From explaining the Greater Toronto property market to hand-picking properties matching your search
criteria, we’ll position you to make a well-informed decision when buying a property in the GTA,
making your purchase process smooth sailing.

We love working with first-time and experienced buyers alike! Whether it’s your first property or you already have multiple transactions behind you, our goal is to make your property purchase as easy as possible.
"Advocate in our corner"
"Phenomenal from start to finish. Every time we had a question, Danny replied within minutes, not days, and he kept us calm with clear, straightforward updates."
- Lori Francis

"Professional & knowledgeable"
"Following the cancellation of that listing, we turned to Danny Macedo on the recommendation of a friend who had experienced success with him. Remarkably, within just three weeks of listing with Danny, we received an offer that met our expectations"
- Mark Elliott

"Highly recommend"
"Selling our home with Danny’s team was the smoothest experience we’ve ever had in real estate. They were incredibly responsive, whether it was a quick text question or a last-minute showing request, a nd we never once felt left in the dark. ."
- Mike Groves

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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Why are some GTA homes still selling while prices are softer, and what can Toronto-area sellers learn from them? In a market where buyers have more choice and prices are adjusting, the homes that attract serious attention usually have three things working together: accurate pricing, strong presentation, and a listing strategy that reflects current local conditions. For homeowners wondering how to sell in a slower market, the answer is a disciplined plan built around what today’s buyers are comparing.
Recent Greater Toronto Area market data shows a more selective environment. TRREB reported 5,039 GTA home sales in March 2026, up 1.7% compared with March 2025. The average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7% year over year, and the MLS Home Price Index Composite benchmark was down 7.4%. New listings were also down 16.7% year over year to 14,442, which means the market is more nuanced than “too many homes” or “no buyers.”
For sellers, that nuance matters. A softer price environment does not mean a well-positioned home cannot sell. It means buyers are comparing value carefully, and they are less likely to stretch for a property that feels overpriced, underprepared, or difficult to evaluate.
The homes that continue to move in today’s GTA market tend to make the buying decision easier. They reduce uncertainty, answer obvious questions upfront, and connect the asking price to real market evidence.
One common reason a house does not sell in Toronto or the surrounding GTA is pricing based on outdated expectations. Buyers are looking at recent comparable sales, active listings, price reductions, and competing homes in real time. If a property is priced as though conditions have not changed, it can sit longer and eventually require a correction.
A stronger pricing approach looks at:
·Recent sold prices for similar homes in the same local area
·Active listings that buyers will compare against yours
·Property type, condition, lot size, parking, layout, and upgrades
·Neighbourhood-level trends rather than broad GTA averages
·Buyer feedback from early showings, if the home is already listed
This does not mean underpricing your home. It means positioning it where serious buyers can see value quickly.
Most buyers first experience a listing through photos, video, a floor plan, or a digital tour. If the online presentation is weak, the home may never make a buyer’s showing list. In a cautious market, presentation is a trust signal.
Effective listing presentation usually includes clean photography, clear room descriptions, thoughtful staging or styling, and marketing copy that highlights property features without exaggeration. Digital enhancements, including virtual staging, should be handled carefully so the listing remains accurate, clear, and not misleading.
Buyers often hesitate when they cannot clearly understand a property’s value. Is the basement finished? Are there recent updates? Is parking included? Are there condo fees, rental items, or known repair considerations? A listing that answers practical questions can reduce friction.
Before going to market, sellers can work with their real estate agent to organize helpful details such as:
·A clear list of inclusions and exclusions
·Receipts or dates for major updates, where available
·Condo status certificate timing, if applicable
·Utility, rental equipment, or maintenance details, where appropriate
·Accurate room measurements and floor plans
This is not a substitute for legal disclosure advice. Sellers should speak with a real estate lawyer about legal obligations, documentation, and any questions about defects, representations, or closing terms.
Small issues can feel larger when buyers have more negotiating power. A loose handrail, burnt-out lights, cluttered storage, pet odours, or visible water staining can create doubt. Buyers may wonder what else has not been maintained.
Preparation does not always require major renovations. In many cases, the highest-impact steps are simple:
·Deep cleaning, decluttering, and neutralizing strong odours
·Completing minor repairs that affect first impressions
·Improving lighting and curb appeal
·Removing excess personal items so rooms feel easier to assess
·Making access simple for showings whenever possible
The goal is to help buyers focus on the home.
A listing strategy should do more than place a property on MLS and wait. The right plan considers who is likely to be searching for that property type, which features matter most, how the home compares locally, and how quickly feedback should be reviewed.
Ethical marketing matters. Content should focus on property features, location attributes, market data, and buyer utility. It should avoid discriminatory language, demographic assumptions, or statements that could be interpreted as steering. In Ontario, every person has the right to equal treatment in housing without discrimination based on Code-protected grounds.
If your home has been on the market longer than expected, the first step is to diagnose the issue rather than assume the market is the only problem. A practical review should look at three areas: exposure, feedback, and price position.
1.Exposure: Are the photos, listing description, floor plan, and online presentation strong enough to earn showings?
2.Feedback: Are buyers raising the same objections about condition, layout, price, or location?
3.Price position: Has the competitive set changed since launch, and are similar homes selling below your list price?
A price adjustment may be part of the solution, but it should be based on evidence. Sometimes the issue is presentation. Sometimes it is access. Sometimes new comparable sales have shifted the pricing conversation. Your agent should be able to explain the recommendation clearly, using current local data.
Selling a home in the GTA today requires more precision than it did during hotter market cycles. Buyers are still active, but many are more selective, affordability-conscious, and careful about value. That means sellers need to compete on clarity, presentation, pricing, and confidence.
The best starting point is not a guess. It is a local selling strategy based on current comparable sales, your property’s condition, buyer demand in your area, and your timing goals. Commission rates and service models can vary and are not fixed; sellers should discuss services, fees, and representation options with their chosen real estate professional.