Toronto Condo Buying Guide 2025

All costs, steps, and tips for buying a condo in Toronto

Toronto Condo Closing Cost Estimator

Toronto Condo Market Overview 2025

Toronto's condo market remains one of Canada's most active and accessible entry points into homeownership. Average resale condo prices in Toronto sit around $700,000–$750,000 in 2025, with smaller studios and one-bedrooms available under $600,000 in older buildings or farther from the downtown core. Pre-construction condos often launch at slight discounts to resale but require patience — delivery timelines of 3–5 years are common.

Understanding the full cost of buying is essential. Toronto condo buyers face a unique double land transfer tax: both the Ontario provincial LTT and the Toronto Municipal LTT (MLTT). Together, these can add $15,000–$25,000 to closing costs on a typical purchase. Factor in legal fees, title insurance, status certificate review, and potential CMHC insurance, and total closing costs often reach $20,000–$35,000 on a $650,000 condo.

All Costs When Buying a Toronto Condo

CostTypical AmountNotes
Ontario LTT$9,475 (on $650K)Tiered provincial tax
Toronto MLTT$9,475 (on $650K)City tax, same rates as Ontario
FTB LTT Rebate (if eligible)Up to -$8,475Ontario $4K + Toronto $4,475
Legal fees$1,500–$2,500Includes disbursements & title insurance
Status certificate review$200–$400Lawyer review, essential for resale
CMHC mortgage insurance2.8%–4% of mortgageRequired if under 20% down
Home inspectionUsually waived on condosConsider for townhouse condos
Moving costs$1,000–$2,500Local moves

Step-by-Step Condo Buying Process in Toronto

Get mortgage pre-approval first. Know your maximum purchase price before viewing units. Condo mortgage approvals also consider maintenance fees — lenders add these to your debt calculations.
Find a buyer's agent experienced in condos. A good agent knows which buildings have healthy financials, upcoming special assessments, or problematic reserve funds. Their commission is paid by the seller.
Evaluate buildings, not just units. Check maintenance fee history, the reserve fund study, any pending litigation, and the condo corporation's financial statements. These are in the status certificate.
Request the status certificate. For resale condos, always include a condition for status certificate review. Your lawyer has 3 business days to review it and can advise you to walk away if the building's financials are poor.
Submit an offer and negotiate. Include a financing condition (usually 5 business days) unless your financing is fully secured. In competitive situations, be prepared for multiple offers and escalation clauses.
Firm up financing and appraisal. Once you remove conditions, your lender orders a formal appraisal. Ensure your rate hold is long enough to cover your closing date.
Close the transaction. Your lawyer collects your balance of down payment and closing costs, registers the transfer, pays LTT, and hands you the keys.

Maintenance Fees: The Hidden Monthly Cost

Toronto condo maintenance fees average $0.70–$0.90 per square foot monthly. A 600 sq ft one-bedroom would cost $420–$540/month in fees, covering building insurance, common areas, concierge, and reserve fund contributions. When lenders calculate your debt service ratios, they include 50% of maintenance fees in your housing costs, which reduces your borrowing capacity compared to a freehold home of equal price.

Reserve fund warning: Always check if the reserve fund is adequately funded. An underfunded reserve means future special assessments. Ask your lawyer to look for any planned capital projects not yet fully funded in the status certificate.

Pre-Construction Condos in Toronto

Pre-construction purchases have a 10-day cooling-off period under the Ontario Condominium Act — use it to get independent legal advice. During interim occupancy (after you move in but before the condo is registered), you pay occupancy fees to the developer rather than mortgage payments. These fees don't build equity. Registration typically happens 6–24 months after occupancy begins. Budget for HST on new builds (partially rebated for owner-occupied units).

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