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Greater Toronto Area Housing Market March 2026: Sales Rebound But New Listings Plunge 16.7%, Average Price Down 6.7% YoY

📅 7 4 月, 2026 14 min read
April 7, 2026 · Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) Official Data
📊 Source: Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) · MLS® System ⚡ Data Period: March 2026 · YoY vs March 2025 Average Price: $1,017,796 (-6.7%) Sales: 5,039 units (+1.7%) New Listings: 14,442 (-16.7%)
🏠 Toronto Home Prices 📊 GTA Real Estate 📈 TRREB Data 🏢 GTA Housing Market

On April 7, 2026, the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) released March 2026 housing market statistics. The data shows that Greater Toronto Area (GTA) resale housing market conditions tightened year-over-year: sales increased 1.7% to 5,039 units, but new listings fell 16.7% to 14,442 units. The average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7% year-over-year; the MLS® Home Price Index (HPI) Composite benchmark was down 7.4% year-over-year.

TRREB President Daniel Steinfeld said: "It's encouraging to see an uptick in March home sales compared to last month and last year. This suggests that an increasing number of GTA households are looking to take advantage of improved affordability as we move into the spring market." Chief Information Officer Jason Mercer added: "Buyers continued to benefit from substantial negotiating power on price across major market segments. However, if market conditions continue to tighten, selling prices could start levelling off as we move through the remainder of 2026." This aligns with the hunting zone SNLR timing analysis in our 2026 Canadian Home Buying Strategy.

📈 Sales: 5,039 units (+1.7%) 💰 Avg. Price: $1,017,796 (-6.7%) 📦 New Listings: 14,442 (-16.7%) ⏱️ Avg. DOM: 31 days
I. GTA Overall Market: Sales Rebound, Supply Tightens, Prices Decline

📊 Key Data Summary (March 2026 vs March 2025): The GTA resale housing market in March 2026 showed characteristics of "moderate sales growth, significant supply tightening, and year-over-year price declines." Total transactions of 5,039 units (+1.7%) and total sales volume of approximately $5.13 billion (-5.1%). New listings of 14,442 (-16.7%) represent the most notable data change this month, indicating weakened seller willingness to enter the market. Active listings of 21,596 units, with Months of Inventory (MOI) of 4.9 months, remain in buyer's market territory. This trend is consistent with the high-inventory market characteristics discussed in our analysis of Toronto and Vancouver price declines.

⏱️ Market Pace: Average days on market fell from 47 days a year ago to 31 days, a reduction of 16 days; the average sale-to-list price ratio was 96%, indicating buyers still have significant bargaining power. On a seasonally adjusted basis, both sales and new listings were up month-over-month compared to February 2026, with sales growing at a slightly higher rate than new listings.

IndicatorMarch 2026March 2025YoY ChangeInterpretation
Total Sales5,039 units4,956 units+1.7%Moderate growth, demand recovering
Total Sales Volume$5.13B$5.40B-5.1%Price decline driving larger drop in volume than sales
Average Price$1,017,796$1,090,372-6.7%YoY price decline, ample buyer bargaining power
New Listings14,44217,340-16.7%Significant supply tightening, weaker seller willingness
Active Listings21,59623,483-8.0%Inventory down YoY but still elevated
Avg. Days on Market31 days47 days-16 daysImproved transaction efficiency, reasonably priced homes selling faster
II. Property Type Analysis: Broad-Based Price Declines, Condos Lead Drop
🏠 Detached
Sales 2,235 · Avg. Price $1,342,375 (-8.0%)
Detached sales of 2,235 units accounted for 44.4% of total transactions. Average price of $1,342,375, down 8.0% year-over-year, the largest decline among all property types. 416-area detached average price $1,613,066 (-8.3%), 905-area $1,248,832 (-8.0%). Detached homes remain the most significant price adjustment segment, offering the largest buyer bargaining power. For more on the class divide in housing, see The Great Divide analysis.
🏢 Condo Apartment
Sales 1,422 · Avg. Price $620,479 (-9.6%)
Condo sales of 1,422 units accounted for 28.2% of total transactions. Average price of $620,479, down 9.6% year-over-year, the second-largest decline. 416-area condo average price $648,287 (-9.1%), 905-area $564,332 (-10.5%). The significant price decline and inventory pressure in the condo market are consistent with the trend observed in our Montreal market analysis.
🏘️ Townhouse
Sales 505 · Avg. Price $931,740 (-6.4%)
Townhouse sales of 505 units, average price $931,740, down 6.4% year-over-year. As a "missing middle" housing type, townhouses offer a compromise between space and price.
🏡 Semi-Detached
Sales 442 · Avg. Price $1,008,246 (-5.5%)
Semi-detached sales of 442 units, average price $1,008,246, down 5.5% year-over-year, the smallest decline among all property types. 416-area average $1,231,967 (-6.4%), 905-area $850,266 (-5.2%). The relative price resilience of semi-detached homes reflects buyer demand for "entry-level" ground-related housing.
Property TypeSalesShareAverage PricePrice YoY416 Avg905 Avg
Detached2,23544.4%$1,342,375-8.0%$1,613,066$1,248,832
Semi-Detached4428.8%$1,008,246-5.5%$1,231,967$850,266
Townhouse50510.0%$931,740-6.4%
Condo Apt1,42228.2%$620,479-9.6%$648,287$564,332
III. 416 vs 905: Core-Suburban Price Gap Narrows
🏙️ 416 Area (City of Toronto)
Sales 1,413 · Avg. Price $1,022,874 (-8.3%)
416 Area total sales of 1,413 units, average price $1,022,874, down 8.3% year-over-year. Detached average $1,613,066 (-8.3%), semi-detached $1,231,967 (-6.4%), condo $648,287 (-9.1%). Core area price adjustments are comparable to suburban areas, indicating city-wide synchronized adjustment.
🏞️ 905 Area (Surrounding Suburbs)
Sales 3,626 · Avg. Price $1,017,796 (-6.0%)
905 Area total sales of 3,626 units, average price $1,017,796, down 6.0% year-over-year. Detached average $1,248,832 (-8.0%), semi-detached $850,266 (-5.2%), condo $564,332 (-10.5%). Suburban condo price declines exceed core area, indicating greater pressure in outer suburban condo markets.

📊 Regional Comparison Summary: The price gap between 416 and 905 areas is narrowing. In March, the 416 average price was only about 0.5% higher than 905 ($1,022,874 vs $1,017,796), indicating that suburban price adjustments are comparable to the core area. This aligns with the conclusion in our Toronto and Vancouver price decline analysis — in a high-interest-rate environment, suburbs no longer command a premium.

IV. SNLR & Inventory Analysis: Market Shifting from Buyer's Toward Balanced Territory
📊 SNLR Calculation (GTA Overall)
Sales-to-New-Listings Ratio = 5,039 / 14,442 ≈ 34.9%
The GTA's SNLR for March 2026 was 34.9%, still within buyer's market territory (below 40%). However, compared to March 2025 (4,956/17,340≈28.6%), the ratio has increased, indicating the market is slowly shifting from deep buyer's market toward balanced territory. This is a direct reflection of the sharp decline in new listings — supply tightening is changing supply-demand dynamics. For a detailed guide on using SNLR, see our 2026 Canadian Home Buying Strategy.
📦 Months of Inventory (MOI)
Active Listings / Monthly Sales = 21,596 / 5,039 ≈ 4.3 months
GTA overall MOI was 4.3 months, still above the 4-month balanced threshold, but down from the same period last year. TRREB Chief Information Officer Jason Mercer noted: "If market conditions continue to tighten, selling prices could start levelling off as we move through the remainder of 2026." This is highly relevant to the discussion in our 2026 Interest Rate Scenario Analysis.
RegionSalesNew ListingsSNLRMarket StatusAvg. Price
Toronto Central9532,54831.8%Buyer's Market$1,045,520
Toronto West4891,31937.3%Buyer's Market$1,061,204
Toronto East4811,13439.3%Buyer's Market$934,948
Peel Region8762,36431.0%Buyer's Market$950,718
York Region8672,57920.2%Deep Buyer's Market$1,104,944
Durham Region4091,57639.3%Edge of Buyer's Market$843,965
Halton Region5391,55938.3%Buyer's Market$1,157,450

📊 TRREB Chief Information Officer Commentary: "Buyers continued to benefit from substantial negotiating power on price across major market segments, which explains why benchmark and average selling prices were down year-over-year. However, if market conditions continue to tighten, as they did in March, selling prices could start levelling off as we move through the remainder of 2026." This assessment is closely tied to the stable interest rate environment following the Bank of Canada's March 18 hold — stable rates allow both buyers and sellers to make more rational decisions.

V. Price Range Analysis: Transaction Distribution by Price

📈 Price Distribution Characteristics: According to TRREB price range data, March 2026 GTA transactions were concentrated in the following price ranges:

  • $1,000,000-$1,249,999: 1,853 units (largest share), indicating the million-dollar range remains the mainstream transaction range in GTA
  • $900,000-$999,999: 1,048 units, strong mid-to-low price segment demand
  • $800,000-$899,999: 1,046 units, active first-time buyer activity
  • $2,000,000+: 625 units, the high-end market still has some transaction volume

Price Center Shifting Downward: Compared to 2025, the price center of gravity in March 2026 shifted noticeably downward. The share of transactions above $1,500,000 decreased, while the share below $900,000 increased, reflecting buyer preference for lower-priced property types (such as condos) or more distant areas. This aligns with the discussion of condos as an affordability safety valve in The Great Divide analysis.

Price RangeSales VolumeSharePrimary Property Type
$400,000-$499,9994609.1%Condo
$500,000-$599,9994909.7%Condo, Townhouse
$600,000-$699,99957711.5%Condo, Townhouse
$700,000-$799,99968813.7%Townhouse, Semi
$800,000-$899,99973614.6%Semi, Townhouse
$900,000-$999,99973614.6%Semi, Detached
$1,000,000-$1,249,9991,85336.8%Detached, Semi
VI. Trend Interpretation & TRREB Outlook: Supply Pipeline at Risk of Running Dry
📈 Early Signs of Market Tightening
16.7% Drop in New Listings Is the Biggest Variable
The 16.7% year-over-year decline in new listings in March is the most notable data change this month. If this trend continues, supply tightening will gradually translate into price support. TRREB Chief Information Officer Jason Mercer noted: "If market conditions continue to tighten, selling prices could start levelling off as we move through the remainder of 2026." For more on how supply tightening affects prices, see our analysis of the Montreal and Quebec City inventory crisis.
🏗️ Long-Term Supply Crisis
TRREB CEO Warns: Supply Pipeline at Risk
TRREB CEO John DiMichele emphasized: "The GTA housing supply pipeline is in danger of running dry in the medium-to-long term. The federal and provincial governments announcements on HST and development charge relief were important affordability policy initiatives designed to spur new home sales and construction. It will be important to ensure that the right types of homes are built, namely 'missing middle' home types bridging the gap between condos and traditional single-family homes." This view aligns with the discussion in our development charge halving policy analysis.

🏗️ TRREB CEO John DiMichele's Full Statement: "The GTA housing supply pipeline is in danger of running dry in the medium-to-long term. The federal and provincial governments announcements on HST and development charge relief were important affordability policy initiatives designed to spur new home sales and construction. It will be important to ensure that the right types of homes are built, namely 'missing middle' home types bridging the gap between condos and traditional single-family homes. This is contemplated in the recent Ontario Building Homes and Improving Transportation Infrastructure Act."

VII. HousingAI Strategy Recommendations: GTA Decision Framework for a Diverging Market

🎯 GTA Real Estate Strategy Based on March 2026 TRREB Data

1
Buyer Strategy: SNLR Still Low, Ample Negotiating Power
GTA overall SNLR of 34.9% remains in buyer's market territory (below 40%). Buyers continue to enjoy significant negotiating power across major market segments. Watch for SNLR rising above 40% as a price stabilization signal. Condos and townhouses are the most price-adjusted segments and worth prioritizing.
2
Seller Strategy: Price Precisely, Avoid Over-Optimism
The 16.7% year-over-year decline in new listings indicates weakening seller willingness. For those who must sell, price based on recent comparable sales to avoid extended listing periods. The current average sale-to-list price ratio of 96% indicates significant buyer bargaining power.
3
Investor Strategy: Focus on "Missing Middle" Opportunities
TRREB CEO specifically emphasized the importance of "missing middle" housing — townhouses and semi-detached homes that bridge the gap between condos and traditional single-family homes. These property types have seen relatively moderate price adjustments (semi-detached only -5.5%) and may benefit from future policy support.
4
Long-Term Perspective: Supply Tightening Is a Potential Price Catalyst
The 16.7% drop in new listings is the most notable data point this month. If this trend continues, combined with the effects of HST and development charge relief policies, prices could stabilize or even rebound in the second half of 2026. Long-term investors should closely monitor new listing trends.

📌 Final Conclusion: GTA Market at a Critical "Buyer's-to-Balanced Transition" Window

The March 2026 TRREB data depicts a GTA housing market in transition: moderate sales growth, a sharp drop in new listings, and year-over-year price declines with month-over-month stabilization. SNLR rising from 28.6% to 34.9% indicates the market is slowly shifting from deep buyer's market toward balanced territory.

Five Key Findings:
1️⃣ Sales rebound but supply tightens — Sales +1.7% vs New Listings -16.7%, supply-demand dynamics are changing.
2️⃣ Broad-based price declines, condos lead — Condo prices -9.6%, detached -8.0%, ample buyer bargaining power.
3️⃣ SNLR remains in buyer's market territory — 34.9% SNLR means buyers still have price negotiating power.
4️⃣ 416 vs 905 price gap narrowing — Suburbs no longer command a premium, price gap only 0.5%.
5️⃣ Supply pipeline at risk of running dry — TRREB CEO warns of medium-to-long-term supply crisis, policy needs to focus on "missing middle" housing.

One-sentence summary: The GTA housing market is at a critical "buyer's-to-balanced transition" window. Buyers should take advantage of the current ample bargaining power window while watching for SNLR recovery signals; sellers need precise pricing to respond to competition; long-term investors should pay attention to the supply tightening trend signaled by the drop in new listings. In the second half of 2026, if supply continues to tighten, prices are expected to stabilize. For more Canadian housing market analysis, visit HousingAI Insights.

—— HousingAI · Data-Driven GTA Market Insights

📚 Data Sources and Description

Primary Source: Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB), "Market Watch - March 2026," released April 7, 2026. Data collected via TRREB's MLS® System.

Coverage: Greater Toronto Area (GTA), including the City of Toronto (416 Area) and surrounding suburbs (905 Area): Peel Region, Halton Region, York Region, Durham Region, Simcoe County, etc.

Definition of Average Price: The arithmetic mean of all transaction prices, influenced by high-end properties; median price better reflects typical market levels. SNLR (Sales-to-New-Listings Ratio) = Monthly Sales / Monthly New Listings, a core indicator of market heat.

YoY Changes: All percentage changes are compared to the same month of the previous year (March 2025). TRREB data is preliminary and subject to revision.

Related Reading: Toronto & Vancouver Price Decline Truth | 2026 Canadian Home Buying Strategy | 2026 Interest Rate Scenarios | The Great Divide | Montreal & Quebec City Affordability Crisis | BoC March 18 Hold Analysis

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