Privacy Policy
We understand the power that the Internet holds for changing your life and making things easier for you. These benefits are at risk if people are concerned about their personal privacy. We are committed to providing you with an Internet experience that respects and protects your personal privacy choices and concerns.
In general, we gather information about all of our users collectively. We only use such information anonymously and in the aggregate. This information helps us determine what is most beneficial for our users, and how we can continually create a better overall experience for you.
Email Links
This site provides an email address link located on the Contact Us page so that you may email us directly with any questions or comments you may have. This site reads all messages received and makes efforts to respond promptly.
In addition to replying to your comment or inquiry, we may also file your email for future reference regarding improvements to our website or discard the information. Your personal information is not shared, traded, sold, or exchanged with any third parties without your express permission.
Information Collection and Use
This site is the sole owner of the information collected. We will not sell, share, trade, or rent this information to others in ways different from what is disclosed in this statement.
This site collects information from our users at several different points on our website. We only collect personal information necessary to effectively market and sell the property of sellers, to locate, assess, and qualify properties for buyers, and to otherwise provide professional services to clients and customers.
We do not sell, trade, transfer, rent, or exchange your personal information with anyone.
Free Evaluation Form / Find Your Dream Home
Did You Know? / Free Real Estate Reports
Since this site is a real estate site, we give you the option of requesting free real estate information about real estate properties. Your personal information is stored on our secure database.
We only collect personal information necessary to effectively market and sell the property of sellers, to locate, assess, and qualify properties for buyers, and to otherwise provide professional services to clients and customers.
We do not sell, trade, transfer, rent, or exchange your personal information with anyone.
Personal Information
This site functionality requires or requests users to give us contact information, such as their email address, and personal information, such as their names, addresses, phone numbers, and property details.
The visitor’s contact and personal information is used to contact the visitor when necessary and requested, but is primarily used to collect personal information necessary to effectively market and sell the property of sellers, to locate, assess, and qualify properties for buyers, and to otherwise provide professional services to clients and customers.
We do not sell, trade, transfer, rent, or exchange your personal information with anyone.
We do not disclose information about your individual visits to this site, or personal information that you provide, such as your name, address, email address, telephone number, etc., to any outside parties, except when we believe the law requires it.
Legal Disclaimer
We may disclose personal information when required by law, or in the good-faith belief that such action is necessary in order to conform to the edicts of the law, or comply with a legal process served on our website.
Opt-Out
Users of this site have the option to unsubscribe from our mailing list directly through their accounts. To opt out, please navigate to the Subscription Settings located under My Account.
By disabling the email or SMS notification toggle, you’ll cease to receive notifications associated with the selected options.
Links
This site contains links to other sites. These sites have their own policies and practices with respect to online privacy, and this site cannot be responsible for the privacy practices, or the content, of these websites.
In addition, in certain instances, this site’s advertisers may ask you for personal information. This site cannot be responsible for the privacy practices of its advertisers.
Only certain employees have access to the information you provide us. For example, we impose strict rules on our employees who have access either to the databases that store user information, or to the servers that host our services.
While we cannot guarantee that loss, misuse, or alteration to data will not occur, we try to prevent such unfortunate occurrences.
Notification of Changes
This policy may be revised over time as new features are added to the website. We’ll post those changes so that you’ll always know what information we gather, how we might use that information, and whether we’ll disclose it to anyone.
Please check this site for information about revisions to our privacy policy. We’ll notify you directly if there is a material change in our privacy practices.
We’ll take commercially reasonable measures to obtain written or active email consent from the user if this site is going to use the information collected from the user in a manner different from that stated at the time of collection. We’ll also post the changes in our privacy statement 10 days prior to a change.
Cookies
This website uses the following cookies:
Google Analytics
This cookie allows us to see information on user website activities, including, but not limited to, page views, source, and time spent on websites. The information is depersonalized and is displayed as numbers, meaning it cannot be tracked back to individuals.
This will help to protect your privacy. Using Google Analytics, we can see what content is popular on our website, and strive to give you more of the things you enjoy reading and watching.
Google AdWords
Using Google AdWords code, we’re able to see which pages helped lead to contact form submissions. This allows us to make better use of our paid search budget.
Removal of and Access to Personal Information
We’ll accommodate the deletion of any personal information as soon as reasonably possible.
Should you wish to request erasure of personal data, please submit a written request to Macedo Real Estate Group, addressed to the address listed below. Each request will be validated, and you’ll be required to provide some personal information for security reasons.
Please note that Macedo Real Estate Group has the right to deny a request and provide an explanation as to why each request was denied.
Macedo Real Estate Group
www.MacedoRealEstateGroup.com
110 Weston Road
Toronto, ON M6M0A6
Canada
[email protected]
416-535-5000
Privacy Questions
If you have any questions regarding our privacy policy, please send us an email, and we’ll be pleased to assist.
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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What do sellers need to know about today’s GTA buyers before listing a home? The short answer is that buyers are still active, but they’re more selective, more informed, and more sensitive to value than they were during faster-moving market cycles. What Sellers Should Know About Today’s GTA Buyers is that the strongest listing strategy now depends on clarity: clear pricing, clear presentation, clear property information, and clear expectations from the first showing to the final offer.
In March 2026, the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board reported 5,039 GTA home sales, a 1.7% increase compared with March 2025. At the same time, the average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7% year over year, and new listings totalled 14,442. Those numbers point to a market where buyers are present, but many are negotiating from a more cautious position.
For sellers, that doesn’t mean a good result is out of reach. It means the listing needs to answer buyer questions quickly. A buyer looking at homes in Toronto, Mississauga, Markham, Vaughan, Pickering, Brampton, or another GTA community may be comparing several similar properties before deciding which homes are worth seeing in person.
Today’s buyers are often asking:
·Is this home priced realistically for the current local market?
·How does it compare with recent nearby sales?
·What condition is the home in?
·Are the photos, floor plan, and description accurate?
·Will this property still make sense after mortgage, closing, moving, and maintenance costs?
A listing that makes those answers easy to understand can stand out, especially when buyers have more choice.
When buyers sense that a property is priced far above the local evidence, they may not engage at all. Some won’t book a showing. Others may wait for a price adjustment. That’s why pricing should be based on relevant comparable sales, current competing listings, property condition, location-specific demand, and the listing’s likely buyer pool. A strong pricing conversation should look at:
1.Recent sales of similar properties in the immediate area
2.Active listings competing for the same buyer attention
3.Property type, size, layout, parking, outdoor space, and upgrades
4.Days on market for comparable homes
5.Whether prices are moving differently by neighbourhood or property category
This is not about underpricing every home. It’s about positioning the property where qualified buyers can recognize value. In a softer price environment, the first impression of price can be just as important as the first impression of the home itself.
A buyer may love a home online, but uncertainty can slow them down. Missing details, unclear room measurements, limited photos, vague renovation descriptions, and inconsistent listing information can all create hesitation.
Sellers can help reduce friction by preparing accurate, useful information before going to market. Depending on the property, that may include:
·A clear list of notable improvements and approximate dates
·Utility, maintenance, or condo fee details, where applicable
·Floor plans or room measurements
·Information about included and excluded items
·Permit, warranty, or renovation documentation, if available
Even value-focused buyers respond to presentation. Clean, bright, well-photographed homes help buyers understand the space. That’s especially important because many people narrow their search online before they ever step inside.
Before listing, sellers should focus on improvements that make the home easier to evaluate, not necessarily the most expensive upgrades. In many cases, the basics can have a meaningful impact:
·Decluttering counters, closets, storage areas, and entryways
·Cleaning windows, floors, appliances, bathrooms, and kitchens
·Touching up paint where walls show wear
·Improving lighting with consistent bulbs and open window coverings
·Addressing obvious maintenance items that buyers may notice immediately
·Making each room’s purpose easy to understand
Staging, virtual staging, and professional photography can also help, but they must be accurate and not misleading. If an image is virtually staged, it should be disclosed appropriately. If a feature is not included in the sale, the listing should make that clear.
Today’s GTA buyers often think beyond the purchase price. They may be weighing monthly affordability, commuting patterns, maintenance needs, renovation costs, condo fees, insurance, and future flexibility. Sellers don’t need to solve every concern, but they should understand how buyers are likely to evaluate the property.
For example, a condo buyer may focus on layout efficiency, building management, monthly fees, and nearby transportation. A buyer comparing freehold homes may pay close attention to parking, exterior maintenance, and major systems.
This doesn’t mean marketing should target or exclude certain groups of people. Housing marketing should describe the property and its features, not make assumptions about who “belongs” in a neighbourhood or home. Ethical real estate marketing should be inclusive, factual, and focused on the property, location features, and transaction details.
In a fast-rising market, sellers may expect multiple offers simply because a property is listed. In today’s GTA market, offer activity depends more heavily on price, condition, local inventory, property type, and buyer confidence.
A seller should talk through offer strategy before launch, including:
·Whether to review offers as they arrive or set an offer date
·How to respond if showings are strong but offers are slow
·What terms matter besides price, such as deposit, conditions, closing date, and included items
·How to evaluate a conditional offer versus a firm offer
·When a price adjustment may be worth considering
Every offer should be assessed on its actual terms. Sellers should avoid assumptions about buyers and should rely on their agent and lawyer, where appropriate, to understand contract language, conditions, and closing obligations.
If you’re planning to sell a home Toronto, the key takeaway is simple: buyers are not gone, but they’re asking better questions. A successful listing needs to meet them with better answers.
That means preparing the property carefully, pricing it with current local evidence, marketing it accurately, and staying flexible during negotiations. The right strategy should reflect your property, your neighbourhood, your timing, and the current competitive landscape.
Before listing, consider asking your agent:
6.Which recent sales are most relevant to my home?
7.Which active listings will buyers compare against mine?
8.What updates or preparation would make the biggest difference?
9.How should we handle offer timing and negotiation?
10.What information should be ready before the first showing?
If you’re considering selling, start with a local, evidence-based pricing and preparation conversation. A clear plan can help you understand your position before you commit to a listing date, renovation, or marketing strategy.