# Land is not the problem right now

By [Brandon Donnelly](https://brandondonnelly.com) · 2026-04-13

housing, land, development, real-estate, urbanism, affordable-housing, toronto, bullpen, patrick-condon, ubc

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This is a follow-up to [yesterday's post](https://brandondonnelly.com/carrots-over-sticks) about too many people allegedly speculating on underutilized urban land. Over the weekend, I saw Patrick Condon, a professor at UBC and author of the book "[Broken City: Land Speculation, Inequality, and Urban Crisis](https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/B/bo215804969.html)," [argue](https://x.com/pmcondon2/status/2043149832983114070?s=20) that "urban land is the impossible-to-ignore driver of the housing crisis." Is it really? Let me offer the developer's perspective and explain what has happened in Toronto.

It is certainly true that the price of development land appreciated rapidly toward the end of the last cycle and that, at the time, there was enough margin for developers to bifurcate the work of zoning land and actually building out projects. But since 2022, that has gone away, and we have seen a dramatic correction in pricing.

According to [Bullpen](https://bullpenconsulting.ca) and Batory's Q4-2025 High-Rise Land Insights Report, the average sold price for a high-density site in the GTA has gone from $119 per buildable square foot in 2019 to $78 per buildable square foot at the end of last year (a ~34% decline).

But this is a blended average. In my experience, the falloff in pricing has been even more dramatic and, in many cases, land now feels illiquid. With rents declining and new condominiums not selling, what's the value? Land prices are a function of what you can do with the land. If what you can do disappears, so too does the value. Land is not the problem right now.

But even if we were to ignore current market factors, it's debatable whether land prices were really the primary driver of unaffordable housing. About six years ago, Toronto developer Urban Capital [published](https://brandondonnelly.com/site-magazine-why-have-toronto-condos-become-so-percentdollardollar-expensive) a pro forma comparison between a project they did in 2005 and a project they were doing in 2020.

What they found over this 15-year period was that construction costs increased by 91%, land costs increased by 160%, and government fees and taxes increased by some 413% (development charges alone increased by 3,244%!). The price of development land certainly increased, surpassing the rate of inflation, but we can't ignore that roughly a third of the price of a new home became [government fees and taxes](https://brandondonnelly.com/fees-on-homes).

Today, there are countless development models that don't pencil even if you plug the land value in at $0. That tells me that we've got bigger problems.

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_Cover photo by_ [_Patrick Tomasso_](https://unsplash.com/@impatrickt?utm_source=unsplash&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=creditCopyText) _on_ [_Unsplash_](https://unsplash.com/photos/high-rise-buildings-with-crane-during-nighttime-Y63-2cljxzI?utm_source=unsplash&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=creditCopyText)

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*Originally published on [Brandon Donnelly](https://brandondonnelly.com/land-is-not-the-problem-right-now)*
