Tag Archives: toronto house prices
March Madness in Toronto
Greater Toronto Realtors reported 9,690 sales through the Toronto MLS System in March 2012. This result was up by almost 8% in comparison to the 8,986 deals reported during the same period in 2011.
Comment: It is still amazing that sales can be up when listings are not – or even down. Every month that sales rise and listings don’t just means that there are even fewer homes for buyers to choose from.
“The GTA resale market has not suffered from a lack of willing buyers this year. Buyers have been spurred on by the positive affordability picture brought about by low mortgage rates,” said Toronto Real Estate Board President Richard Silver. “The challenge has been a lack of inventory. Many listings have attracted multiple interested buyers. Strong competition has led to annual rates of price growth well above the long-term average.”
Comment: When 1/2 of houses in the $600–900,000 range sell for over asking… yikes.
The average selling price in the GTA was $504,117 in March – up by 10.5% in comparison to March 2011.
Comment: Wow! I think January was up 8%, then February was up 9% and now March is up 10%. This is nuts. And all from a severe lack of inventory.
“The number of new listings was up last month in comparison to March 2011. However, based on the historic relationship between price and listings, the GTA resale market should be better supplied. If competition between buyers remains as strong as it is right now, we will almost certainly see an average selling price above $500,000 for 2012 as a whole,” said Jason Mercer, TREB’s Senior Manager of Market Analysis.
City of Toronto (“416″)
2012 Sales: 3,682 | Average Price: $548,354
2011 Sales: 3,610 | Average Price: $498,050
Rest of GTA (“905″)
2012 Sales: 6,008 | Average Price: $477,006
2011 Sales: 5,376 | Average Price: $428,155
All of the GTA
2012 Sales: 9,690 | Average Price: $504,117
2011 Sales: 8,986 | Average Price: $456,234
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
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Toronto’s most underrated neighbourhoods
New Toronto
Edward Keenan and Katie Underwood – Toronto Star
Once upon a time in Toronto, if you were searching for a place to live, you just looked at the neighbourhood that suited your lifestyle. And if the area you liked had become popular — and therefore a little too pricey — you just wandered a few blocks away and found a similar pocket of the city the big wallets hadn’t discovered yet.
But the combination of Toronto’s constant population growth and a sustained real-estate boom over the past decade and a half means you’ll wear out a lot of shoe leather now trying to find a deal. The map of neighbourhoods semi-officially recognized as gentrified or up-and-coming now stretches the length of all the subway lines, and covers virtually every square metre south of St. Clair Ave. from the Beach to Jane St. It’s enough to make some people who want a decent, affordable house take a long look at Hamilton, Milton or Peterborough.
However, there are still places where you can find a relative bargain — neighbourhoods that go unmentioned in the trend stories but offer a quality of life and amenities similar to what you’d find in more celebrated (and punishingly expensive) quarters of the city. We ventured away from the subway lines to find the qualities we’ve come to love about the places we can’t afford.
IF YOU’RE PRICED OUT OF THE BEACH, TAKE A LOOK AT NEW TORONTO
Close to gorgeous public parkland and the lake? Check. Easy access to the 501 Queen streetcar, running 24 hours? Check. A main drag lined with pubs, restaurants, specialty coffee shops and pet spas? Check. It could be a list of amenities you’d find in the Beach —but it’s at the other end of the streetcar line in New Toronto, which shares much in common with its pricier east-end counterpart.
The natural beauty of this “streetcar suburb” sandwiched between Mimico and Long Branch is defined not just by its access to the western beaches, but also the sprawling Colonel Samuel Smith Park, which contains some of the oldest buildings in Toronto. These include the former “asylum” that’s been restored and put to use by Humber College. The park also features a unique figure-eight ice-skating path at its centre.
There’s a good mix of detached single-family homes, new townhouses, bungalows and apartment towers on both sides of Lake Shore Blvd. W. for half of what you’d pay in the Beach.
LOCATION
If you follow the lake west to Etobicoke, you’ll pass through New Toronto. The neighbourhood hugs the shore close to the Mississauga border in the city’s southwest end.
BOUNDARIES
West: Twenty-Third St.; East: Dwight Ave.; North: GO Rail Line; South: Lake Ontario.
TRANSIT
The Gardiner Expressway sits about a five-minute drive north of the neighbourhood, providing a direct route downtown. At war with your car? Mimico GO Station is close by and the Queen 501 streetcar also runs along the main drag. Those heading downtown can make a quick switch at Roncesvalles Ave. from the 501 Queen to the 504 King car. The 44 Kipling and the 110 Islington bus routes head north from New Toronto to the subway. If you’re the “scenic route” type hop on your bike to take full advantage of the lakeshore panorama.
APPROXIMATE TIME TO UNION STATION
By car: 16 minutes
By streetcar: 68 minutes
By GO train from Mimico station: 17 minutes
PARKS
Highlights include the baseball diamond at Rotary Peace Park and a playground, splash pad and paved surface perfect for rollerblading at Prince of Wales Park. The socially minded New Toronto pooch can roam free in the off-leash area at Colonel Samuel Smith Park.
RECREATION
Residents can head to Ourland Community Centre for tennis, bocce and kids’ camps or go skating at Mimico Arena, but the Mastercard Centre for Hockey Excellence is worth the quick drive west of the ‘hood. Home to four rinks, it’s the official practice facility for the Leafs and Marlies, and offers occasional free family skates on Saturday afternoons. FYI Battle of the Blades fans: The show’s third season was filmed there.
EDUCATION/SCHOOLS
The lakeshore offshoot of Humber College — home to 5,000 full-time students and the school’s main hub for its arts, social work and police foundations programs — sits just west of New Toronto and is easily accessible by transit. Lakeshore Collegiate Institute and Father John Redmond Catholic Secondary are the local high schools, while Seventh Street and Twentieth Street Junior Schools, both opened in the 1920s, serve the elementary level alongside St. Teresa’s Catholic school.
HIGHEST RANKED ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
St. Teresa’s Catholic Elementary School (8.9÷10)
HIGHEST RANKED HIGH SCHOOL
Father John Redmond Catholic Secondary School (7.2÷10)
CULTURAL CAPITAL
The Gallery Studio Café (2877 Lake Shore Rd. W.) does triple duty as a coffeehouse, live music venue and gallery space for artists.
SAFETY RANKING
Ranked the 82nd safest out of 140 Toronto neighbourhoods.
WHAT’S THE CATCH?
The streetcar is convenient, but it can be a loooong trip to more popular destinations downtown — the trip to Yonge and Queen Sts. takes about an hour.
GOOD TO KNOW
Colonel Samuel Smith Park is home to the first wetlands and wildlife preserve on the Great Lakes.
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416−388−1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
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Houses out of reach for first time buyers in Toronto
Rachel Sa – Toronto Sun
The average price for a single-family home in Toronto hit $606,000 last month.
That’s according to a new system for tracking home and condo sales launched last week by the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA).
It’s not a misprint. The cost of a Toronto house is up by approximately 50% since 2005.
But, fear not! According to CREA, the astronomical cost to be a homeowner in the 416 is actually still affordable to the average Torontonian.
Comment: But it is, truly it is. Let’s take the average price and work out the mortgage payments using the average 5-year rate. So, if the average detached is $606,600 right now and the 5-year rate has gone up to 3.09%, then the monthly mortgage payment with 20% down would be $2,342.22. Back in 2005, mortgage rates were around 6.05% or so. Thus, for a house priced $403,593, the monthly mortgage payment would have been $2,096.13 – a difference of about $250. But, taking inflation into account, that $2,096.13 in 2005 would be worth about $2,341.59 as of last year. Basically the same. So yes, the average cost to own a home in the 416 is as affordable as it was in 2005.
Breathe, Rachel. Just breathe.
Then go look for these mythical average Torontonians and learn their secrets. Perhaps also borrow some money. Hey, we can afford it!
In all seriousness, if it’s true the “average” Torontonian doesn’t gulp when dropping well over half-a-million on a regular old house, then we have truly pushed the middle class out and the city is becoming the exclusive playground of another demographic all together.
Comment: But you are forgetting, this is an average. Which means that half of the detached houses in the 416 are less than $606,600. If you do not need a 3,000 square foot Victorian with granite and stainless steel and potlights across the street from Trinity Bellwoods, then I can show you all sorts of options for $400k. No, they won’t be near Yonge & St. Clair, but such is life.
Unless you already have a foothold in the downtown market, how on earth is the average Torontonian going to come up with a 20% down payment for a $606,000 house?
Comment: They do not need to, they only need 5%. And they do not have to buy something that expensive. I have many clients who are first time buyers looking in the $500k range. They have good jobs, money in the bank and sometimes help from parents. That is how they do it. The income need to qualify for a $500,000 house with 5% down and 25 year amortization is just under $98k. Many couples make 50-60% more than that, easily qualifying. And if they have 10% down and ma & pa chip in an extra 5%, then that mortgage only costs them $2,066 a month – less than rent on a 2-bedroom condo.
Is it any wonder so many people, especially young, first-time buyers, turn to the condo market?
Comment: But that is not always a price issue, it is a location issue. They do not want to live at Danforth/Dawes in the only house they can afford for $400k, so they choose a condo downtown. This way they can walk to work and have every convenience nearby. Housing choices are not always dictated by price.
While they’re still fortunate to be able to afford to buy a home at all, the idea of owning a house in the city — or the Holy Grail of Toronto real estate, a detached house — is a dream. A sweet, sweet dream: I’m picturing a front lawn and a backyard. Sigh.
It’s not the cost of city real estate per se that has me steamed, although the thought of how to buy a house that isn’t ready to collapse into a heap of lead pipes and drywall has kept me up at night recently.
It’s that real estate organizations like CREA are still trying to sell our uber-expensive housing as affordable. That is irresponsible in my view and, to many, insulting.
Comment: But it is true, as I have shown. You are only looking at the sticker price, not the monthly cost. We all buy houses (and cars to a large extent) based on the monthly cost. Go back 30 years and a $200,000 mortgage at 18% cost about $2,370 in 1981 dollars. Adjust for inflation and that works out to $5,500 today! And that is more than double the $2,342 a $606,600 mortgage at 3.09% costs today (both amortized over 25 years with 20% down). So housing is actually more affordable now than ever before.
The other line that supposedly makes Toronto housing affordable is that, compared to other big cities, our real estate is a steal.
That may be true, but I don’t really care how much cheaper Toronto is compared to London or New York.
We’re Torontonians. We don’t live in London or New York.
And, in Toronto, $606,000 is still a whack load of cash in a city that can’t even get its act together to provide adequate transit.
Comment: That is for all single family homes. Semi-detached cost less, townhouses even less. Detached are a lot more, around $725,000. But semis can be had for $500k or less, towns for $300,000 – even in cool areas!
I’m not anti-home-ownership; the opposite, actually. I own a condo (well, the mortgage company and I share it at this point) and I hope to buy a house in the city with the fiancé after our wedding.
This, of course, will take our combined incomes and a heck of a lot of scrimping and saving. And there’s nothing wrong with that.
What I’m against is irresponsible home ownership.
That is, if you’re barely scraping by to make your monthly payments now and an (inevitable) uptick in interest rates results in a personal financial crisis of cataclysmic proportions, well then, guess what? That’s not sustainable, and it’s certainly not affordable.
Comment: You got it! Just because the bank says it will give you $700,000 does not mean you need to spend it all! I spent about $200,000 less than the bank agreed to give me, just to be safe. I have a great house, even if it is not quite where I want it. But I can afford it without breaking a sweat. In time, I will build equity and I will move up to something I like more. But that will take time and I am okay with that. Trust me, in my line of work it is VERY easy to get jealous, I see amazing homes every day. But I know that if I am smart and take my time, I can have something lovely one day too. Or win the lottery, whichever comes first.
In a lagging economy, at a time when we are bombarded with messages of austerity, reminded over and over that the average Canadian carries too much debt and that we must start to live within our means, the fact we’re being told expensive real estate is affordable, thanks to low interest rates, is a recipe for disaster.
Comment: No no no. Being told it is affordable has nothing to do with it. Being affordable or not has nothing to do with it. It is our consumer culture that tells people they have to have the best, all the time, that is the problem. People who buy 70″ TVs when 40″ would do. Buying a BMW X6 for $120,000 when a Chevy Equinox would be just fine – and 1/5th the price. We have all been taught that if it does not have granite and stainless and potlights, then it is no good. That is the problem. Managing expectations and trying to keep spending down.
But then, we can’t expect the CREA, or any other organization with a vested interest in keeping Toronto’s real estate market red hot, to hold our hands.
Comment: You are all adults, are you not? And we do not make things up. There are around 100,000 sales in the GTA every year. That is 100,000 sellers, 100,000 buyers, 100,000 listing agents and 100,000 buyer’s agents. Never mind the friends and family offering advice to all involved. Some half a million people are involved in a years sales, which is where the prices come from. You guys all create the market, not CREA. Anyone can interpret data in any way they want, but the facts speak.
People have to be their own watch dogs.
And we need to have informed, realistic expectations about what we can and cannot afford.
Comment: You got it!
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Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960
Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.
—————————————————————————————————–
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