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Toronto Real Estate Market 2025 Year-End Review & Outlook

By Advice For Buyers, Advice For Sellers, Toronto

If 2024 was about uncertainty, 2025 was about adjustment.

The defining force this year wasn’t disappearing demand — it was inventory overwhelming the market’s ability to absorb it. Toronto averaged 25,548 active listings throughout 2025, a level that consistently exceeded what buyer demand could comfortably clear. Supply peaked mid-year at 31,603 active listings in June, then remained elevated through most of the fall before finally compressing into December.

Sales activity followed a familiar seasonal arc, averaging 5,228 sales per month, but that demand was spread thin across a much larger pool of listings. On paper, the market looked active. On the ground, it felt selective.

Buyers had options. Time. Leverage. Sellers could still transact — but only when expectations were realistic from the outset. This wasn’t a crash. It wasn’t a rebound either. It was a prolonged re-pricing environment, where leverage steadily and decisively shifted toward buyers.

Sales & Demand: Present, But Highly Filtered

Sales volumes showed resilience through the middle of the year. Monthly sales climbed from 3,847 in January to a peak stretch above 6,100 sales between May and July, confirming that buyers were not sitting on the sidelines entirely.

But that demand was fragile.

By December, sales slipped back to 3,697, nearly identical to January levels, despite clearer pricing, more transparency, and softer expectations. That bookend tells the real story of 2025: demand existed, but urgency never fully returned.

Where buyers did act decisively, three patterns stood out:

• Homes priced directly in line with recent comparable sales
• Listings that were clearly superior to competing inventory
• Properties positioned as good value, not best-case scenarios

Homes that missed those marks didn’t just sell later — they often sold for less, after extended exposure and multiple price reductions.

Inventory & Supply: The Dominant Force of 2025

If there was a single variable that shaped behaviour this year, it was supply.

New listings averaged 15,469 per month, with spring inflows particularly heavy. April through June alone added nearly 60,000 new listings to the market. Even as sales improved seasonally, absorption never caught up.

The impact compounded over time. Active listings rose from 17,157 in January to over 30,000 by May, fundamentally changing buyer psychology. And even when new listings slowed sharply — falling to just 5,299 in December — buyers were still choosing from 17,005 active listings.

That’s not scarcity by any definition.

As a result, buyers compared more homes before committing, conditional offers became routine again, and sellers lost the ability to rely on urgency or fear of missing out. Inventory didn’t need to keep rising forever to reshape the market. It simply needed to stay elevated long enough for psychology to change — which it did.

Pricing & Value: Softening, With Clear Winners and Losers

The average Toronto sale price in 2025 landed around $1.065M, but that headline number hides meaningful divergence beneath the surface.

Prices peaked in late spring, then softened steadily through the second half of the year, tracking directly with elevated inventory and rising buyer selectivity. Average Days on Market climbed from 38 days in Q2 to 57 days by Q4, reinforcing how patience — not urgency — defined buyer behaviour by year-end.

Well-priced homes often sold within their first listing window. Overpriced listings typically required multiple reductions. Final sale prices increasingly drifted away from original list prices.

By Q4, buyers weren’t negotiating off asking prices — they were negotiating off perceived value, often pointing to better alternatives still sitting on the market.

The Well Toronto
The Well Toronto

2025 by Housing Segment: Four Markets, One Theme

Detached Homes

Detached homes were the most resilient segment in 2025, but not immune.

Sales volumes held up better here than in other segments, particularly in established neighbourhoods where land value, schools, and long-term scarcity continued to support demand. Even so, elevated supply capped pricing momentum. Many detached listings required sharper initial pricing to generate traction.

Buyers were qualified, deliberate, and far less emotional than in past cycles. Overpriced detached homes frequently sat through multiple listing periods, while realistically priced homes attracted steady — if unspectacular — interest.

Semi-Detached Homes

Semi-detached homes felt affordability pressure more directly.

As a traditional step-up option, this segment was highly sensitive to interest-rate psychology. Demand existed, but buyers had more choice than usual, and that softened competition.

Well-presented semis in strong neighbourhoods continued to sell, but rarely with the multiple-offer dynamics sellers had come to expect. Pricing accuracy mattered enormously, making this segment a clear barometer of buyer confidence.

Townhouses

Townhouses experienced one of the more noticeable shifts in 2025.

Inventory growth, particularly in newer and suburban-adjacent projects, increased competition and reduced urgency. Buyers weighed townhouses more carefully against condos and smaller detached options, prioritizing layout, fees, and long-term livability.

Well-priced freehold townhouses performed reasonably well. Those that lacked differentiation or sat awkwardly between price points often struggled.

Condos

Condos were the most challenged segment of 2025.

Elevated supply, especially among one-bedroom and investor-oriented units, weighed heavily on pricing and absorption. Buyers had ample choice and often adopted a wait-and-see posture, particularly in buildings with high listing concentration.

While unique, well-located, or larger units still sold, competition was fierce and pricing pressure persistent. By year-end, condos increasingly led the market’s re-pricing rather than following it.

What This Meant for Buyers

For buyers, 2025 delivered something Toronto rarely offers: choice without chaos.

Elevated inventory created real leverage, particularly on listings that had been on the market 30 days or longer. Disciplined buyers were often rewarded with price reductions, seller concessions, and time to conduct proper due diligence.

That said, decisiveness still mattered. Homes that were clearly priced right — especially in strong neighbourhoods or turnkey condition — continued to attract competition.

The opportunity wasn’t universal leverage. It was selective leverage.

What This Meant for Sellers

For sellers, 2025 was a year where strategy mattered more than timing.

Listings that launched aligned with market reality often sold efficiently, even in a high-inventory environment. Those that chased aspirational pricing frequently became stale and paid for it later.

The data reinforced a difficult but consistent truth: waiting for the market to “come back” was rarely rewarded.

Carrying costs, competition, and buyer fatigue often outweighed the benefit of holding out, particularly in the second half of the year. Sellers who succeeded treated pricing as a proactive decision, not a fallback plan.

Short-Term Outlook Heading Into 2026

As the market moves into 2026, inventory remains the variable to watch.

New listings have slowed seasonally, but active supply is still high enough to keep buyers cautious and selective. Interest-rate sentiment may improve, but affordability constraints haven’t disappeared.

The most likely near-term scenario is continued sorting: well-priced homes transact, misaligned ones adjust, and leverage remains situational rather than universal.

Thinking About Buying or Selling in 2026?

Markets like this reward strategy, not guesswork.

If you’re planning to buy or sell in 2026 and want clarity around pricing, timing, and leverage, we’re happy to help you think it through. Whether that means stress-testing a sale price, identifying real buying opportunities, or simply understanding how current conditions affect your plans, our role is to give you clear, grounded advice—before you make any big decisions. Get in touch with us by sending a message below!

Toronto Luxury Townhouse

Types of Townhouses in Toronto: Freehold vs Condo vs POTL

By Advice For Buyers, Real Estate, Toronto

When most people picture a townhouse, they imagine a row of homes neatly connected by shared walls — but in Toronto, that’s only half the story. What really defines a townhouse isn’t its look, but how you own it. From full land ownership to shared maintenance agreements, understanding the difference between freehold, condo, and POTL townhouses can save you surprises (and thousands of dollars) down the line.

Let’s break down the three main types you’ll find across Toronto — and help you decide which one fits your lifestyle best.

Freehold Townhouses: Complete Ownership, Maximum Control

Toronto Row House
Toronto Row House

A freehold townhouse is the closest thing you’ll find to owning a detached home in a connected row. You own both the building and the land it sits on — from the basement floor to the patch of grass out front.

With no condo board or management company, there are no monthly maintenance fees. But that independence comes with full responsibility. You’ll handle the roof repairs, lawn care, snow shovelling, and any exterior upkeep yourself. For some, that’s freedom. For others, it’s a to-do list that never ends.

Freehold townhomes are often found in mid-density pockets like Queen West, and older pockets of the city, where lots are deep enough to support row-style development. They’re also becoming more common in outer neighbourhoods of Scarborough and Etobicoke where builders can offer fee-free ownership.

Pros:

  • Full control over your home and land
  • No monthly maintenance or condo fees
  • Greater long-term appreciation tied to land value

Cons:

  • All exterior and structural maintenance is on you
  • Costs can add up for major repairs (roof, driveway, etc.)

Thinking about selling your freehold townhouse? Learn how to sell higher with Toronto Livings.

For a deeper comparison of ownership styles, check out GTA West Living’s guide on Freehold vs Condo Townhouses.

Condo Townhouses: Shared Spaces, Simplified Upkeep

Toronto Stacked Town House
Toronto Stacked Town House

A condo townhouse blends home-like living with the convenience of shared maintenance. You own the interior of your unit, but the exterior, land, and shared amenities belong to a condominium corporation. That means you’ll pay monthly condo fees, which typically cover landscaping, snow removal, roof repair, insurance on the exterior, and sometimes even utilities.

In exchange, you’ll have fewer weekend chores — but a bit less autonomy. The condo board oversees what you can and can’t do with your home’s exterior. Want to change your front door or install a satellite dish? You might need board approval first.

These townhouses are common in Liberty Village, East Bayfront, and along major transit corridors where land is scarce and vertical living makes sense. For many, they strike the right balance between ownership and ease.

Pros:

  • Lower individual maintenance responsibilities
  • Shared upkeep through predictable monthly fees
  • Often include amenities or shared green space

Cons:

  • Monthly condo fees can rise over time
  • Limited control over exterior appearance and common areas

For an official definition, visit the Condo Authority of Ontario’s explainer on condominium ownership.

If you’re exploring condo living in Toronto, visit our Buy Better guide for expert insights.

POTL Townhouses: The Best of Both Worlds

Toronto POTL Townhouse
Toronto POTL Townhouse

A POTL townhouse — short for Parcel of Tied Land — sits somewhere between a freehold and a condo. You own your home and the land beneath it, but it’s “tied” to a Common Elements Condominium Corporation (CEC). That means you also own a share of certain shared spaces — think private laneways, visitor parking, or landscaped courtyards.

You’ll pay a monthly POTL fee for maintenance of those shared elements, but otherwise, you control your property much like a freehold owner. It’s a hybrid model that gives you autonomy with a touch of community upkeep.

POTL developments are increasingly common in suburban pockets of Vaughan, Brampton, and North York (Downsview Park is a big fav of ours), where builders include private roads and shared driveways. They offer the best of both worlds — independent living without the full burden of maintenance.

Pros:

  • You own both the home and land
  • Shared maintenance of common areas like roads and landscaping
  • Typically lower fees than a full condo townhouse

Cons:

  • Still subject to condo-style rules for shared spaces
  • Legal structure can be complex — always review the status certificate

To better understand this hybrid form of ownership, read Merovitz Potechin LLP’s explanation of POTL and Common Elements Condos.

Want to hear us talk through these townhouse types in real time?

Tune into our latest Toronto Livings Podcast episode, where Mark and Joey break down the differences between freehold, condo, and POTL townhouses — with real examples from Toronto neighbourhoods.

🎙️ Listen to the episode here or find it on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.


Which Type Is Right for You?

When it comes to townhouses in Toronto, the right choice depends on how you want to live — and what you’re willing to manage.

TypeOwnershipFeesControlMaintenance
FreeholdHome + LandNoneFull100% Yours
CondoInterior + Shared LandMonthlyLimitedShared
POTLHome + Land + Shared ElementsSmall Monthly FeeModerateShared

Before you buy, ask your agent (hi 👋) to check the property’s title and status certificate — it’s the best way to confirm what you’re actually buying. Whether you want full control, minimal upkeep, or a balanced middle ground, there’s a townhouse type that fits your lifestyle.

Ready to explore what’s on the market? Start with our Buy Better guide or contact us below for personalized advice!