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Toronto Condo Market Faces Sharp Decline as Oversupply and Foreign Buyer Ban Drive Losses




The Greater Toronto Area condo market is experiencing a severe downturn, with oversupply and regulatory changes leaving sellers facing significant losses and buyers able to purchase units at steep discounts. Thomas Tate, a realtor with Tate Homes, describes the current market as fractured and disconnected from the broader residential sector.
“The condo market is not moving right now. It’s very difficult to sell a condo,” Tate says. He attributes the slowdown to a surplus of available units. “There’s just way too many.”
This glut of inventory has shifted the balance of power entirely to buyers. Tate notes that buyers can now purchase condos for far less than in recent years, while sellers are almost certain to lose money if they need to sell. “If you’re trying to sell, you better realize you’re going to take a loss, because the market just isn’t there for condos right now,” he explains.
Foreign Buyer Ban Exacerbates Oversupply
The downturn is driven by two main factors: structural oversupply and reduced demand due to policy changes. In particular, Tate says, restrictions on foreign buyers have removed a sizable pool of potential purchasers from the market. “With certain rules on foreign buyers, it’s made it very difficult to sell condos,” he says.
Foreign investors once played a major role in Toronto’s condo market, especially in downtown projects marketed directly to overseas buyers. In an effort to improve affordability, the federal government banned most foreign buyers from purchasing residential property, including condos. While this policy may have eased competition in the single-family home market, it has sharply reduced demand for condos without a corresponding slowdown in new construction. Developers continued to launch projects even as these restrictions took effect, compounding the oversupply.
As a result, sellers now face limited options and little negotiating power. Unlike single-family homes, which can offer unique features such as lot size or location, most condos are seen as interchangeable. This makes it difficult for individual sellers to stand out or command higher prices, turning the market into a race to the bottom.
Investment and Wealth Building Under Pressure
The collapse of Toronto’s condo market raises major questions about whether condos can still serve as a path to building wealth. For years, condos were promoted as an accessible way to enter the housing market, with the expectation that values would rise and owners could eventually move up to larger homes.
Tate’s view is that this assumption no longer holds. Many sellers who bought during the pandemic or in the years just before are now facing sales prices below their purchase cost, wiping out any equity gained. Investors who counted on rental income to cover mortgage payments and expenses now risk negative cash flow, as falling values and potential softness in the rental market create financial strain.
This division between buyer and seller fortunes also affects the rental market. Condo owners unable to sell at a large loss may hold onto their units and rent them out, increasing rental supply. While this could put downward pressure on rents, the strategy only works if rental income covers the costs of ownership. With interest rates still high compared to pandemic-era lows, many owners may find that renting does not offset their expenses.
Uncertain Recovery and Market Outlook
There is no clear path to a quick recovery for the Toronto condo market. Tate does not predict when prices might rebound, and the current oversupply is likely to persist as thousands of new units already under construction are completed and listed for sale over the next several years.
Stabilization would require a substantial increase in demand. This could stem from stronger population growth, changes to foreign-buyer restrictions, or a renewed preference for urban living. However, none of these developments appears likely in the near future. Population growth and immigration remain strong in the region, but not enough to absorb the existing and incoming condo inventory. Policy changes are not imminent, and many buyers remain cautious about downtown living after the pandemic.
In the meantime, Toronto’s condo market serves as a warning about the risks of unchecked building and the unintended consequences of policy interventions. Restrictions on foreign buyers may have helped slow single-family home price growth, but they have left condo sellers with few buyers and falling values.
Tate’s guidance to potential sellers is direct: expect to sell at a loss and price accordingly. For buyers, the current market offers an opportunity to purchase at historically low prices, but with the risk that values may not recover for years. Both groups face a market defined by uncertainty, limited options, and the need for careful financial planning.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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