condominium market Archives - REM https://realestatemagazine.ca/tag/condominium-market/ Canada’s premier magazine for real estate professionals. Wed, 16 Jul 2025 14:09:31 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://realestatemagazine.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/cropped-REM-Fav-32x32.png condominium market Archives - REM https://realestatemagazine.ca/tag/condominium-market/ 32 32 Why Canada’s condo market is unraveling https://realestatemagazine.ca/why-canadas-condo-market-is-unraveling/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/why-canadas-condo-market-is-unraveling/#comments Mon, 14 Jul 2025 09:05:12 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/?p=39099 Canada’s condo market plunges as investor demand evaporates, inventory soars 400 per cent, and sales plummet—prompting fears of a prolonged downturn and stalled developments

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After a wave of rapid expansion, Canada’s condominium market is facing a dramatic reversal, as a glut of unsold inventory and a sharp retreat by investors have triggered a sector-wide slowdown.

A report from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation in June found that condominium apartment sales in Toronto have dropped 75 per cent from 2022 to the first quarter of 2025. In Vancouver, condo sales have dropped 37 per cent for the same period, according to the report.

 

Condos built to invest in – not to live in

 

Meanwhile, a report from data firm CoStar Group found that Canada’s inventory of condos has risen 400 per cent over the last three years. Carl Gomez, CoStar’s chief economist and author of the report, told Real Estate Magazine that much of the inventory is smaller units that were primarily built for investors.

“Those condo units aren’t designed for people to live in,” Gomez said. “They’re basically more of a hedge, get an investor in.”

However, investors have now fled both the Toronto and Vancouver markets due to higher interest rates than during the pandemic, which have now made units unaffordable. Gomez said either prices will have to come down or units will have to be made bigger in order to start moving the inventory, a pivot that won’t be an easy pill for developers to swallow as both will eat into their profits.

It may be necessary, though, given they are currently bleeding capital, according to Gomez. CMHC’s report found that investors face as much as a six per cent capital loss on pre-construction purchases concluded in 2024 in Toronto, and project cancellations have gone up five times in the city since 2022. In Vancouver, cancellations have gone up 10 times in the same time frame, according to the report.

 

Risk was overlooked, says Toronto Realtor

 

Toronto real estate agent Christopher Bibby told REM that the condo market really began to unravel in 2022, after interest rates went up.

“The writing’s on the wall now,” he said. “Prices have started to come down.”

CMHC’s report says prices have gone down 13.4 per cent in Toronto between 2022 and the first quarter of 2025, and 2.7 per cent in Vancouver. Bibby said the price erosion over the past two months has been the fastest and steepest he’s ever seen in the more than 20 years he’s been in the business, but it has been a stimulus for transactions to start finalizing after being stuck.

Bibby said that when interest rates were low, pre-construction prices were more than the resale value because there was a belief that prices would keep going up, which turned out not to be true. Add to that inflation, which has raised the cost of materials, as well as higher development fees and the inability to raise rents to meet higher costs, and condos are not as profitable a business as they once were.

Bibby felt back in 2021 that the market had hit its peak, but he said sellers didn’t want to believe that prices would eventually come down. At the time he felt it was a risky business venture, and he is not surprised about the current situation.

“People weren’t assessing what they were buying,” he said. “There was this belief the market would only go one way.”

 

A ‘classic bubble’

 

In Vancouver, Realtor Steve Saretsky told REM that what led to this situation was 20 years of a bull market.

“It’s kind of like a classic bubble,” he said. “It’s just all unraveling on itself.”

When there was high demand and interest rates were low, there was a speculation frenzy, he said. Now the market is experiencing the hangover after the party, with a record number of units seeing completion at exactly the wrong time.

CMHC’s report says that a record high of 25,572 condos were completed in Toronto in 2024, while 12,442 were done in Vancouver. Toronto now has 14 times more months of inventory than it did in 2022, according to the report, and it would take 58 months to sell that current stock at the current rate of sale. That means that developers will now put a hold on new build starts, which will sow the seeds for the next crisis down the line in three to four years, when supply won’t meet demand, according to Saretsky.

He sees the current condo bust as a natural market correction, though, after about 20 years of no price correction. 

“When you have 20 years of rising home prices basically every year, it creates complacency,” Saretsky said. “People think they can’t lose money in real estate. It creates malinvestment.”

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A deep dive into Toronto’s condominium market: Get informed and help your business https://realestatemagazine.ca/a-deep-dive-into-torontos-condominium-market-get-informed-and-help-your-business/ https://realestatemagazine.ca/a-deep-dive-into-torontos-condominium-market-get-informed-and-help-your-business/#respond Tue, 30 Jan 2024 05:01:58 +0000 https://realestatemagazine.ca/?p=28144 From historic origins to modern high-rises, gain insights on the evolution, legislation and future trends shaping Toronto's condominium landscape

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Being a successful agent in a competitive market takes work — there’s no question you must deliver value to your clients and stand out among the crowd.

A simple way to do this is to become better informed about the area and product you’re selling. And if that happens to be condominiums in Toronto, Fusioncorp Developments’ CEO and co-founder, Nick Ainis, can help.

Backed by detailed research, Ainis’ book, Building Toronto’s Skyline, is a 10-chapter story of how Toronto’s iconic residential towers evolved — from their early late 19th-century start to today’s modern high-rise buildings. The book, written with Charlie M. Wordsworth, launched last fall.

“In modern-day Toronto, so many people reside in apartments or condos that it’s difficult to imagine a time when renting a small area of a larger building was an unconventional, even shocking, way of life. Incredibly, Toronto was an anomaly in North America before 1899 because there were no purpose-built apartment buildings in the city.”

 

– Nick Ainis

 

Inspiration

 

When asked about his inspiration for the book, Ainis told REM it comes from “a love of what I do, and a genuine curiosity with history and the evolution of the condominium industry in Toronto. I was really interested in seeing the development and evolution of the condominium industry through the decades.”

In fact, Ainis is fascinated by the history of condominiums all the way from antiquity with the Romans to today. This includes the North American legislation being introduced and the many social and economic factors and initiatives, like Ontario’s protected Greenbelt area.

 

What you’ll learn

 

Building Toronto’s Skyline discusses the boarding houses and low-rise apartments built early on in fast-growing urban areas as an affordable way to house working-class families. It goes on with information about high-rise condominiums being introduced during the mid-20th century, when developers tried out new construction techniques and building materials.

“Improved technology in construction, metallurgy and an increased abundance of resources has led to a drastic decrease in the cost of building high rises in Toronto. Laws such as the Greenbelt Act of 2005 have also limited the space available for building, motivating developers to take on the risk of building high rises to squeeze the most amount of profit out of their available space. Most of the tallest condominiums seen in Toronto today are a project of the past 20 years of growth in the industry.”

 

– Nick Ainis

 

Ainis describes the book as “a must-read for anyone interested in Toronto’s history and its evolution to today’s modern city.” It comments on:

  • The benefits and downsides of condominiums vs apartment buildings
  • How population changes, demographics and economic development changed the housing market
  • The origins of condominiums from Rome to the first modern condominiums
  • Key legislation influencing the propagation of condominiums
  • Condominium beginnings in Toronto to its current explosive growth
  • Various architectural styles of condominiums
  • The future of condominiums: how they’ll look and the needs they’ll serve for future generations

 

The takeaway

 

As for the book’s biggest takeaway, Ainis says real estate professionals must have an understanding of what’s happening now to know what the future should hold:

“We have to study the trends to predict where we go in the future; to answer the hot questions of today including affordable housing and the housing crisis. We must look at history and the socioeconomic trends of the past to predict, meet and solve our current, present and future needs.”

 

– Nick Ainis

 

Building Toronto’s Skyline is available on Amazon in print, Kindle and audible editions.

 

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