The Condo Year That Forced Real Decisions
If 2025 had a defining theme for downtown Toronto condos, it was realism.
This wasn’t a year where demand vanished — it was a year where buyers slowed down, sellers were tested, and the market stopped rewarding shortcuts. Inventory stayed elevated, financing costs stayed restrictive, and condos were the first segment to fully feel both pressures at once. What emerged wasn’t panic or paralysis, but a market that demanded accuracy.
For anyone paying attention, 2025 quietly reset expectations — and in doing so, laid important groundwork for what comes next.
Inventory Took Control of the Conversation
Throughout 2025, active condo listings remained structurally high. Even during the spring, when sales typically surge, inventory continued to build. That meant buyers weren’t just choosing between a handful of options — they were comparing dozens of similar units, often within the same building.
More listings didn’t translate into more urgency. Instead, they created hesitation, comparison shopping, and leverage. Visibility no longer guaranteed momentum; pricing accuracy did.

Sales Volume Was Selective, Not Stalled
On paper, condo apartment sales averaged roughly 908 transactions per month in 2025, down from the 2024 average of 1032 per month. Spring and early summer posted the strongest numbers, while late summer and year-end cooled noticeably.
But those averages mask what was really happening downtown. Sales clustered around correctly priced units with strong layouts, while investor-heavy product lagged behind. Buyers showed up, but only when the numbers made sense.
This was a market where demand existed — it just refused to overpay.
Condo sales continued throughout the year, but they weren’t evenly distributed. Well-located, livable units still attracted attention, while investor-heavy product often sat longer than expected.
This created the impression of an active market on paper but a cautious one on the ground. Buyers showed up informed, patient, and selective. They waited for price adjustments, tracked relists, and rarely felt pressured to act quickly.
In many ways, 2025 separated genuine end-user demand from speculative momentum — especially downtown.
Pricing Reality: The Slow Grind Lower
Condo prices didn’t collapse in 2025, but they softened steadily.
The average condo apartment price hovered around $698,000 for the year, drifting lower on a year-over-year basis in nearly every month. By late 2025, average prices were roughly 5–8% below the same period a year earlier, depending on the month.
Month-to-month changes were modest — often a few thousand dollars at a time — but the cumulative effect mattered. Sellers who chased the market down through multiple price reductions often ended up selling for less than those who priced realistically from day one.
For buyers, this slow grind lower shifted psychology. Instead of rushing, many waited for confirmation — and often got it. What we found most interesting was the months between August and November. Prices started trending up each month, from an average price of $667,660 to ending in November at $701,259.
Days on Market Became the Silent Negotiator
Time became one of the most important metrics in the condo market.
Average days on market climbed into the mid‑40s over the year, and stretched further toward year-end. By December, average DOM reached roughly 65 days, a stark contrast to the fast-moving condo market of prior years.
Longer listing histories gave buyers confidence to negotiate. Offers became more conditional, price discussions more direct, and relists more common. In a market once defined by speed, patience became leverage.
One of the clearest shifts in 2025 was the role of time.
Rising days on market gave buyers leverage without confrontation. Longer listing histories invited questions, encouraged conditional offers, and opened the door to meaningful negotiations. In a downtown condo market once defined by speed, time became the most powerful bargaining tool.
Listings that lingered weren’t necessarily flawed — but they were rarely immune to price discussions.
Mortgage Rates Changed Behaviour, Not Demand
The Bank of Canada’s interest rate environment shaped nearly every condo decision in 2025.
Lower borrowing costs didn’t add a ton of buyers — but it did change the math. Monthly payments became the focal point, especially for condos where affordability is closely scrutinized. Even small rate changes translated into meaningful differences in purchasing power.
What stood out was timing. Rate drops during the year often coincided with short-lived boosts in showing activity, but they didn’t translate into sustained urgency.

Where Downtown Condos Struggled Most
Small Investor Units and Micro Layouts
Studios and small one-bedroom units faced the toughest conditions. Carrying costs remained high, rental growth was uneven, and assignment competition lingered. Buyers demanded discounts, and many sellers were forced to confront numbers that no longer worked the way they once did.
Investor-Heavy Buildings
Buildings with large volumes of similar units struggled to stand out. With multiple near-identical listings competing at once, pricing transparency worked against sellers. Buyers knew exactly where leverage existed — and used it.
Return to Office: The Quiet Variable
One of the most underappreciated shifts in 2025 showed up in the rental numbers.
As downtown office attendance improved, rental absorption strengthened — particularly in the second half of the year. Condo apartments that struggled to lease earlier in 2025 began filling more consistently, especially near transit, and the downtown core.
This mattered for investors. While prices and rates kept many on the sidelines, improving rental stability helped re-anchor long-term projections.
Where Buyers Found Opportunity
For buyers willing to think beyond headlines, 2025 offered rare leverage.
Larger three-bedroom units, functional two-bedrooms, and end-user-oriented buildings became negotiable in ways that would have been unthinkable a few years earlier. Conditions, price reductions, and flexibility all re-entered the equation.
What Condo Sellers Learned the Hard Way
Pricing accuracy mattered more than marketing.
In 2025, sellers who priced strategically often sold. Those who tested the market frequently ended up adjusting — sometimes multiple times. Condition, layout, and presentation regained importance, and patience without a plan proved costly.
Why Investors May Re-Enter — Carefully
While 2025 wasn’t the year of the investor, it wasn’t the end either.
With rental absorption improving downtown and borrowing expectations beginning to stabilize, long-term investors started watching again. Not broadly — selectively. Units with strong fundamentals, livable layouts, and sustainable numbers drew quiet interest.
The speculative investor faded. The patient one began running the numbers again. We expect to see more of this with a return to office for many who work in the downtown core.

Looking Ahead to 2026
As 2025 closed, the downtown condo market felt more balanced — not tight, but clearer.
Inventory remains elevated, but expectations are better aligned. Buyers understand value. Sellers understand leverage. Investors understand risk. That clarity may prove to be 2025’s most important legacy.
Thinking About Buying or Selling a Downtown Condo?
Whether you’re weighing a purchase, planning a sale, or simply trying to understand where downtown condos are headed next, clarity matters more than ever.
We spend every day helping buyers and sellers navigate Toronto’s condo market with real data, real context, and honest advice — not pressure. If you’d like a second opinion on pricing, timing, or strategy as we move into 2026, we’re always happy to talk.
Send us a message below to discuss your next move — even if you’re just exploring your options!




