Urbanation just released its Q2-2025 condominium market survey results for the Greater Toronto & Hamilton Area. The results are as expected: new home sales are slow (like, 91% below the 10-year average) and unsold inventory is rising. But what I'm most interested in is trying to guess the future.
Urbanation expects a total of 17,117 condominium homes to complete in the second half of this year, which would bring total completions for 2025 to 31,422 homes (which is an elevated number). Completions in 2026 are then expected to drop to a more "historically normal level" of 18,037 units.
At the same time, there are 64,623 condominium homes under construction as of Q2-2025. I take this to mean that, once the above 17,117 homes complete in the second half of this year, there will be at least 47,506 new homes still under construction as we start 2026.
If we do end up completing 18,037 units next year, and ignoring any new starts, that will leave just under 30k units under construction into 2027. If completions remain at a similar level after this, we could then be close to building our way through this condominium pipeline by the end of 2027.
Of course, this says nothing about actual absorption. It's one thing to build a new home, but it has to ultimately get filled. And right now, there are almost 2,500 unsold condominium apartments in newly completed projects across the region. This is a record high going back as far as 2005.
So it's hard to say. But my view continues to be that, by 2028, we should be on the other side of this market. In the meantime, if you're looking for a place to live in Toronto, I think you'd be hard pressed to find a better time to buy. Most people will be too scared, and that's the point.
Cover photo by Venrick Azcueta on Unsplash
Urbanation just released its Q2-2025 condominium market survey results for the Greater Toronto & Hamilton Area. The results are as expected: new home sales are slow (like, 91% below the 10-year average) and unsold inventory is rising. But what I'm most interested in is trying to guess the future.
Urbanation expects a total of 17,117 condominium homes to complete in the second half of this year, which would bring total completions for 2025 to 31,422 homes (which is an elevated number). Completions in 2026 are then expected to drop to a more "historically normal level" of 18,037 units.
At the same time, there are 64,623 condominium homes under construction as of Q2-2025. I take this to mean that, once the above 17,117 homes complete in the second half of this year, there will be at least 47,506 new homes still under construction as we start 2026.
If we do end up completing 18,037 units next year, and ignoring any new starts, that will leave just under 30k units under construction into 2027. If completions remain at a similar level after this, we could then be close to building our way through this condominium pipeline by the end of 2027.
Of course, this says nothing about actual absorption. It's one thing to build a new home, but it has to ultimately get filled. And right now, there are almost 2,500 unsold condominium apartments in newly completed projects across the region. This is a record high going back as far as 2005.
So it's hard to say. But my view continues to be that, by 2028, we should be on the other side of this market. In the meantime, if you're looking for a place to live in Toronto, I think you'd be hard pressed to find a better time to buy. Most people will be too scared, and that's the point.
Cover photo by Venrick Azcueta on Unsplash
The federal government should just purchase all the unsold condos at wholesale and call the housing problem solved. That would keep everyone whole and the developers get to stay in business or plan a structured closedown
The federal government should just purchase all the unsold condos at wholesale and call the housing problem solved. That would keep everyone whole and the developers get to stay in business or plan a structured closedown