Urbanation just released its Q1-2025 condominium market survey results for the Greater Toronto & Hamilton Area (GTHA). Here's how things are looking:

The entire GTHA recorded 533 new condominium sales and the City of Toronto recorded 215 new condominium sales in the quarter. Once again, and as you can see above, this is the lowest level since the early 90s.
For all intents and purposes, I think you can look at these sales figures as mostly representing a zero. The numbers are relatively small and a sale doesn't necessarily equate 1:1 to an eventual new home. The sale needs to be within a project that achieves its requisite pre-sales for construction financing.
Since the beginning of 2024, Urbanation has tracked a total of 5,734 pre-construction condominiums that have been put on hold, cancelled, placed into receivership, or converted to purpose-built rental.
So where does this leave us? It leaves us with:
69,042 condominium homes under construction across the GTHA
10,934 unsold condominiums in pre-construction projects
11,073 unsold condominiums in projects under construction
1,911 unsold condominiums in completed projects (standing inventory)
One hypothetical could be that many/most of the projects currently in pre-construction never actually make it to construction, which would mean that the above 10,934 condominiums just disappear from the market. For argument's sake, let's assume this happens. That would leave projects under construction and standing inventory.
Of the condominium's currently under construction, 11,073 are unsold, which represents about 16% of the total. For the units that have sold, some will belong to end users, some will belong to investors who have an ability to close, and the rest will be buyers who, frankly, don't want to close or who can't close.
I don't know what this latter percentage might be, but let's say that 40% of the condominiums sold and under construction become a problem and need to be "reabsorbed" in the market. That is, they need to find new buyers. That would equal 23,187 condominiums (and hopefully I'm being very conservative). In this scenario we would have:
11,073 unsold condominiums in projects under construction
23,187 condominiums that become a problem and need to reabsorbed in the market
1,911 unsold condominiums in completed projects
Total of 36,171 "unsold" condominiums
So, how long will it take to absorb these new homes? I don't know. It depends on a bunch of factors, including immigration. But I think we need at least 2 more years just to physically deliver the homes that are currently under construction. Then there may be a period of reabsorption. That continues to suggest to me that 2028 could be the year where we're on the other side of this.
Cover photo by Brian Jones on Unsplash

The turning point for the Toronto housing market, including pre-construction condominiums, was, I would say, in the spring/summer of 2022. This is when the market turned and sentiment changed dramatically. What that means is that we are about to enter year three of this downturn. Time flies when you're grinding away. How long it lasts is anyone's guess, but new sales and completions are a good place to look.
Last year, the GTHA saw approximately 29,800 condominium homes complete according to Urbanation. This is slightly above Zonda's estimate of 27,228. Whatever the exact number, it was a high number of completions. And this year, the forecast is for something similar. But given how precipitously new home sales have fallen off, it's only a matter of time before completions do the same.
Here's what Zonda Urban is currently forecasting:


Here's some unsurprising but important news via Urbanation:
New condominium apartment sales last year totalled 4,590 homes. This is a 78% decline compared to the latest 10-year average of 20,835 homes, and the slowest year for new condo sales in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area (GHTA) since 1996. See above chart.
Only 802 new condominium apartments were sold in Q4-2024.
Six projects launched in Q4-2024, totalling 1,829 homes, of which only 10% were sold. A total of 1,506 new condominium apartments started construction during this same quarter.
A total of 29,800 condominium homes were completed in 2024 -- a record. This year, 30,793 homes are expected to complete, which if it happens, will create another new record.
In total, 78,742 new condominium homes are currently under construction across the GTHA, as of Q4-2024.
This may seem like a lot. But 30k of these homes are expected to complete and occupy this year. That leaves around 48k under construction, plus whatever new starts end up happening in 2025. So as Shaun Hildebrand points out in the above release, at some point around 2026-2027, we are going to see a dramatic fall off in completions and new housing supply.
Even if starts magically ramped up this year (which would be unexpected), there would still be a period of relatively low completions that would need to work its way through the system. Development is, by nature, excruciatingly slow to respond to changes in demand. There's always a lag. So overall housing supply is something we're paying close attention to right now as we execute on our real estate strategies.
Chart via Urbanation
They are expecting 2027-2028 to be fairly normal. The above figures would be just under the 10-year average. But then completions fall off a cliff starting in 2029 and go down to basically nothing in 2030 — 411 condominium homes could be a single project!
My sense is that this cliff is going to occur earlier. 2027 will be five years since the market turned. That's enough time for many, if not most, pre-sales to get through construction. It's also important to point out the obvious fact that some large percentage of the above completions need to be categorized as new rental housing. So this looming housing shortage will impact both buyers and renters.
Cover photo by Patrick Tomasso on Unsplash
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