Pre-Approved, Prepared, and Ready to Buy

From helping you understand your budget to strengthening your offer before you start your search, getting

pre-approved gives you a clear advantage when buying a home in the Greater Toronto Area.

With a mortgage pre-approval in place, you’ll know what you can afford, focus on the right properties, and

move forward with confidence when the perfect home becomes available.

ATTENTION: Toronto Homebuyers

Dedicated and Experienced Team

We believe every successful home search starts with the right preparation. Whether you’re buying your first property, moving up, or purchasing again, getting pre-approved helps you understand your budget, shop with confidence, and focus on homes that truly fit your goals.

With a pre-approval in place, you’ll be ready to act quickly when the right property comes along, making your buying experience smoother, clearer, and more efficient.

Building Up Your Credit Score

Improving your credit score takes time and effort, but because it results in getting the best terms on your mortgage, it is worth it. Here's how you can improve your credit score:

#1 Get a copy of your credit report

The first step to rebuilding your credit score is to get a copy of your credit report. You can request a free copy of your credit report from Equifax or TransUnion in Canada. Review your credit report carefully to identify any errors or inaccuracies that may negatively impact your score. If you find any errors, dispute them with the credit bureau.

CLICK TO GET YOUR FREE CREDIT REPORT

#2 Pay down your debts

While having debt - if you are paying it off on time - helps you build your credit score, the amount of debt you have limits the amount you can borrow. If you have high credit card balances or other debts, work on paying them down as quickly as possible. If you're using a significant amount of your available credit, this may suggest that you are overextended and may struggle to make payments. The less debt you have, the better your credit utilization ratio will be, which can help improve your credit score.

#3 Start budgeting to pay your bills on time

Start paying your bills on time with no exceptions. Make this the #1 priority each month. Creating a monthly budget helps you take care of your financial health. You can use a budgeting app or a Google or Excel sheet to plan your expenses.

#4 Seek professional help

If you are struggling to rebuild your credit score, consider seeking professional help from a credit counselor or financial advisor. They can help you develop a plan to improve your credit score, manage your debts, and create a budget.

How to Avoid a Money Pit:

Be on the Lookout for these 6 Warning Signs That Could Mean Expensive Repairs...

Roof

Leaks are the most common problem with roofs, and are tough to detect from outside. However, from inside an attic, you can often see water marks where there is a leak.

Plumbing System

Make sure you are confident that both water systems: the one that brings fresh water in and the one that takes sewage out are functioning well before signing on the dotted line.

Electrical Systems

Before you agree to buy you should make sure that you can run all of the appliances you want to and even power tools at the same time without having a power failure.

Heating and Cooling Systems

Be sure to thoroughly inspect the heating and air conditioning systems in any home you are considering purchasing.

Bad Paint and Signs of Rotting

The paint inside and outside the house can reveal a lot about the condition of the underlying material. Check several places on several walls, using your eyes and a screwdriver for poking.

Cracks and other important signs

Cracks in walls, doors not closing properly and uneven floors can all be signs that there is a problem with the foundation. If the foundation is not strong, the entire house could literally collapse, so you should carefully check for these signs.

TESTIMONIALS

What others are saying

"We found the one"

"Danny negotiated strategically, got the seller to address key repairs, and secured a price that felt like a win without risking the deal. We felt supported, informed, and genuinely cared for the entire time"

- Deklon R.

"Communication was immediate"

"I can’t say enough about how professional, energetic, and effective Danny Macedo’s team is. Communication was immediate and consistent, and we always knew what was happening, what came next, and what decisions mattered most."

- Tony Marquez

"Outstanding Realtor Service"

"Thanks again for everything! We really look forward to ha ving you as a resource and being able to refer friends to you for real estate advice."

- Alex Campagnaro

Royal LePage® Supreme Realty, Brokerage

110 Weston Road
Toronto, ON M6N 0A6

416-535-8000

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.

Elite Broker Blogs

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Benchmark Price

Average Price vs. Benchmark Price: Which Toronto Market Stat Matters More?

May 17, 20265 min read

Trying to understand whether average price or benchmark price matters more when selling a home in Toronto? You’re not alone. Many GTA sellers see headlines about the average home price, then hear their agent mention the MLS® Home Price Index, benchmark price, comparable sales, and neighbourhood trends. It can feel like several numbers are telling different stories at the same time.

Here’s the practical answer: average price is useful for understanding the broad market mood, while benchmark price is usually better for tracking price trends over time. Neither number replaces a property-specific pricing analysis. For sellers, the smartest approach is to understand what each stat measures, what it misses, and how it should influence your listing strategy.

Why Toronto market stats can feel confusing

Toronto and the Greater Toronto Area are not one single real estate market. A detached home in Etobicoke, a condo in downtown Toronto, a townhouse in Pickering, and a semi-detached home in Vaughan can all move differently in the same month. That’s why one headline might say prices are down, while another report says a specific housing segment is holding steadier.

In March 2026, TRREB reported that GTA REALTORS® recorded 5,039 home sales, up 1.7% year over year, while new listings fell 16.7% to 14,442. TRREB also reported that the average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7% compared with March 2025, and the MLS® HPI Composite benchmark was down 7.4% year over year. Those figures are related, but they are not interchangeable.

What is average home price in Toronto real estate?

Average price is calculated by adding up the sale prices of homes sold during a specific period, then dividing by the number of sales. It is simple, easy to report, and useful for quick market snapshots.

Average price is helpful when you want to know:

·The general direction of market headlines

·How overall buyer activity is changing

·Whether the mix of sold homes is shifting

·How one month compares with another at a high level

The limitation is that average price can be heavily influenced by the type, size, and location of homes that happened to sell. For an individual seller, that means the GTA average price should not be treated as “what your home is worth.”

What is benchmark price in Toronto real estate?

Benchmark price comes from the MLS® Home Price Index, often shortened to MLS® HPI. CREA describes the MLS® HPI as a tool designed to gauge neighbourhood home price levels and trends, using more than 15 years of MLS® System data and statistical models to track typical homes across areas and property types.

In plain language, a benchmark home represents a typical home in a given area and category. CREA’s HPI methodology explains that benchmark attributes reflect common property characteristics, which helps create a more apples-to-apples way to track price movement over time.

Benchmark price is helpful when you want to know:

·Whether values are trending up, down, or sideways

·How one property type is performing compared with another

·Whether price movement is broad-based or concentrated

·How your local market is changing beyond one month of sales mix

Average price vs. benchmark price: which stat should sellers trust?

For most sellers, benchmark price is the stronger trend indicator, and average price is the stronger headline indicator. The difference matters because sellers often make pricing decisions based on the number they see most often, not necessarily the number that best reflects their specific segment.

Average price vs. benchmark price

How this affects your Toronto home pricing strategy

A strong listing strategy should not start with one stat. It should start with your property type, neighbourhood, competing listings, recent comparable sales, and current buyer behaviour.

If the GTA average price is down, that does not automatically mean every seller needs to reduce expectations by the same percentage. A renovated freehold home in a low-supply pocket may face a different demand level than a condo competing with many similar units.

Before setting a list price, review:

1.Recent comparable sales, ideally from the last 30 to 90 days

2.Active listings that buyers will compare with your home

3.Expired, suspended, and terminated listings that may reveal overpricing

4.Property-specific features, including condition, layout, parking, outdoor space, and upgrades

5.Current showing activity, offer behaviour, and buyer feedback in your micro-market

The goal is not to chase a broad market average. The goal is to position your home accurately within the market that buyers are actually shopping.

Why one Toronto headline may not apply to your home

A seller in North York, Scarborough, Mississauga, Oakville, Markham, or Ajax should look beyond the GTA-wide figure. Even within one municipality, neighbourhoods and property types can perform differently based on supply, condition, transit access, buyer affordability, and local competition.

What sellers should ask their real estate agent

When reviewing Toronto market stats, ask questions that connect the data to your specific sale. Good questions include:

·“What is happening with my property type in my immediate area?”

·“Are recent comparable homes selling close to list price?”

·“How many similar homes are currently competing with mine?”

·“Is the benchmark price for my segment moving differently from the GTA average?”

·“What pricing strategy gives my home the best chance of attracting serious buyers without misleading the market?”

Your agent can help interpret the real estate data, market positioning, listing strategy, and buyer activity. For legal, tax, mortgage, or financial planning questions, speak with a qualified lawyer, accountant, mortgage professional, or financial advisor.

The bottom line for Toronto sellers

So, average price vs. benchmark price: which Toronto market stat matters more? If you are reading the market, benchmark price is usually more reliable for understanding trend direction. If you are reading the headlines, average price helps explain the broader conversation. If you are pricing your home, neither number is enough on its own.

The best listing decisions come from combining market statistics with local comparable sales, buyer behaviour, property condition, and a clear understanding of your timing. In a market where buyers are selective and data can be interpreted in different ways, sellers benefit from a pricing strategy that is accurate, transparent, and grounded in current local evidence.

Thinking about selling in Toronto or the GTA?

If you are wondering how the average price, benchmark price, and recent comparable sales apply to your home, request a local home-selling consultation. You’ll get a clear, property-specific look at your current market position, your likely buyer pool, and the steps that may help your listing compete more effectively.

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Danny Macedo

Danny Macedo is a distinguished Realtor® based in Toronto, Ontario, offering a full spectrum of real estate services tailored to meet the unique needs of each client. With three decades of experience in the Toronto real estate market, Danny has built a reputation for delivering exceptional results, thanks to his deep market knowledge, personalized approach, and commitment to excellence. At the heart of Danny's services is a passion for helping clients navigate the complexities of buying and selling properties. Whether you're a first-time homebuyer, a seasoned investor, or looking to sell your property, Danny provides comprehensive support that covers every aspect of the real estate transaction.

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