Demand For Detached Homes In Toronto Up 27% From Last Year

Demand For Detached Homes In Toronto Up 27% From Last Year

Detached homes in Toronto got a little bit further out of reach in October. According to the Toronto Real Estate Board (TREB)’s latest numbers, prices rose, they’re selling above ask, and demand for them was much higher than last year at this time.

Prices

Prices of detached homes in the GTA are up 25.8% from last year, with an average price of $1,034,077. The 416 is a little pricier than the 905 as you might have guessed, with an average selling price of $1,303,339 – a 21.7% increase from October 2015. What you might not have guessed is the 905 continues to outperform with an average price increase of 29.4%, to an average selling price of $948,191. Toronto’s market is a little more mature, so a slower rate of appreciation should be expected.

Price Distribution

The average home price in the GTA is $1,034,339, but the median price is actually $845,000. You didn’t think everyone was buying a million dollar home did you? The most frequent range of purchase falls in the $700k – $799k range, with 13.5% of all homes purchased in this range. Another interesting tidbit in the distribution is 6.5% of purchasers in October were over $2 million.

Detached Home Sales By Price Range

Selling Over Ask

Sticker prices still look like suggested starting points for Toronto real estate. The average home sold for 3% over ask in the city, with all but one ward selling over ask. The only region that sold for under ask was C02, that averaged 96% of the sticker price. [statement about trend].

Absorption Is Higher Than Last Year

One of the most effective way to gauge demand for real estate is using the absorption rate. Basically it’s the percentage of inventory sold every month. When it’s higher than 20%, it’s considered a seller’s market and upwards pricing pressure should be expected on homes. If it’s below 10%, that’s when prices should generally fall. Anything between those two numbers is considered a balanced market.

Detached homes in Toronto had an absorption rate of 46%, which means it’s definitely still a seller’s market. This number is over 27% higher than this time last year, meaning demand isn’t waning – it’s increasing. This number is a percent lower than last month, but the drop is seasonally expected.

Detached Home Absorption In Toronto

Toronto Detached Absorption
Absorption of detached homes in the Toronto real estate market show a higher than normal seasonal demand in October 2016.

The good news – if you already have a detached home, your investment is sound for at least another month. The bad news, homes just got a little more unaffordable for those that don’t. An odd trend since even the government of Canada has started to warn about the frothy environment, but what do they know.

Data via TREB, Photo via Steve Browne & John Verkleir.


Like this post?

Like us on Facebook to be notified when the next post goes live.

3 Comments

COMMENT POLICY:

We encourage you to have a civil discussion. Note that reads "civil," which means don't act like jerks to each other. Still unclear? No name-calling, racism, or hate speech. Seriously, you're adults – act like it.

Any comments that violates these simple rules, will be removed promptly – along with your full comment history. Oh yeah, you'll also lose further commenting privileges. So if your comments disappear, it's not because the illuminati is screening you because they hate the truth, it's because you violated our simple rules.

  • Reply
    Kevin Hunter 7 years ago

    People need to realize that detached homes are going to be an extremely rare luxury in Toronto’s future.

  • Reply
    Cheryl McCoy 7 years ago

    Investment secured. There might be a crash in the cards, but actual houses are going to become more and more rare in Toronto – there’s no way around it.

    • Reply
      Jean 7 years ago

      This is all of the GTA thought. It doesn’t make sense to pay a million dollars for a bungalow in Halton. The crash is coming to the suburbs first.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *