Toronto Star

Realty: Condos are the only market segment that maintained its upward momentum through the 2017 market correction,

Units represent growing percentage of home sales in Toronto region

- TESS KALINOWSKI REAL ESTATE REPORTER

Condos represent more than a third of residentia­l property sales in the Toronto area so far this year, accounting for about 25,000 sales or 36.7 per cent of real estate transactio­ns between January and October this year.

That is up from 30.1per cent in the same period five years ago, including both new and resale units.

It’s the only housing market segment that maintained its upward momentum through the 2017 market correction, according to a report from Re/ MAX released Tuesday. The average price of a condo apartment rose about 8 per cent, or about $40,000 year over year ], in the period between January and October — to $551,761 from $512,552.

Condo townhome prices remained essentiall­y flat in the same period, says the report.

The success of condos is largely a function of the region’s affordabil­ity challenges, said Christophe­r Alexander, Re/ MAX Ontario-Atlantic Region executive vice-president.

Most of the growth in condos has come in the past two years with the largest jump of nearly four percentage points occurring between 2016 and 2017. Before that, he said, “There wasn’t a lot of inventory and there wasn’t a lot of price appreciati­on.”

Although condos have gone mainstream, they are still a compromise for a lot of buyers, who would prefer to own a house, Alexander said.

“You look to an area where you’d love to buy a home but a condo is 30 or 40 per cent less. You can still be in the neighbourh­ood you want, just in a lot less space,” he said. “Affordabil­ity really propelled the condo market in both market share and just it really carried the resale market in the last year and a half.” Higher downtown Toronto condo prices are pushing some buyers, including first-timers, to areas outside the core. About 10 per cent of resale condo transactio­ns were near the Yonge St. corridor north of Hwy. 401 and along the Sheppard subway between Bayview Ave. and Leslie St., says the report.

Buyers such as Cherry Qin, who studied actuarial science in Waterloo and is looking for a full-time job in Toronto, said it makes sense to buy a condo rather than paying high rent.

Given that rent is costing about $2,700 a month, “I think it’s more reasonable to get a house,” she said.

The “house” Qin bought is a two-bedroom-plus den that’s close to transit, relatively quiet compared to downtown locations and has amenities.

But downtown Toronto remains the hottest condo market, says the report, with one in five sales occurring in an area bounded by Bloor St. and Lake Ontario to the north and south, and the Don Valley Pkwy. and just past Dovercourt Rd. to the east and west.

Fourteen per cent of Toronto region sales this year have been in Mississaug­a thanks in part to teeming developmen­t there, said Alexander, who cited the M-City project near the Square One mall, which is expected to house about 10,000 people when it’s finished.

Half of GTA condos are priced under $500,000, says the report, which notes that the number of condo sales fell 14 per cent in the 10-month study period this year, when compared to the same time frame last year.

A shortage of inventory is a factor, Alexander said.

A report from Altus Group, which tracks new constructi­on home sales and prices, on Monday, said traditiona­l (nonstacked) townhouse sales have plunged in the Toronto area in the past two years to just 7 per cent of the total new home sales in the first half of this year. Stacked towns, lowrise homes with upstairs and downstairs units, are a “niche market” accounting for one in five townhouse sales.

Although condos have gone mainstream, they are still a compromise for a lot of buyers

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