Toronto's condo market in 2026 is in the deepest correction of any major real estate segment in the country. Sales between January and March 2026 hit a 35-year low — only 246 units sold across the entire 416. Prices are down 14–20% from the Q1 2022 peak, and rents are down 5.7% year-over-year. If you own a Toronto condo right now, you have three options. They are not equally good.

The real picture

The GTA average condo price hit $604,759 in January 2026, down 9.8% year-over-year. New construction sales fell 79%. Approximately 10% of pre-sold condos that registered in 2025 were returned to developers because buyers couldn't close. Average one-bedroom unfurnished rent in Toronto is $1,993/month — down $156 from a year ago.

This isn't a temporary blip. The investor model that drove Toronto's condo boom from 2018 to 2021 — buy pre-con, hold for appreciation, rent at break-even — is broken. The math doesn't work at 4.5% mortgage rates and falling rents.

Option 1 — Sell

The hardest emotional choice for many condo owners. Selling at today's softer prices feels like locking in a loss. But the math often favors selling in three specific situations:

Option 2 — Hold

Holding makes sense if three conditions are true: (a) you can afford the monthly carrying costs without stress, (b) you don't need the equity for any other purpose in the next 3–5 years, and (c) you have a clear thesis for why the market will recover by your exit window.

Be real about the carrying math. A Toronto condo that costs you $3,200/month all-in (mortgage + maintenance + property tax + insurance) and rents for $2,400/month is bleeding $9,600/year. Over five years, that's $48,000 of out-of-pocket cost. Unless prices appreciate 8–10%+ over that window, the hold is a loss.

The "wait for recovery" trap: recovery isn't automatic. Toronto condo supply has structural overhang from 2018–2022 pre-construction sales completing now. Until that inventory is absorbed, prices and rents are likely to drift sideways or lower. The recovery timeline could easily be 3–7 years.

Option 3 — Rent it out

Renting is the right move if (a) selling now would lock in a loss you can't tolerate, and (b) you can carry the gap between rent and carrying costs for several years. Toronto rents are still down — but rentals are filling, and many condo owners who can absorb a small monthly loss are choosing to rent rather than sell at a discount.

Two things to know before becoming a landlord:

The decision framework

For most Toronto condo owners in 2026, the decision is roughly:

If you're not sure which bucket you're in, the conversation is free and I won't push you toward any particular outcome.

Have questions about your specific situation?

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