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Greater Toronto Area’s housing market stalls in March

An earlier glimmer of overbidding activity in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) has faded into faltering homebuying competition this March, suggests a new analysis.

Some 6 per cent of the 213 GTA neighbourhoods in which as least five homes changed hands were in overbidding territory last month, down from 7 per cent of the 238 neighbourhoods that met the sales minimum in February, according to Wahi. A remaining 92 per cent of neighbourhoods across the region were in underbidding territory last month, while 2 per cent were selling at-asking.

This was the weakest month for homebuyer competition in at least four years (Wahi began tracking overbidding/underbidding in July of 2022). The previous low for the month occurred in 2025, when 20 per cent of GTA neighbourhoods saw prices bid up.

Graphics courtesy Wahi

“Just when it seemed like the effects of economic uncertainty may have been fading, emerging geopolitical conflict appears to be spooking markets,” says Wahi Economist Ryan McLaughlin. “Add to that the unseasonably cold weather to start spring and challenging-albeit-improved affordability, and there’s a recipe for subdued housing activity,” he adds.

Divided by housing type, single-family homes outperformed condos by a wide margin. Some 14 per cent of the 221 GTA neighbourhoods with at least five single-family home sales were overbid, compared to 1 per cent of the 106 neighbourhoods with five condo sales.

Another way of gauging bidding activity is to look at what percentage of all sold listings are transacting for more than the list price. In March, 23 per cent of all homes that sold did so for above the asking price, down from nearly one-third (31 per cent) during the same month in 2025 — though there are some regional variations.

For instance, Durham had the highest share of above-asking sales at 31 per cent of all sold listings, while Halton had the lowest at just 15 per cent. “Similar to what we’ve seen at the neighbourhood level, regions with lower home prices are attracting more bidding competition than more expensive parts of the GTA,” McLaughlin explains.

The West is Best for Overbidding in March 2026 

In the first two months of the year, the strongest bidding competition was concentrated in Toronto’s east end. In March, there was a shift in the opposite direction.

Three of the top five neighbourhoods for overbidding were located in the city’s west end (Runnymede, Bloor West Village, and Trinity Bellwoods).

The east end was still represented with Riverdale cracking the top five for the first time this year, while Rouge Woods was the lone neighbourhood outside of the City of Toronto to make the list.

Prior to March, the region’s most underbid neighbourhoods had — with only one exception — been located outside of the City of Toronto in the first two months of the year. In March, this changed, with the appearance of three centrally located and affluent Toronto neighbourhoods (Rosedale, Forest Hill, and Summerhill) in the top five.

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