Most articles about Toronto real estate in 2026 focus on what's hard — falling prices, mortgage renewal stress, condo oversupply, sellers sitting on the sidelines. There's a quieter story almost nobody is telling. Move-up buyers — families ready to trade a condo or starter home for a larger one — are in their best position in five years. Here's the math.
Why "down market" is good for move-up buyers
Counter-intuitive but true: if you're trading up, what matters isn't whether your existing property has gone up or down. What matters is the spread between your existing property and the one you want to buy.
In 2022 at peak: a 2-bed condo at Yonge & Eglinton might have been $850K. A 3-bed semi in Leslieville might have been $1.45M. Spread: $600K to bridge with new mortgage + down payment.
In 2026 today: that same condo is worth $720K. The Leslieville semi is worth $1.25M. Spread: $530K. Even though both properties are down in dollar terms, the move-up buyer needs $70K less to make the trade. Add in lower transaction costs because the percentages apply to lower prices, and the move-up math has gotten meaningfully easier.
The numbers in detail
Example: Toronto family trading up
Current: 2-bedroom condo, Liberty Village, market value $680K. Mortgage balance: $420K. Net equity: $260K.
Target: 3-bedroom semi-detached, Roncesvalles, market value $1.25M.
The trade — 2022 peak vs 2026 today:
2022 scenario (hypothetical)
- Sell condo at $800K, net $750K after costs, payoff mortgage $440K → $310K net equity
- Buy semi at $1.5M with $310K down → $1.19M mortgage at 2.5% = ~$5,330/month
- Total monthly housing cost: ~$5,800 (mortgage + tax + utilities)
2026 scenario (today)
- Sell condo at $680K, net $635K after costs, payoff mortgage $420K → $215K net equity
- Buy semi at $1.25M with $215K down → $1.04M mortgage at 4.5% = ~$5,760/month
- Total monthly housing cost: ~$6,200 (mortgage + tax + utilities)
Monthly cost is roughly similar. But the move-up family is buying a $1.25M home instead of a $1.5M home — and the home itself has objectively more value at the lower price (same physical asset, less paid).
Three move-up scenarios that work especially well in 2026
1. Condo to detached
The widest spread in the market. Condos are down 6.3% YoY. Detached is down 4.1%. So the trade-up math improved in 2026 even more than the overall market.
The best version: trade a downtown 1-bed investor unit for a 905 detached in a transit-connected pocket. The condo capital you free up plus a moderate insured mortgage gets you into a real family home.
2. Starter home to family home (same neighbourhood)
The classic move. You bought a starter detached or semi in 2018-2020, you have kids now, you need more space. Moving within the same neighbourhood preserves your community, schools, friendships. The math works because both properties moved in similar percentages.
3. Mid-range freehold to upper-end freehold
Higher-end Toronto homes ($2M+) have corrected slightly more than mid-range ($1M-1.5M). The trade up to a $2M+ home from a $1.2M home is more attractive in 2026 than it was in 2022.
The three things you have to get right
1. Sequence the sale and purchase carefully
Sell first, then buy — or buy first, then sell? Generally sell first in 2026 because: (a) you know exactly what you have to spend, (b) no bridge financing, (c) you can negotiate harder on the buy.
But: if you find the perfect upgrade and can carry both for 30–60 days, buying first locks in the home before someone else does. Have a mortgage broker pre-qualify you for a bridge loan in either case.
2. Don't fall in love with the wrong move-up home
You'll see homes 25–35% above your target price that "feel right." Resist. Stretch budgets at peak rates create real stress. Find the right home at your real budget.
3. Time the closing dates correctly
Match the closing dates as closely as possible — same day if you can. Otherwise you're paying for two homes for a window, or you're moving twice. Both expensive.
The hidden bonus: mortgage flexibility
Move-up buyers in 2026 have more mortgage tools than five years ago:
- 30-year amortizations available for first-time buyers (note: only if you qualify as a first-time buyer — most move-up buyers don't)
- $1.5M insured mortgage cap means you can buy up to $1.5M with smaller down payment than before
- Falling rate path likely from current levels — renewal optionality is real
What to do if you're considering moving up
- Get a real CMA on your current property — know exactly what you'd net at sale
- Talk to a mortgage broker about pre-approval for the move-up home
- Tour 5–10 target properties to calibrate what you actually want
- Run the closing-date sequence with your realtor
- Don't wait for "rates to fall" — buyers waiting on perfect timing usually overpay when the market shifts
If you'd like to run the move-up math for your specific situation — current property value, target property pricing, mortgage scenarios — the conversation is free. Most move-up buyers in 2026 are pleasantly surprised at how the math actually works.
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