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GTA home sales in December set record

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Last Updated on October 24, 2023 by Neil Sharma

2020 was a year like no other, but for Toronto’s real estate market, it was more of the same.

Sales reported through the MLS system rose by 8.4% from 2019, reaching 95,151. December also set a monthly record for sales, which, at 7,180, surged by 64.5% year-over-year.

“The Greater Toronto Area housing market followed an unfamiliar path in 2020. Following the steep COVID-induced drop-off in demand during the spring, home sales roared back to record levels throughout the summer and fall. A strong economic rebound in many sectors of the economy, ultra-low borrowing costs and the enhanced use of technology for virtual open houses and showings fuelled and sustained the housing market recovery,” Lisa Patel, president of TRREB, said in a statement.

 

GTA home sales in December set record

 

B-20, the 200 basis point mortgage stress test introduced in 2018, somewhat cooled detached home sales, but they roared back with a vengeance in 2020. There were 46,359 sales last year in the GTA, which is a 15.1% increase over 2019, led mainly by the 905 region where annual sales surged by 18.3% to 36,636.

Conversely, sales declined by 5.5% to 22,206 in the GTA condo market last year, with transactions decreasing by 6.7% to 15,245 in the City of Toronto and by 2.6% to 6,961 in the 905 region.

“While the housing market as a whole recovered strongly in 2020, there was a dichotomy between the single-family market segments and the condominium apartment segment. The supply of single-family homes remained constrained resulting in strong competition between buyers and double-digit price increases. In contrast, growth in condo listings far outstripped growth in sales. Increased choice for condo buyers ultimately led to more bargaining power and a year-over-year dip in average condo selling prices during the last few months of the year,” said Jason Mercer, TRREB’s chief market analyst.

However, according to , president and CEO of Royal LePage, the softer GTA condo market opened the door to first-time homebuyers, many of whom have sat helplessly on the sidelines in recent years as even the price of starter homes became unaffordable. But because the COVID-19 pandemic prompted a moratorium on accepting both immigrants and international students into the country, rents in investor-owned condominiums plummeted and price appreciation decelerated.

“That flattening of the price curb attracted an army of first-time buyers into the condominium market,” said Soper. “Super low interest rates, flattening prices and less competition ignited interest in homeownership among first-time homebuyers, and they’re snapping up properties”

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