GTA average new detached home price hits $1.23M

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GREATER TORONTO – As a year of tight new-home inventories has drawn to a close, statistics released by the Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD) show that the GTA average price for new homes has been reaching some of the highest prices ever.

According to a BILD press release issued December 22, November saw the GTA average price for a newly-built detached home climb to $1,230,961 – reflecting what the Toronto Star called a “staggering” 27-per-cent increase over the previous November’s average of about $972,970.

While detached homes have been making headlines for the past several years due to their high demand, perhaps another surprising trend that month was the GTA average cost of a new condo – which rose by 10 per cent, year-over-year, to $493,137. (BILD’s release notes that the average size of a new condo also increased, to 820 square feet.)

Unsurprisingly, the upward price trends coincided with another month of relatively low new-home inventory in the GTA.

At November’s end, builders had just 15,184 new homes available for purchase – reflecting the lowest November inventory on record, and a total of just 84 more homes than was recorded in August, when the area’s inventory hit its lowest level since BILD began recording them in 2000.

“The low inventory story is not only about low-rise,” clarified Patricia Arsenault, Executive Vice President of Research Consulting Services at Altus Data Solutions. “high-rise inventories have been on a downward path over the past 3 years.”

Michelle Noble, BILD’s Vice President of Communications, Marketing and Media Relations, connected the demand for new low-rise homes – and their overall year-over-year average price increase of 20 per cent – with public policies that have steered builders towards denser projects.

“The industry is building to government policy and building far fewer low-rise homes, especially detached single-family homes,” Noble said. “But demand has not dropped with the supply, so prices continue to increase.”

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