
Since 1996, Danny Macedo has been a trusted leader in luxury real estate, guiding discerning buyers and sellers through every phase of the property journey. With a wealth of expertise honed over two decades, Danny combines deep market insight with an unwavering commitment to delivering a seamless, personalized experience.
Over 30 years of real estate experience.
Real estate trainer, coach, and speaker.
A Trusted Advisor & Advocate


Leveraging the latest in digital marketing, social media, and targeted local SEO, Anthony ensures each listing reaches its fullest potential in visibility and appeal. His embrace of innovative strategies and technologies positions his clients for success in today's dynamic luxury market.
Anthony is known for a client-first philosophy, placing priority on understanding and elevating each client's vision. This commitment to excellence has cultivated long-standing relationships and earned him a reputation as a skilled negotiator who consistently achieves favorable outcomes
Modern Marketing & Cutting-Edge Exposure
Client-Centered Excellence
Exceptional Market Insight & Strategic Approach
Navigating today’s real estate market, whether you’re buying or selling, can feel overwhelming. The Macedo Real Estate Group understands how to guide clients through every step with clarity, strategy, and confidence. While the market may be challenging, homes are still being bought and sold every day across the Greater Toronto Area. The difference between a successful real estate experience and a stressful one often comes down to the details.
Whether you’re preparing to list your home, searching for the right property, negotiating an offer, or planning your next move, our team leaves no detail overlooked. Through proven sales strategies, effective marketing campaigns, strong negotiation skills, and an extensive network, the Macedo Real Estate Group is committed to helping you make informed decisions. We also use technology and innovation to maximize exposure for sellers, identify the right opportunities for buyers, and create a smoother experience from start to finish.
This guide was created to educate, support, and empower you, whether you’re selling your home, buying your next one, or doing both. Choosing the right real estate team matters, and our goal is to help you move forward with confidence.
When we say we’re “redefining service in real estate,” we mean it. Our clients come first. We’ll help you understand what needs to happen for a successful sale, a smart purchase, and a seamless transition. Every real estate transaction has many moving parts, and you can count on us to be there throughout the process, making sure nothing is overlooked.
With a proven track record, the right skill set, and years of experience, the Macedo Real Estate Group has the tools, knowledge, and commitment to help you achieve your real estate goals. Whether you’re serious about selling, buying, or both, we’re serious about getting the job done.
Now more than ever, who you work with matters.
Copyright 2026. Macedo Real Estate Group, Danny Macedo, Sales Representative, Anthony Rocco Macedo, Sales Representative, Royal LePage Supreme Realty, Brokerage all rights reserved assumes no responsibility for the accuracy of any information shown. The information provided herein must only be used by consumers that have a bona fide interest in the purchase, sale or lease of real estate and may not be used for any commercial purpose or any other purpose.
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Are you wondering which Toronto real estate market stats actually matter before you list your home?
If you are thinking about selling in Toronto or the Greater Toronto Area, it is easy to feel buried under headlines. One month you hear that sales are up. The next month, prices are softer. Then someone mentions active listings, benchmark prices, days on market, or months of inventory, and the picture gets even less clear.
Sellers do not need to become market analysts. You only need to understand the Toronto real estate market stats that influence pricing, timing, negotiation, and buyer behaviour.
A home does not sell in the abstract. It sells in a specific market, at a specific time, against specific competition. That is why the same pricing strategy that worked six months ago may not work today.
Monthly market data helps answer practical questions:
·How much competition is on the market?
·Are buyers moving quickly, or taking more time?
·Are prices rising, flat, or declining?
·Is your property type performing differently from the overall GTA market?
·How much negotiating power do buyers have right now?
For example, TRREB reported 5,039 GTA home sales in March 2026, up 1.7% year over year. New listings were 14,442, down 16.7%, while the average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7%. Together, those numbers suggest modestly improved activity, continued price sensitivity, and room for buyers to compare options.
Sales volume shows how many homes changed hands during a given month. More sales can indicate buyer confidence, while lower sales can suggest hesitation, affordability pressure, or uncertainty.
Still, sales volume should never be read alone. A rise in sales does not mean every home will sell quickly, and a drop in sales does not mean selling is impossible. The better question is how sales compare with available listings in your area and property category.
New listings show how many homes entered the market. Active listings show how many homes were available for sale. These stats matter because they shape buyer choice.
If active listings are high in your segment, buyers may compare more options, take longer to decide, and negotiate more firmly. If listings are limited, a well-priced and well-presented home may stand out more quickly.
Review competition at the micro-market level, not just across the GTA. A detached home, a semi-detached home, and a condo can each face very different supply conditions.
The average selling price is widely reported, but it can be misunderstood. It divides total dollar volume by the number of sales, so it can move because of changes in the mix of homes sold, not only because individual property values changed.
For example, if more luxury detached homes sell in one month, the average price may rise. If more lower-priced condos sell, the average may fall. That does not necessarily mean every home gained or lost value at the same pace.
Use average price as a broad temperature check, then go deeper with local comparable sales, property type, condition, lot size, parking, renovation quality, and current competition.
The MLS Home Price Index, or HPI, tracks price trends for benchmark homes. TRREB explains that MLS HPI is based on the value buyers assign to housing attributes, and CREA describes it as a tool for measuring neighbourhood price levels and trends.
For sellers, the HPI can be more useful than the average price when you want to understand whether values are generally moving up, down, or sideways. In March 2026, TRREB reported that the MLS HPI Composite benchmark was down 7.4% year over year. That context matters when setting expectations and pricing competitively.
Days on market measures how long it takes for a listing to sell. Sellers often focus on this number because it feels personal. If a home sits longer than expected, it can raise concerns about price, presentation, access, or market conditions.
Days on market should be interpreted carefully. A higher number may reflect a slower market, or a price above current buyer expectations. A lower number may suggest strong demand, but only when the listing was exposed properly and reviewed against comparable sales.
The sale-to-list price ratio compares the final selling price with the asking price. If homes are selling below asking, buyers may have more leverage. If homes are selling at or above asking, the market may be more competitive.
This stat is helpful, but pricing strategy can distort it. Some sellers list low to encourage multiple offers. Others list closer to their target price. Review the ratio alongside comparable sales, listing history, and competing properties.
The GTA market is not one market. It is many markets moving at once. Toronto condos, Durham detached homes, Peel townhomes, and York Region semis can behave differently in the same month.
Before listing, ask your realtor to review stats by:
·Property type: detached, semi-detached, townhouse, condo apartment, or condo townhouse
·Location: neighbourhood, municipality, and nearby competing areas
·Price band: homes that are truly comparable to yours
·Condition and presentation: renovated, original, staged, vacant, or tenanted
·Listing competition: active and recently expired listings
This approach avoids broad assumptions and keeps the strategy focused on market evidence.
When reviewing Toronto real estate market stats, ask practical questions:
1.How many comparable homes sold in my area in the last 30 to 90 days?
2.How many similar homes are active right now?
3.Are comparable homes selling above, at, or below asking?
4.How long are similar listings taking to sell?
5.What pricing adjustments are we seeing after the first two weeks on market?
6.Are buyers raising concerns about condition, financing, or value?
These questions turn raw statistics into a real selling strategy.
Market stats are educational tools, not guarantees. No real estate professional should promise a specific sale price, timeline, or result based only on market averages. Any advertising or public-facing content should be accurate, current, and not misleading, and brokerage identification should be clear where required.
If your selling decision involves legal, tax, mortgage, estate, or financial planning questions, speak with the appropriate qualified professional. A realtor can help with market conditions, pricing strategy, marketing, negotiation, and the selling process, but they should not replace legal, accounting, mortgage, or financial advice.
Toronto real estate market stats are most valuable when connected to your property, neighbourhood, and timing. Broad headlines show the mood of the market, but your listing strategy should be based on local evidence.
If you are thinking about selling in Toronto or the GTA, request a personalized home-selling consultation for a clearer view of recent comparable sales, current competition, buyer activity, and the stats that matter most for your next move.