cost of repairs and renovations — what it actually takes to bring the property to retail-ready condition for the Caledon buyer pool, accounting for Caledon Hills heritage-farmhouse considerations, the GTA-commuter finish expectations in Bolton and Mayfield West, and the deferred-maintenance patterns common across pre-1980 rural builds.

  • Holding costs during ownership — mortgage carrying, Town of Caledon property tax, utilities, insurance, snow removal, acreage and equestrian-property maintenance, and security through the renovation window — costs that compound on large rural estates.

  • Selling costs — Realtor commissions on the resale, closing costs, marketing, and staging when the renovated home eventually returns to MLS.

  • Target margin — the return required to make the project worth doing, particularly given Caledon's thinner upper-tier and rural buyer pools.

Two things push offers higher: solid condition (recent furnace, no foundation movement, roof has remaining life, kitchen and baths recently updated, modern electrical panel and copper plumbing) and a strong-demand neighbourhood like newer Bolton, Mayfield West, or Valleywood family corridors where ARV comparables anchor at higher price points. Two things push offers lower: significant repair scope (foundation underpinning on heritage farmhouses, electrical service upgrade from 60-amp to 200-amp, full kitchen and primary-bath renovation, asbestos abatement on pre-1990 vermiculite, oil-tank decommissioning, well-and-septic remediation on rural acreages) and title issues (Niagara Escarpment Plan compliance, Greenbelt Plan restrictions, conservation-authority easements, unregistered easements common on rural Caledon properties, builder's liens, probate not yet granted).

You get a written breakdown showing each of those four numbers — not just a final figure. If the math doesn't work for you, walk away. Zero pressure.

Process

How It Works in Caledon

  1. Tell Us About Your Property

    Fill out the form or call us. Takes 2 minutes. We ask a few questions about the property and your situation. Zero pressure.

  2. Get a Fair Cash Offer in 24 Hours

    We pull comparable sales, factor in condition and Caledon-specific market dynamics, and send you a clear, cash offer within 24 hours.

  3. Close on Your Timeline — As Fast as 7 Days

    Pick the closing date that works for you. We close through a licensed Ontario real estate lawyer. Cash wired directly to your account.

Quick Submit

Ready to start? Get your offer in 24 hours.

Specialty Cases

Caledon-Specific Situations We Handle

I inherited a Caledon home or estate but I live in central Toronto, BC, or Alberta — how does this work?

Inherited properties in Bolton, Caledon East, Caledon Village, and the Caledon Hills estate corridor are some of the most common cash sales here. Many original Caledon estate owners — particularly the families who bought rural acreages in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s when Caledon was substantially less developed than today — have adult children who have long since moved to central Toronto, BC, or Alberta. Ontario probate runs through the Superior Court of Justice — a Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee typically issues in 6 to 16 weeks once the application is filed. A cash sale can be lined up to close shortly after the Certificate is issued. Documents get signed remotely through an Ontario real estate lawyer with video commissioning or a local notary. No need to drive to Caledon for showings, repairs, contents-clearout, or stable / acreage upkeep on an equestrian property.

I'm a tired Caledon landlord with a Bolton or Mayfield West GTA-investor rental — can you buy with tenants in place?

Yes. Tenanted properties get purchased with the existing lease assumed on closing — no eviction notice, N4, N5, N12, or LTB application required. The Caledon rental segment includes a substantial pool of GTA investors who bought across Bolton and Mayfield West during the 2020-2022 boom looking for affordable Peel yields — many of those landlords are now exhausted by tenant arrears, N12 / N13 disputes that drag through the Landlord and Tenant Board for months, and the deferred-maintenance economics of properties that don't pay for themselves at current rates. Whether the tenant stays long-term after closing depends on the post-sale plan, which isn't your problem to solve before you sell.

The lender served Notice of Sale under Mortgage — am I out of time?

Probably not. Ontario power of sale requires the lender to serve a Notice of Sale under Mortgage, then observe a 35-day redemption window before they can move to court-ordered sale. A cash sale closing in 7 to 15 days can pay out the mortgage, discharge the registered lien, and stop the proceeding before the redemption period closes — provided enough equity exists in the property. The earlier you reach out, the more options stay on the table. After the redemption window closes, the home moves toward sale-by-court-order and the seller's leverage drops sharply. The 2024-2026 wave of fixed-rate renewals jumping from 2.5% to 5%+ has driven a meaningful uptick in Notice of Sale activity across Bolton and Mayfield West, where higher-priced 2020-era purchases produced larger renewal-shock payments.

My Caledon Hills estate or equestrian property has been on MLS for months — will you buy it?

Yes. The Caledon Hills executive-estate and equestrian segments are some of the slowest-moving parts of the local market right now because residential lenders rarely underwrite acreages with barns, paddocks, riding rings, or large outbuildings. Niagara Escarpment Plan and Greenbelt Plan restrictions, conservation-authority easements, well-and-septic complications, and pre-1980 wiring or plumbing in heritage farmhouses all push retail buyers and their lenders away. Cash offers go through on these properties because the underwriting model doesn't depend on residential mortgage approval. Title encumbrances and conservation-authority correspondence still get reviewed before closing.

I've owned a Caledon rental or estate for 20+ years — what about capital gains?

Long-held Caledon properties often carry significant capital gains exposure. A property bought for $325,000 in the early 2000s might dispose at $1.4M today — and a Caledon Hills estate bought for $500,000 in the 1990s could dispose at $3M+ today. A Vendor Take-Back (VTB) mortgage — where part of the purchase price gets paid out over multiple tax years rather than fully at closing — can sometimes spread the gain across several reporting periods. That structure works for some sellers and not for others, depending on overall income and CRA filings. Talk to your accountant first before assuming anything. Once you know what works, the deal structure can be adjusted to fit.

My Caledon house won't sell on MLS — what's actually wrong?

The usual culprits in Caledon: foundation movement on pre-1980 Caledon Hills heritage farmhouses built on Niagara Escarpment till and clay-loam, original 60-amp electrical service or knob-and-tube wiring in 1900s rural properties, polybutylene grey-pipe plumbing in mid-1990s Bolton and early Mayfield West builds, oil tanks and oil-fired furnaces in older rural Caledon properties, well-and-septic complications on rural acreages, awkward layouts in early 1970s splits, executive Caledon Hills estates priced above what comparable Peel North sales can support, condos in buildings with unresolved condo-corporation issues, and rural properties with Niagara Escarpment Plan, Greenbelt Plan, or conservation-authority easement complications. Anything that makes a residential lender skittish makes the property hard to sell retail. Cash buyers don't depend on retail underwriting.

My Caledon house is too much for one person now — can I sell as-is and walk away?

Yes. When a long-term care placement opens up — and the prospect of repainting, decluttering, staging, and 60-90 days of MLS showings feels like more than the household can carry — a direct cash sale is the cleanest path out. The property sells in its current condition. The closing lawyer pays out the mortgage and property tax from the proceeds. Remaining equity gets wired to the seller's account, available to fund the next move — into a retirement community, assisted-living facility, long-term care, or a smaller home closer to family.

Local Quirks

Caledon Housing Supply Realities

Caledon's housing supply spans roughly 175 years — from the original mid-1800s Caledon Hills heritage farmhouses tied to the Niagara Escarpment settlement era and the original Bolton, Caledon East, and Caledon Village hamlets, through the post-war 1950s and 1960s Bolton expansion, the 1970s and 1980s rural-estate buildouts when GTA buyers first started moving north for Caledon Hills acreages, the 1990s and 2000s Bolton subdivisions, and the 2010s-onward Mayfield West and Valleywood corridors driven by GTA-priced-out demand from Brampton and central Toronto. Each era brings its own issues at sale time, and the smaller Peel-North-specific buyer pool means thinner demand for non-conforming properties.

  • Caledon Hills heritage farmhouses and rural foundation issues. Pre-1900 farmhouses across the Caledon Hills, Inglewood, Cheltenham, Belfountain, and the rural Niagara Escarpment corridor sit on a mix of clay-loam over Niagara Escarpment till, glacial deposits, and in places dolostone bedrock. Settlement cracks, sloping basement floors, water intrusion through original weeping tile, and stone-foundation deterioration are common in 100-plus-year-old heritage farmhouses. Repair scope ranges from $7,000-$12,000 for crack injection and weeping-tile replacement to $40,000-$80,000+ for full underpinning on heritage stone foundations. Heritage-conservation considerations on designated properties also add stricter exterior-repair compliance requirements.

  • Electrical and plumbing systems. Original 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s Bolton and rural Caledon homes still occasionally show 60-amp service panels, knob-and-tube wiring, or aluminum branch circuits — all create insurance and financing complications. Pre-1900 Caledon Hills heritage farmhouses routinely have multiple electrical and plumbing eras layered together. Mid-1990s subdivisions in parts of Bolton and early Mayfield West were built with polybutylene grey-pipe plumbing, which fails at the fittings without warning. Buyers can't typically obtain a residential mortgage on properties with these systems until they're fully replaced.

  • Environmental, well, septic, and conservation-authority issues. Asbestos in pre-1990 vermiculite attic insulation, drywall mud, and floor tile is the recurring environmental issue across older Caledon homes. Lead paint in pre-1978 homes adds remediation cost on any renovation. Oil tanks and oil-fired furnaces are common in older rural Caledon properties — TSSA decommissioning and soil-contamination flags are routine and stop residential financing cold until they're resolved. Wells and septic systems on rural acreages need potability testing and service-history documentation. Properties within the Niagara Escarpment Plan area or the Greenbelt Plan face binding development restrictions; properties affected by Credit Valley Conservation or Toronto and Region Conservation Authority easements need easement-discharge or compliance review. Heavy snow loads and freeze-thaw cycles produce roof and ice-damming issues. Any environmental or conservation flag adds remediation cost and stalls retail buyers.

  • Rural Caledon acreages, equestrian properties, and surrounding hamlets. Acreages around Caledon — toward Palgrave, Mono Mills, Tullamore, Cataract, Snelgrove, and the smaller rural hamlets — come with rural-specific underwriting challenges: septic fields with unknown service history, well-water potability testing, propane heating, gravel road access, outbuildings that don't appraise, agricultural-zoning complications, conservation-authority easements, and buyer pools that shrink dramatically above $2M. Equestrian properties with barns, paddocks, riding rings, and stable infrastructure rarely qualify for conventional residential financing even when the dwelling itself does. Cash offers don't depend on retail underwriting, which is why so many Caledon Hills rural and equestrian dispositions never close on MLS.

If your home has any of these, that's not a reason to walk away from selling. It's a reason to talk to a buyer who handles them every week.

Honest Disclosure

What We Typically Don’t Buy in Caledon

  • Single-family homes priced above $1.8M. Above this range — including most Caledon Hills executive estates and large equestrian properties — we're not the most efficient buyer pool. A high-end Realtor with strong Caledon-area, Headwaters region, and equestrian-property experience will get you a stronger result. Rental, recreational, agricultural, and commercial properties at any price point are still a fit.
  • Properties on First Nations reserve land. Different jurisdiction, different process — outside our scope.
  • Actively on-market properties. If your home is currently listed with a Realtor, we can revisit once the listing has been formally cancelled or expired.

If you're not sure whether your property fits, submit it anyway — a quick response will let you know within 24 hours either way.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions Caledon

How fast can you actually close on a house in Caledon?

Typical close runs 7 to 15 days from accepted offer, depending on title status and your timeline. Closing happens through a licensed Ontario real estate lawyer. If circumstances are urgent — a power-of-sale deadline, an estate timeline, a Toronto-relocation date, or coordinating with a downsizing purchase — a 7-day close is workable as long as title is clean and any required Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee is in hand.

Do you buy houses in power of sale in Caledon?

Yes. Ontario runs the process as power of sale. If a Notice of Sale under Mortgage has been served but the 35-day redemption window has not yet closed, there's usually time to close a private sale that pays out the mortgage and discharges the registered lien before the lender moves to court-ordered sale. Equity position determines what's possible. Earlier outreach gives more options.

What about Caledon Hills acreages, Greenbelt-protected properties, and equestrian estates?

Caledon Hills acreages and equestrian properties are bought regularly — septic, well, propane, oil tank, gravel road, barns, paddocks, riding rings, the whole rural and equestrian package. The underwriting handles rural and equestrian specifics that residential lenders typically won't. Niagara Escarpment Plan and Greenbelt Plan-affected properties get factored into the offer rather than rejected outright. Conservation-authority easements (Credit Valley Conservation, Toronto and Region Conservation Authority) get reviewed as part of due diligence. Rural Caledon hamlets like Palgrave, Mono Mills, Tullamore, Cataract, Inglewood, Cheltenham, Belfountain, Alton, and Terra Cotta are all covered.

Will you buy my Bolton condo if the building has special assessments?

Yes, in most cases. Special assessments — common in older Bolton condos facing roof, balcony, or building-envelope work — pending lawsuits against the condo corporation, low reserve funds, and pet or rental restrictions are exactly the issues that scare retail buyers and their lenders away. Cash offers factor those costs into the price rather than rejecting the deal outright. Condo documents still get reviewed before closing.

Do you buy houses with tenants?

Yes. Tenanted properties get purchased with the existing lease assumed on closing — no N12 notice or LTB application required. Whether the tenant stays long-term after closing depends on the post-sale plan, which isn't your problem to solve before you sell.

What if I'm behind on mortgage payments or Town of Caledon property taxes?

Arrears get paid out of sale proceeds at closing through the lawyer's trust account. The mortgage gets discharged, Town of Caledon tax arrears get cleared, and remaining equity gets wired to you. As long as enough equity exists in the property, missed payments don't kill the deal.

Are you a licensed Realtor in Caledon?

No. Properties get purchased directly from sellers — no listing, no agent representation. The transaction itself closes through a licensed Ontario real estate lawyer, which is the same way every Ontario real estate transaction closes.

What documents do I need to sell my Caledon house?

The basics: government photo ID, the most recent property tax bill from the Town of Caledon, current mortgage statement, condo documents if applicable, septic, well, and oil-tank records for rural Caledon acreages, conservation-authority correspondence and easement documentation for Niagara Escarpment Plan or Greenbelt Plan-affected properties, and equestrian-infrastructure records for stable / paddock properties. For estate sales, the Certificate of Appointment of Estate Trustee issued by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. The lawyer pulls title, encumbrances, and the tax certificate as part of closing.

Can I sell if my spouse is on title and we're separated?

Both spouses on title need to sign the transfer documents. Under Ontario's Family Law Act, even if only one spouse is on title, the non-titled spouse may need to consent in writing if the property is the matrimonial home. If a separation agreement is being negotiated, the sale can usually be coordinated with your family lawyer so net proceeds are held in trust until the agreement closes.

Got your answer? Submit your property — no obligation.

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Authoritative Source

What the Town of Caledon Says About Caledon

Access to transportation systems, labour force and an unparalleled quality of life makes Caledon the choice to locate or expand your business.
Town of Caledon Economic Development

Reviews

What Sellers Say After Closing With Us

5.0

5.0 average across all closed deals

  • Ben helped me sell my mother's home when she was retiring. In a world full of scammers there is still hope — this company is 100% legit.
  • Excellent to deal with. Always got back to us quickly and helped navigate us through the process. Fair offer, fair terms, and a quick sale.
Caledon, Ontario home recently purchased by Canadian Home Buyers — closed as-is in cash through a licensed Ontario real estate lawyer.

Ready to Sell?

Get a fair cash offer on your Caledon home today.

Whether you're an out-of-province executor settling a Caledon Hills estate or Bolton family home, a tired Caledon landlord exiting a Bolton or Mayfield West GTA-investor rental, a separated couple needing a clean Caledon East or Valleywood sale, a homeowner facing Notice of Sale under Mortgage after a fixed-rate renewal shock, an equestrian or rural Greenbelt acreage owner residential lenders won't underwrite, or sitting on a stalled MLS listing on a Caledon Hills heritage farmhouse — submit your property and a cash offer comes back within 24 hours. Zero pressure, zero obligation.

Get a Free Cash Offer on Your Home

Simply fill out the form below:

We use your information only to prepare your cash offer and contact you about it.

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