Toronto

Toronto-area housing prices creeping up again, says real estate board

Toronto's housing market continued to tighten last month as prices edged up four per cent from March and sales moved closer to the level they were at last April, the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board revealed Wednesday.

Prices edged up 4% from March, market showing signs of tightening: TRREB

A for sale sign sits in front of a home.
Toronto's data was released a day after the Real Estate Board of Greater published its April data, which it said showed home sales are staging a comeback and headed toward levels seen last spring. (Alex Lupul/CBC)

Toronto's housing market continued to tighten last month as prices edged up four per cent from March and sales moved closer to the level they were at last April, the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board revealed Wednesday.

Sales for the month hit 7,531, down 5.2 per cent from a year ago but up about nine per cent from March.

Those sales outpaced new listings, which were down by over a third from a year before, fuelling more competition between buyers who were too hesitant to buy homes earlier this year.

Pushing these buyers to the sidelines were eight consecutive interest rate hikes, which took a bite out of their borrowing power, even as prices started to tumble.

Their hesitance and those lower prices weighed on sellers too as many held off listing their homes because they won't fetch the big sums or bidding wars their neighbours had in 2021 and early 2022.

'There's a lot of frustration'

But real estate agents have started to see the market turn in recent months.

"Many buyers have come to terms with higher borrowing costs and are taking advantage of lower selling prices compared to this time last year," said TRREB president Paul Baron in a statement.

"The issue moving forward will not be the demand for ownership housing, but rather the ability to meet this demand with adequate supply."

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Toronto real estate agent Desmond Brown said there was a window for first-time home buyers to get into the market between December and February.

"That window's closed," he said. "We have all kinds of multiple offer situations going on right now. We don't have the supply for all of them and there's a lot of frustration."

New listings down, prices climbed in April

April's supply level was much lower than the city has seen in the past. New listings for the month totalled 11,364, down 38.3 per cent from a year ago.

The average price was also lower than it was a year ago, tumbling 7.8 per cent to $1,153,269. April's average price was roughly four per cent higher than the $1,108,499 the average buyer paid in March.

Detached homes fell 8.3 per cent since last April to $1,489,258, while semi-detached properties dropped 9.8 per cent to $1,135,599.

Townhouses slid 3.2 per cent to $986,121 over the same time period and condos were down eight per cent to $724,118.

A man with glasses and a black jacket stands on a residential street.
Real estate agent Desmond Brown said the amount of offers homes are receiving can make things frustrating for buyers. (Ivan Arsovski/CBC)

Toronto's data was released a day after the Real Estate Board of Greater published its April data, which it said showed home sales are staging a comeback and headed toward levels seen last spring.

Last month's Vancouver-area sales totalled 2,741, almost 16 per cent below the 10-year seasonal average and 16.5 per cent below the April 2022 level.

The composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver hit $1,170,700 last month, down 7.4 per cent from a year ago but up 2.4 per cent from March.

There were 4,307 new listings last month, a 29.7 per cent decrease, when compared with the prior April and a 22 per cent drop from the 10-year seasonal average of 5,525.

Experts mixed on what comes next 

Jason Mercer, the chief market analyst at the TTREB, said he expects demand for home ownership will increase as 2023 goes on.

Firstly, home buyers who were sidelined by Bank of Canada rate hikes are coming to terms with those increases and may be deciding to purchase a different type of home or look in a different area.  Secondly, he said there's a strong regional economy with job creation in a number of different sectors. 

James Laird is co-CEO of Ratehub.ca, which provides online mortgage tools among other services. He said although home prices are down year-over-year, they have recently been rising slightly each month.

"So I think it's fair to assume that the decreases in home prices might be behind us," he said.

Cranes in the foreground with Toronto's skyline in the background.
The year-over-year price of condos is down eight per cent to $724,118. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

Laird said prices could stabilize or slightly rise as the spring and summer unfold. That prediction is based on mortgage rate stability, which he said didn't exist until the Bank of Canada held its rate during the last two announcements.

Tony Stillo, director of economics for Canada at Oxford Economics, thinks the spring pick-up will fade by summer. 

"We think the economy nationwide is going to slip into a recession and we think that's happening during this spring," Stillo said. 

He said prices could bottom out late this year or early next, though he noted it's tough to predict the exact time.

With files from Talia Ricci