UrbanHomeCare
Seasonal home maintenance · Canada

Keeping a home in step with the seasons.

From the first hard frost to the spring thaw, Canadian homes ask for different things at different times of year. These notes collect the routine tasks that keep a house dry, warm, and structurally sound through every season.

A detached house under fresh snow during a Canadian winter
The four-season cycle

Maintenance follows the calendar.

In most of Canada, the heating season runs roughly from October to April, and freeze-thaw cycles can repeat dozens of times each year. Grouping upkeep by season keeps tasks manageable and timed to the weather that actually causes wear.

Winter

Heat, snow load, and ice

Cold months put pressure on heating equipment, roofs carrying snow, and pipes running through unheated spaces. The focus is keeping warm air in, water moving, and exits clear after storms.

Spring

Thaw and water management

As snow melts, attention shifts to drainage, foundation grading, and checking for damage that built up over winter. Spring is when meltwater shows you where the house sheds — or holds — moisture.

Summer

Cooling and exterior repair

Warm, dry weeks are the practical window for exterior paint, deck work, and servicing cooling equipment before peak heat. It is also the easiest time to reach roofs and gutters safely.

Fall

Preparing for freeze-up

Autumn is the busiest maintenance season: clearing leaves, draining exterior lines, sealing gaps, and booking a heating check before the first cold snap arrives.


Reading

Three seasonal guides.

Each guide walks through a single part of the year in detail, with task lists, timing notes, and references to public Canadian resources.


Insulation installed between attic joists
Attic insulation reduces heat loss during the long Canadian heating season.
Why timing matters

Small tasks, done on schedule.

Much of home maintenance is not complicated — it is a matter of doing routine tasks at the right point in the year. A gutter cleared in October behaves very differently from one left full of leaves when freezing rain arrives.

  • Disconnect and drain outdoor hoses and faucets before the first hard frost.
  • Replace or clean furnace filters on a regular interval through the heating season.
  • Test smoke and carbon monoxide alarms when clocks change in spring and fall.
  • Re-grade soil that has settled against the foundation after the thaw.
A note on sources. Public Canadian references such as Natural Resources Canada and the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation publish maintenance and energy guidance for homeowners. Where this site points to specifics, it links to those public resources rather than restating numbers second-hand.
Contact

Questions or corrections.

If you spot an error in these notes or want to suggest a seasonal task worth covering, send a message using the form. This is an informational site, so messages are read but no on-site service is offered.

  • Email contact@urbanhomecare.org
  • Location Ontario, Canada
  • Topics Seasonal residential maintenance references