TLDR: Most Toronto homeowners sign builder contracts without understanding what the language actually means for their project. The clauses around change orders, budget allowances, and price fluctuations aren't just legal boilerplate — they're a window into exactly how your builder operates. Here's what we've seen — and what every homeowner should know before they sign.
The Moment That Tells You Everything About a Builder
A client came to us after getting a contract from another home builder. She was a lawyer — so she actually read it. Every clause. And by the time she was done, she called us.
Not because she found something illegal. But because she found something revealing. The change order process was vague. The budget allowances were suspiciously low. And the price fluctuation clause only moved in one direction — up.
She wasn't getting a construction contract. She was signing a blank cheque.
We've seen this more than once. Homeowners who went with another builder, started reviewing the paperwork, and made a different call. The contract tells you who you're dealing with before the first nail is driven. You just have to know how to read it.
Three Contract Clauses That Reveal Your Builder's Character
Every residential construction contract has hundreds of words. But three areas tell you almost everything you need to know about the company you're about to trust with your home.
1. Change Orders — Is There a Real Process?
Change orders are inevitable on any large project. You cannot plan every single detail in advance, and homeowners sometimes change their minds about finishes or layouts mid-construction. That's normal. What isn't normal is being handed a bill at the end of the project for changes you don't remember authorizing.
What you want to see: a clear, documented process for how change orders are initiated, approved, priced, and signed off — before any additional work begins. If the contract is vague on this, extras can appear seemingly out of nowhere, and you have no paper trail to dispute them.
A solid change order clause protects you. A fuzzy one protects your builder.
2. Budget Allowances — The Favourite Trick of Lowball Bidders
Budget allowances are placeholders. They're used when a client hasn't yet selected specific finishes — your tile, your fixtures, your cabinetry. The builder estimates an amount and plugs it into the contract.
Here's the problem: many builders deliberately lowball allowances to win the project. The number looks competitive on paper. Once you sign, though, that allowance may not come close to covering the finishes you actually want. The difference becomes an "extra."
The single best way to protect yourself: finalize every selection BEFORE you sign the contract. Not after. Once your finishes are confirmed and priced, you eliminate the allowance risk entirely. The number in your contract is the number you'll pay.
If a builder is pushing you to sign before selections are made, ask yourself why.
3. Price Fluctuations — Does This Clause Only Work Against You?
Material prices move. Nobody disputes that. But look carefully at how your contract handles it.
Does the clause account for price increases only? Or does it also apply when prices drop?
A builder operating in good faith will credit you if materials come in under budget. A builder running a margin-padding operation will quietly pocket the savings and say nothing. The contract will tell you which kind you're dealing with.
The Red Flag Nobody Talks About: Signing an Estimate
This is probably the most important thing in this article.
If your builder hasn't actually procured your project — meaning they haven't gotten real quotes from real subcontractors — then what you're signing is an estimate, not a fixed price. And signing a contract based on an estimate puts almost all of the financial risk on you.
Builders sometimes shortcut the planning process. They send a number they think is close and hope it holds. If it doesn't, the contract language around "price adjustments" kicks in and you get a revised number mid-project.
Never sign a construction contract without confirming the project has been fully procured. Ask directly: "Have you gotten actual subcontractor quotes for this scope of work, or is this estimate-based?" The answer will tell you a lot.
You Don't Have to Sign a Full Contract Right Away
Most homeowners don't know this option exists.
Before signing a construction contract, you can sign a pre-construction planning agreement. This is a separate document that compensates the builder for their planning time while the design and budgeting process plays out. It lets the budget take shape iteratively — based on real procurement numbers — before you're locked into anything.
At BVM, this is exactly how we work. We integrate design, planning, approvals, and building under one roof. The pre-construction phase lets you see real numbers before committing to a full contract. You have a project planning quarterback from day one. And when you do sign a construction contract, you know exactly what you're signing.
It's not a complicated concept. It's just not how most builders operate.
What Happens If You've Already Signed and Have Second Thoughts?
It's not necessarily too late.
Most contracts have a cooling-off period. If you're within that window, you can walk away without major financial consequence. Get clear on that timeline the moment you sign anything.
If the cooling-off period has passed, you may still be able to exit the contract — sometimes at the cost of a deposit. Before you write that off as too expensive, run the math. A lost deposit today might be significantly cheaper than completing a project with a builder you don't trust, with a contract that doesn't protect you.
Make sure your contract clearly spells out the termination clauses and dispute resolution process. If a project goes sideways — and sometimes they do — you need to know your options before you're in the middle of a dispute.
What Most Homeowners Get Wrong About Builder Contracts
Most people treat the contract review as a formality. A box to check before the fun part — picking finishes, watching the build happen — begins.
It's not a formality. It's your single best tool for evaluating the builder you're about to hire.
Before you sign, three things: Get Independent Legal Advice (ILA) — every reputable builder should encourage this. We do. A lawyer can spot imbalances you'd never catch on your own. Ask for a draft draw schedule — at minimum you should see a proposed payment schedule before you sign so you can plan your cash flow. Compare contracts across multiple builders — not just prices. The contract terms show you how each company operates. A builder who hides behind vague language is telling you something important.
The BVM Approach: Fixed Price, Fully Procured, Before You Sign
Our standard contract is fixed-price. That means we fully procure the scope of work — real quotes from actual subtrades, not ballpark estimates — before you commit to anything. We build this way on every project, whether it's a custom home in North York, a major renovation in Leaside, or a laneway addition on the east side of the city.
Other builders might call that excessive. We think it's the only honest way to do it. Our clients deserve to know the real cost of their project before they sign, not discover it mid-build through a series of change orders and allowance overruns.
We also walk every client through the contract in detail and strongly encourage them to get ILA. Not because we're worried about what they'll find — but because we want them to understand exactly what they're signing. That's how you build trust before the project even starts.
Key Takeaways
- Change order, budget allowance, and price fluctuation clauses are the three areas that most clearly reveal how a builder operates — read them carefully
- Never sign a builder contract based on estimates alone — confirm the project has been fully procured first
- Finalize all your selections before signing to eliminate budget allowance risk
- Pre-construction planning agreements exist — you don't have to commit to a full contract before the planning process is complete
- If you've already signed and have doubts, check your cooling-off period immediately
- Always get Independent Legal Advice before signing a residential construction contract in Toronto
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What's the biggest mistake homeowners make when reviewing a builder contract?
A: Not reviewing it at all, or treating it as a formality. The contract isn't just a legal document — it's a diagnostic tool for understanding how your builder operates.
Q: How do I know if a builder's price is based on estimates or real procurement?
A: Ask them directly: "Have you received actual quotes from your subtrades for this scope of work?" A builder operating on procurement-based pricing will be able to say yes and explain the process.
Q: What should I do if I signed a contract and I'm having second thoughts?
A: First, check your contract for a cooling-off period — if you're still in it, you likely have options to exit without major cost. If not, review the termination clauses. It may be worth consulting with a lawyer to understand the cost of exiting versus the risk of proceeding with a builder you don't trust.
Ready to Talk About Your Project?
If you're comparing builders in the GTA and want to see what a fixed-price, fully procured contract actually looks like, give us a call. We'll walk you through ours line by line — not as a sales pitch, but because we genuinely think understanding the contract makes for a better project regardless of who you end up building with.
Book a call with our team at bvmcontracting.com.