Toronto Region Market Update, January 2026

Interestingly even though the number of new listings that came to market declined by over 13 percent compared to last January, entering February inventory levels were up by over 8 percent. At the beginning of February almost 18,000 homes are available to buyers. The increase in inventory was directly related to January’s declining sales. Basically, sales fell faster than new listings; and as a result, inventory levels are higher even though fewer new listings came to market this January compared to last year.

Fewer listings coming to market is no doubt a reflection of sellers’ lack of market confidence. With prices declining and sale cycles approaching two months, it would appear only those sellers that are pressed to come to market are doing so. January’s average sale price may have also influenced those reluctant sellers.

In January the average sale price for all properties reported sold, including condominium apartments, came in at $973,289, 6.5 percent lower than last year, and the first time it has fallen below $1 million since before the Covid pandemic market. Taken alone, January’s average sale price is very misleading. In the City of Toronto, more than half of all reported sales – there were 1,067 in total – were condominium apartments. The average sale price generated by the 568 condominium apartments reported sold was only $631,932. The average sale price for all ground level properties sold in the City of Toronto came in at almost $1,200,000, including less expensive townhouses that sold at an average sale price of $876,585.

The most punishing aspects of the Toronto and Region resale market all came to play in January. Uncertainty has been a market factor since the Trump administration took office in early 2025. Affordability, although it has improved, remains a barrier to homebuying, even with the average sale price declining over 8 percent in January. Lastly, employment uncertainty is top of mind. Statistics Canada reported that in January 25,000 jobs had been lost.