Saturday, May 2, 2015

Toronto named hottest luxury real estate market in the world

Toronto named hottest luxury real estate market in the world



TORONTO – High-end homes are being snapped up increasingly fast in Toronto, named the world’s hottest luxury real estate market in a new report that looks at where the wealthy choose to live.
The study says the extremely low supply of homes in Toronto has pushed prices for relatively average homes to over $1.2 million, and up to $4.8 million for larger homes or those in more desirable neighbourhoods.The report by Christie’s International Real Estate says Toronto was the only location among the world’s top 10 markets to see a faster pace of luxury home sales last year over 2013 – 37 per cent in 2014, compared with only four per cent the previous year.
Homes worth $1.2 million or more spent less time on the market in Toronto than in any other top locations – an average of 31 days, eight days less than the previous year.
Toronto luxury real estate
A mansion in Toronto’s Forest Hill is pictured in this file photo.
Fernando Morales/The Globe and Mail

By comparison, the second-fastest market was San Francisco, where homes in that price range took an average of 71 days to sell. The report says the global average in 254 days.
However, Toronto ranked only 10th on the general luxury index, which measures overall prices as opposed to growth and demand. London was ranked first.
“2014 was the Toronto market’s second-best year on record,” Justine Deluce, a broker at Chestnut Park Real Estate, said in the report.
“If there had been more inventory, the record would easily have been shattered.”
On average, luxury resort markets saw a stronger boost in sales than urban areas last year, the report shows.
The Muskoka region north of Toronto saw a “marked increase” in luxury home sales, especially in the $2.4 million or more range, which went up 66 per cent from 2013.
“The jump in luxury sales volumes does not necessarily show that average sale prices increased, but does indicate that buyers had an appetite for more expensive recreational properties-something that has not occurred since before the recession of 2008,” Deluce said.
Last year also saw more properties than ever being sold for more than US$100 million across all markets.
© The Canadian Press, 2015
To find out what kind of home can 1  million get you inside (and outside) Toronto?  Call or email
Lisa Portolese, Sales Representative
Royal LePage Signature Realty, Brokerage
905-568-2121