CAD 59 Edmonton legal suite decision check

Thinking about a legal basement or garden suite? Check the decision before you spend serious money.

A legal suite can mean permits, drawings, contractors, months of disruption, and CAD 40k-100k in spend. For CAD 59, get a decision-first scan that organizes payback, permit path, cost drivers, missing items, and next-step options before you decide what to do.

Free preview before payment CAD 59 report in 1 business day You decide. We organize the decision.

What the CAD 59 scan answers

Five questions before drawings, quotes, permits, and months of disruption.

The scan is for the first decision: should this legal suite project be explored further? It gives a structured decision packet with assumptions, source-backed public information, missing facts, and next-step options. It is not a quote, appraisal, permit approval, or contractor recommendation.

01

Is this actually a legal-suite path?

Checks whether your idea looks like a legal secondary suite, garden suite, regular renovation, or an unclear case that needs more review.

02

Do the cash-flow numbers make sense?

Uses your rent and build-budget assumptions to show rough payback before financing, tax, insurance, vacancy, maintenance, and appraisal effects.

03

What could make the project more expensive?

Flags separate entrance, windows/egress, ceiling height, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, structure, drawings, and inspection complexity.

04

How much permit work is likely?

Summarizes likely development, building, electrical, plumbing, gas, HVAC, document, and review steps based on your answers.

05

Could incentives or financing matter?

Flags case-specific options like CMHC refinance, clean-energy financing, solar, accessibility, senior, and disability-related paths to verify.

06

What should you do next?

Tells you whether to pause, measure key constraints, collect photos/drawings, prepare a readiness packet, or talk to a contractor or designer.

Free preview first

Answer five questions. See the first decision signal. Pay only if it helps.

Most homeowners do not need another long City page first. They need the right questions in the right order. This preview narrows the project into legal-suite path, cash-flow assumptions, permit workload, cost drivers, and missing facts.

1 Answer five questions

Tell us what you want to build, where you are, and which assumptions you want to test.

2 Review the live preview

See the likely decision path, cost-risk level, missing facts, and rough payback signal.

3 Order only if useful

Get a one-business-day report before paying for drawings, quotes, or application work.

1

First we separate a rental-suite decision from a regular renovation decision.

2

The property context changes what needs checking before drawings or quotes.

3

Timing decides whether the next useful output is a decision scan, readiness packet, or qualified review.

4. Which parts may be involved?
5

The CAD 59 scan turns this into a short decision report instead of a generic search result.

I already need a readiness packet

The preview updates as you answer. Payment opens only after this check; the paid report is delivered by email after payment and completed intake.

Pricing

Start with the small decision. Prepare the bigger packet only if the idea survives.

First decision

Legal Suite Decision Scan

CAD 59

For homeowners asking whether the idea is worth pursuing before drawings, quotes, contractor calls, or application work.

  • Cash-flow and rough payback under your assumptions
  • Likely permit path and review workload
  • Cost-driver and missing-information flags
  • Financing, energy, solar, accessibility, senior, and disability options to verify
Next step

Readiness + Shortlist Packet

CAD 199

For projects that still look promising and need organized photos, documents, permit-readiness questions, provider shortlist, and draft outreach emails.

  • Permit, photo, and document checklist
  • Project brief for providers
  • Public-info provider shortlist
  • Draft emails you can verify and send yourself
See CAD 199 packet

What happens after the decision scan

If the project still looks worth it, prepare before you contact people.

The deeper packet does not sell your information or send your project to contractors. It organizes what a contractor, designer, trade provider, or City reviewer will likely ask for, so your first outreach is less vague.

How providers are shortlisted Public review rating and review count, service descriptions, website details, service area, basement-suite fit, and visible contact information.
Residential designer or drafter Floor plans, site plan support, drawing set preparation.
Secondary-suite contractor Project scoping, build planning, coordination, renovation execution.
Certified trade contractor Electrical, plumbing, gas, heating, ventilation, and related permits.
Structural engineer Potentially needed when beams, foundations, load-bearing walls, or structural openings are involved.
Verification prompts Ask each provider about licensing, insurance, recent secondary-suite work, permit experience, quote exclusions, timeline, and who applies for trade permits.

Planning guides

Answer the first questions before you apply or hire.

Boundary

Organize the decision path. Do not replace official review.

This site helps with

  • Permit path organization
  • Document and photo checklist
  • Fee estimate and missing-item list
  • Project brief and local provider shortlist

This site does not provide

  • Permit approval or submission
  • Design, engineering, or code certification
  • Stamped drawings
  • Provider endorsement or hiring guarantee
  • City of Edmonton representation

Official sources used in the first packet model