You read the June condo numbers and they do not seem to match. Sales are up double digits. The average price is still down from last year. If you are shopping for a downtown one-bedroom or weighing a move-up to a two-bedroom, that split matters more than whichever headline you saw first.
The Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) reported 1,714 condo apartment sales across the GTA in June 2026, up 14.3 per cent from June 2025. The average sale price was $630,688, down 9.5 per cent over the same period. I call it the Toronto condo paradox because both trends are real at the same time.
After 17-plus years as a licensed agent in this city, I have seen sales volume recover before prices more often than the other way around. June 2026 followed that pattern in the condo segment. The question is what you do with that information when you are ready to write an offer.
Why condo sales can rise while prices fall
Sales count tells you how many deals closed. Average price tells you what those deals looked like in dollar terms. When more lower-priced units sell and higher-priced units sit, the average can fall even as activity rises.
That is common in the condo market. Investor-owned one-bedroom units listed at sharper prices can lift transaction counts quickly. Two-bedroom-plus units at older seller expectations can linger without closing. TRREB rolls all of that into one GTA average. The average is useful, but it is not a price for any specific unit in any specific building.
Mortgage rules matter too. A household that qualifies for a $600,000 one-bedroom may not qualify for an $850,000 two-bedroom in the same tower. The stress test, maintenance fees, and down payment size all filter who can buy what. Volume often shifts toward what is financeable, not just what is listed.
Toronto condo paradox 2026: June by the numbers
Condo apartments led the GTA in year-over-year sales growth in June. Detached sales rose 9.1 per cent, townhouse sales climbed 4.3 per cent, and semi-detached sales increased 3.0 per cent. Condos were the only segment with a double-digit sales gain.
In the City of Toronto, 1,124 condo units sold at an average price of $665,760. City condo prices fell about 9 per cent year over year, similar to the GTA-wide decline. Downtown towers and inner-suburb buildings do not move in lockstep, but the direction was the same in June: more deals, lower averages.
For the full market picture, read my June 2026 GTA home sales report. Condos led part of the recovery story while detached and semi-detached segments moved at a slower pace.
What this means if you are buying a condo now
I do not tell buyers to jump in because sales rose or to wait because averages fell. I look at their financing, timeline, and how long they plan to own the unit. Here is what I ask buyers to check before they offer:
- Get sold prices for your exact building, not just the TRREB regional average
- Compare unit mix carefully: one-bed, one-plus-den, and two-bed pricing gaps widened in many towers
- Read the status certificate: reserve fund health and special assessments matter more when sticker prices are soft
- Model your payment with maintenance fees included, not just the mortgage
- If you are putting down less than twenty per cent, remember the insured mortgage cap is $1.5 million and most condos sit well below that
- Check rental rules in the declaration if you plan to lease the unit later
- On assignments, lawyer review is not optional when pricing is moving this quickly
- Well-priced units can still draw multiple offers: see how Toronto bidding wars in 2026 play out by segment
The paradox resolves differently for an end-user planning a five-year hold than for an investor focused on yield. Same numbers, different decision.
Downtown, midtown, and the lakeshore are not one market
Downtown south of Bloor has seen heavy investor listing volume in many towers. That can pull averages down while sharp one-beds still get showings. Midtown pockets near transit often show steadier two-bedroom demand from end-users trading down from houses. Along the lakeshore east and west, older buildings with higher maintenance fees can look cheap on price until you model the full monthly cost honestly.
I compare buildings, not slogans. Two towers on the same street can have different reserve fund pictures and very different sold charts in June. The GTA-wide average is a starting point for your research, not an offer price.
For the wider condo picture beyond June, my Toronto condo market reality check for 2026 covers carrying costs, investor supply, and what to watch through the rest of the year.
Final Thoughts
June 2026 TRREB data put the Toronto condo paradox in plain numbers: 1,714 sales, up 14.3 per cent year over year, at an average of $630,688, down 9.5 per cent. Sales up and prices down is not a mystery once you understand what sold and who was buying.
Buyers should treat rising sales as liquidity returning, not as proof that averages have bottomed. Sellers should read rising sales as a signal to price against recent solds, not last year’s list prices.
If your household math works at today’s stress-tested rate and the building fundamentals check out, this can still be a reasonable entry window. If you need averages to rise before you act, you may watch sales recover without ever getting the signal you were waiting for.