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Here's how much the average home in Toronto is expected to cost by 2032

Becky Robertson

created: Aug. 20, 2025, 4:10 p.m. | updated: Aug. 21, 2025, 8:23 p.m.

<img class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual" src="https://display.blogto.com/articles/20250819-toronto-real-estate.jpg?w=1200&amp;cmd=resize_then_crop&amp;height=630&amp;quality=70&amp;format=jpeg" width="100%" /><p>Toronto's housing market has been&nbsp;<a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/07/toronto-real-estate-market-bad-costing-city/" target="_blank">struggling</a> lately, with the&nbsp;golden era &mdash; when&nbsp;local real estate was&nbsp;a&nbsp;surefire profitable investment &mdash; seemingly far behind us.</p><p>While sales <a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/05/toronto-home-sales-nosedive-nobody-buy/" target="_blank">have fallen flat</a> for many months and prices are <a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/07/toronto-housing-market-fallen-off-cliff/" target="_blank">hurtling downwards</a>, the&nbsp;latest predictions for the industry still foresee the average home in the city getting more expensive in the coming years, albeit not to the degree&nbsp;that many may have assumed (or, <a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/02/toronto-owners-struggle-sell-homes-20000-market/" target="_blank">for existing homeowners, hoped</a>).</p><p><a href="https://equiton.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Breaking-Ground-AI-Driven-Analysis-of-How-Policy-Reform-Can-Unlock-Canadian-Housing-Supply.pdf" target="_blank">A report</a> on the topic that is making headlines this week comes from Concordia University's John Molson School of Business, researchers from which controversially employed&nbsp;AI to anticipate real estate trends across Canada and, based on those figures,&nbsp;suggest relevant public policy reforms.</p><p>The analysis starts off by citing&nbsp;a "period of crisis" that it says&nbsp;has&nbsp;dominated the market&nbsp;not just in Toronto, but across Canada,&nbsp;fueled&nbsp;by "chronic undersupply and unrelenting demand."</p><p>We must point out, though, that&nbsp;recent stats show&nbsp;this long-standing trend&nbsp;has been<a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/06/supply-demand-toronto-housing-market-record/" target="_blank"> turned on its head</a>&nbsp;in the&nbsp;GTA, where the&nbsp;<a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/05/toronto-home-sales-nosedive-nobody-buy/" target="_blank">plummeting interest from buyers </a>has led to a&nbsp;<a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/06/toronto-housing-market-milestone-collapse/" target="_blank">record glut of supply</a>.</p><p>But the report is correct in asserting that purchasing a home in Canada has not been easy or affordable for residents for quite some time. And the study's&nbsp;numbers prove as much, stating that&nbsp;any old home in Toronto, as of 2024, costs&nbsp;around $1.4 million, which makes&nbsp;us one of the most "impossible affordable" cities for property <a href="https://www.blogto.com/city/2024/06/toronto-named-most-impossibly-affordable-cities-world/" target="_blank">in the world</a>.</p><p>This number, Concordia's AI models say, will inflate by another $100,000, to $1.5 million, by 2025, then another $400,000 to a whopping $1.8 million by 2032&nbsp;&mdash; a figure that could be curbed substantially by expediting residential building projects, which will necessitate some major changes at various levels of government, they suggest.</p><p>"We find that easing municipal regulation and streamlining approval processes are low-cost, high-impact levers to unlock supply, especially for single-family homes," the report states, emphasizing "the importance of removing policy and bureaucratic obstacles from the housing completion process."</p><p>But, while cutting prohibitive red tape like <a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2024/11/ontario-city-cuts-building-fees-housing/" target="_blank">development charges</a>&nbsp;&mdash; which in Toronto have escalated by an astonishing <a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2024/09/charges-building-new-homes-ontario-1000/" target="_blank">993 per cent in less than 15&nbsp;years</a> &mdash; can help, the researchers add that their&nbsp;findings "are not without nuance."</p><p>"Regulatory streamlining and ambitious supply-side targets are necessary but, alone, insufficient to alleviate Canada's housing crisis," they continue.</p><p><img alt="toronto real estate" id="content-image-120220" src="https://display.blogto.com/uploads/2025/08/20/1755705055-2025020-toronot-home-prices.jpg?w=1400&amp;cmd=resize&amp;quality=70&amp;format=jpeg" style="width: 1400px; height: 1820px;" /></p><p class="caption">Concordia University</p><p>The doc then goes on to cite how&nbsp;Canada's current population policy, immigration patterns, and construction costs&nbsp;have&nbsp;worsened the landscape for anyone hoping to own a home here &mdash; something other experts, like those at TD Economics,<a href="https://www.blogto.com/city/2023/07/experts-say-canada-less-affordable/" target="_blank"> have also highlighted</a>.</p><p><span style="font-family: Georgia; font-size: 20px; font-weight: 300;">Along with reevaluating current building processes,&nbsp;this report suggests "a&nbsp;coordinated, multi-faceted, long-term policy response" that addresses things like the rapid influx of new residents to&nbsp;"slow population growth and potentially impact housing demand and affordability" beyond just the short term.</span></p><p>"The recent policy to reduce non-permanent residents&nbsp;helps stabilize prices temporarily until 2027. However, as population growth normalizes, averaging 400,000&ndash; 500,000 new residents per year, prices will begin climbing again," it warns.</p><p>So yes, speeding up approvals for new developments in the pipeline and trying to cut costs for builders &mdash; many of whom <a href="https://www.blogto.com/real-estate-toronto/2025/06/no-one-building-condos-toronto-market-rock-bottom/" target="_blank">are taking a great pause from the Toronto market</a> &mdash; is just one quick&nbsp;way to help the situation.</p><p>But,&nbsp;wider, more long-term visions and solutions are&nbsp;needed, for which it may prove difficult to balance conflicting issues (such as&nbsp;a dearth of skilled construction labour vs.&nbsp;how immigration surges deteriorate overall affordability by creating demand shock).</p>

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