
The contractor you choose will determine whether that investment pays off, or becomes a prolonged, expensive headache.
A home addition is one of the largest investments you’ll make in your property. It changes how you live. It affects your home’s structure, your family’s daily routine, and its resale value for years to come.
The contractor you choose will determine whether that investment pays off, or becomes a prolonged, expensive headache.
In Toronto’s renovation market, not all contractors are equal. Some are experienced and accountable. Others are not. This guide helps you tell the difference.
In Ontario, builders who construct new homes or major additions must be licensed with the Home Construction Regulatory Authority (HCRA). This isn’t a certification, it’s a legal requirement.
An HCRA license means the builder has met Ontario’s education, experience, and financial requirements. It also means they’re accountable to a regulatory body if something goes wrong.
Ask any prospective contractor for their HCRA registration number and verify it at the Ontario Builder Directory. If they can’t provide one, or if what they provide doesn’t check out, walk away.
Grand Design Build is HCRA licensed.
There are two common pricing models in construction: fixed-price contracts and cost-plus contracts. They are not the same thing, and the difference matters enormously to homeowners.
Fixed-price: You agree on a price before work begins. That number doesn’t change unless you change the scope. Your risk is capped.
Cost-plus: You pay the contractor’s costs plus a percentage fee. If costs go up, and they often do, so does your bill. Your exposure is open-ended.
Most homeowners prefer fixed-price contracts because they can plan around a known number. Be wary of contractors who insist on cost-plus without a clear explanation of why.
Grand Design Build uses fixed-price contracts on every project. What you’re quoted is what you pay.
Reputable builders stand behind their work. A structural warranty is the clearest signal that a contractor has confidence in the quality of what they build.
Ask directly: “Do you offer a structural warranty? What does it cover, and for how long?”
Vague answers or no answer at all is a red flag. A contractor who won’t guarantee their structural work is a contractor who isn’t confident in it.
Grand Design Build provides a 7-year structural guarantee on all home additions.
General renovation experience doesn’t automatically translate to home addition expertise. Additions involve structural engineering, foundation work, roofline integration, and coordination with existing systems, it’s a distinct skill set.
When reviewing a contractor’s portfolio, ask to see completed addition projects, not just kitchens and bathrooms. Ask about the scope, timeline, and any challenges they navigated.
If they don’t have a portfolio of additions, or if they’re vague about past project details, that tells you something important.
Online reviews are a useful signal, but they require context. Look beyond star ratings.
A handful of thoughtful, specific five-star reviews is worth more than 50 generic ones. And one recurring complaint (about communication, timelines, or hidden costs) is worth paying attention to.
In Toronto, home additions require building permits. Full stop. Any contractor who suggests you skip the permit process, or who seems unfamiliar with Toronto’s permitting requirements, is not the right contractor for this project.
Unpermitted work creates real problems: it can be flagged during a home sale, it voids insurance coverage, and in some cases, the City can require you to tear it down.
Your contractor should be familiar with Toronto’s zoning bylaws, building code requirements, and the permit application process. They should be the one managing this on your behalf.
How a contractor communicates during the sales process is a preview of how they’ll communicate during the project.
Do they respond promptly? Are their proposals clear and detailed? Do they seem genuinely interested in your goals, or are they rushing to close a sale?
A large renovation project can span six months or more. The relationship you build with your contractor matters. If communication feels difficult or transactional before you’ve even signed a contract, consider that a warning sign.
Getting more than one quote is always sensible. But the lowest bid isn’t always the best value.
A dramatically lower quote often signals something: lower quality materials, an underestimated scope, or a contractor who plans to make up the difference in change orders once work is underway.
Compare quotes on scope, not just price. What does each proposal include? What’s explicitly excluded? Where might costs escalate?
The goal is to understand what you’re actually buying: and to choose the contractor you’re most confident will deliver it.
What to Check | Why It Matters |
HCRA license verified | Legal requirement for major additions in Ontario |
Fixed-price contract offered | Protects you from open-ended cost exposure |
Structural warranty provided | Signals confidence in workmanship |
Relevant addition portfolio | Additions require specialized experience |
Permits managed by contractor | Unpermitted work creates serious long-term risks |
Reviews are specific and detailed | Generic reviews are less reliable indicators |
Communication is prompt and clear | Reflects how the project will be managed |
Quote scope fully documented | Prevents confusion and disputes mid-project |
Choosing the right home addition contractor comes down to a few fundamentals: proper licensing, transparent pricing, accountability through warranties, and a track record you can verify.
Toronto homeowners who take the time to vet thoroughly, before signing anything, are the ones who come out on the other side with the home they planned for.
If you’re planning a home addition in Toronto, North York, Forest Hill, or surrounding areas, Grand Design Build is happy to walk you through our process, our pricing model, and our portfolio.