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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If you’re asking that question, you’re not alone. “Should I sell my house now in the GTA?” has become one of the most practical questions for homeowners in Toronto, Mississauga, Brampton, Markham, Vaughan, Pickering, and the surrounding communities. The answer depends on your property, your timeline, your local competition, and your next move. But March 2026 market data does offer useful clues for sellers who are trying to make a confident decision.
According to the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB), GTA REALTORS® reported 5,039 home sales in March 2026, up 1.7% compared with March 2025. New listings were down 16.7% year over year, at 14,442. At the same time, the average selling price was $1,017,796, down 6.7% from March 2025, while the MLS® Home Price Index Composite benchmark was down 7.4% year over year.
In plain language: activity improved, supply tightened, and buyers still had negotiating power. For many homeowners, that means selling now can make sense, but only with a realistic pricing strategy and a clear plan.
The March numbers show a market that’s more balanced than the peak-pandemic years and more nuanced than a simple “buyer’s market” or “seller’s market” label. TRREB noted that sales were up year over year, new listings were down, and month-over-month activity improved on a seasonally adjusted basis.
That matters because sellers often focus only on price. Price is important, but it’s not the only signal. A homeowner thinking about selling a house in Toronto or the GTA should look at several indicators together:
·Sales activity: More completed sales suggest buyers are still active.
·New listings: Fewer new listings can reduce competition for well-positioned homes.
·Average and benchmark prices: Year-over-year declines show buyers are price-sensitive.
·Days on market: Longer exposure can signal that buyers are comparing options carefully.
·Local property type: Detached homes, semis, townhomes, and condos can behave differently, even in the same city.
The key takeaway: the GTA market isn’t one market. A detached home in Etobicoke, a condo in downtown Toronto, and a townhouse in Durham Region may face very different buyer demand. That’s why a local pricing review is more useful than relying on a headline average.
For some homeowners, yes. If your home is well-presented, priced against recent comparable sales, and located in an area with limited competing inventory, March 2026 conditions may support a serious listing conversation.
TRREB’s March 2026 commentary also noted that buyers continued to benefit from negotiating power on price across major market segments. For sellers, that doesn’t mean you should avoid the market. It means you should avoid assumptions. Pricing too high “to test the market” can lead to reduced interest, longer time on market, and future price adjustments.
A stronger approach is to ask:
·What have similar homes actually sold for in the last 30 to 90 days?
·How many similar homes are currently listed nearby?
·What condition are those homes in compared with mine?
·Are buyers in my segment asking for concessions, repairs, or flexible closing dates?
·What’s my preferred closing timeline, and how does that affect strategy?
If you need to sell because of a relocation, lifestyle change, estate decision, separation, or purchase timeline, the “right” time may be the time that supports your larger plan. If your timeline is flexible, you may have more room to prepare, test seasonality, and monitor local inventory.
A successful sale in today’s market is rarely about one tactic. It’s usually the result of preparation, positioning, and disciplined pricing. Before listing your home, consider these steps.
An online estimate can be a starting point, but it usually can’t account for renovations, layout, lot characteristics, building condition, views, parking, noise, buyer perception, or the most relevant comparable sales. A local real estate professional can interpret the data in context.
Because average prices were down year over year in March 2026, it’s important to anchor your list price to recent local evidence. Overpricing can make buyers hesitate, especially when they have options.
Most buyers will evaluate your home digitally before booking a showing. Professional photography, accurate descriptions, floor plans, and clear feature lists can help buyers decide whether the home fits their needs. Any advertising should be current, accurate, and not misleading.
In a market where buyers have negotiating power, sellers should think ahead about price flexibility, closing date preferences, included items, condition clauses, and offer terms. This isn’t about giving up leverage; it’s about knowing your priorities before emotions rise.
A real estate agent can guide pricing, positioning, marketing, showings, and negotiations. For legal, accounting, mortgage, tax, estate, or financial planning questions, sellers should speak with the appropriate qualified professional. For example, questions about capital gains, mortgage penalties, or legal title should be reviewed with an accountant, mortgage professional, or real estate lawyer.
Not every seller has the same goal. Here’s how current GTA conditions may affect different situations.
·Upsizers: If you’re selling and buying in the same market, a softer price environment may affect both sides of the transaction. Your sale price matters, but so does your buying opportunity.
·Downsizers: Lower-maintenance properties may have different competition levels than larger family-sized homes. Compare both your sale market and your next purchase market.
·Condo sellers: Condo demand can vary significantly by building, location, fees, layout, parking, and investor activity. Building-specific data is essential.
·Relocating sellers: A clear timeline, remote signing options, pre-list preparation, and flexible showing logistics can reduce stress.
·Investors: Rental, tax, financing, and cash-flow questions should be reviewed with licensed financial, tax, and legal professionals.
In a market where buyers are informed and cautious, avoid these common seller missteps:
·Using a list price based only on what you want to net.
·Ignoring recent comparable sales because they’re lower than expected.
·Launching with weak photos or incomplete listing information.
·Assuming spring activity guarantees a quick sale.
·Making broad claims such as “best neighbourhood” or “perfect for families,” which can raise fair housing and human rights concerns depending on context.
·Treating commission, pricing, or buyer incentives as fixed or standard rather than negotiable and situation-specific.
Ethical real estate marketing should focus on property features, accurate market context, and consumer choice. It should not steer buyers or sellers based on protected characteristics, and it should not make guarantees about results.
The best answer is: maybe, if the numbers support your goals.
March 2026 GTA market data suggests that buyers are active, supply has tightened compared with last year, and prices remain below year-ago levels. That combination creates both opportunity and risk. Sellers who price carefully, prepare thoughtfully, and understand their local competition may be well-positioned. Sellers who rely on outdated expectations may face more resistance.
Before deciding, get a property-specific market review. Look at recent comparable sales, active competition, condition, timing, and your next-step plan. A data-driven conversation can help you decide whether selling now, preparing for a later date, or making targeted improvements is the better path.
If you’re thinking about selling a home in Toronto or the Greater Toronto Area, request a local home value conversation. You’ll get a practical look at recent comparable sales, current buyer activity, and the steps that may help your property stand out, without pressure or guesswork.
Important note: This article is for general real estate information only. It is not legal, tax, mortgage, accounting, or financial advice. Please consult the appropriate qualified professional for advice specific to your situation. Brokerage name and registrant identification should be added clearly and prominently before publication, in accordance with Ontario real estate advertising requirements.