toronto condo prices

Here's how downtown Toronto compares to Manhattan in terms of condo prices

Toronto may look enough like New York to play it on TV sometimes, but these two bustling urban metropolises command far different prices in terms of property.

Zoocasa sales representative Doug Vukasovic recently looked at how the most expensive boroughs in both cities (Toronto proper and Manhattan, respectively) measure up in terms of their condo markets.

His findings, published by Yahoo Finance on Monday, show that condos in Manhattan, on average, are exponentially more pricey than those which can currently be purchased in Toronto — and Toronto's condo market is on fire.

There are some caveats, of course — one of them being size.

Vukasovic points out in his analysis that the average condo on Manhattan's posh Upper East Side is 3,868 square feet at a cost of $11,400,011. In Toronto's similarly (but much less) ritzy Yorkville, condominium apartments are just 890 square feet on average, and go for around $1,014,835.

Unit alone doesn't justify the more than $10 million price difference. Land size is also a key factor, with the borough of Toronto spanning 630 square kilometres against Manhattan's measly 59.1 square kilometres.

On average, across all parts of pre-amalgmation Toronto (read: everything but Etobicoke, Scarborough, York, East York or North York) in Q3 of 2019, the average one-bedroom condo cost $617,232.

Manhattan's average one-bedroom condo price during the same period of time? $1,148,827. 

It may be getting nearly as expensive to rent in Toronto as it is to rent in New York, but we're a long way off from seeing the one-bedroom average surpass seven figures. One would hope so, at least.

Lead photo by

Randy McDonald


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in Real Estate

Proposed Toronto condo tower seeking gargantuan 18-storey increase

$4 million home in exclusive Toronto area hits market for first time in 30 years

Ontario city slashes development charges on new homes amid criticism

An old 1800s Toronto apothecary turned house is up for sale at over $4 million

New legal drama worsens plight of Toronto's troubled megatower

Massive redevelopment plans unveiled for abandoned Toronto bus terminal

Brand new $3.8 million Toronto home looks like it's straight out of a design magazine

Proposed buildings would replace Toronto grocery store and huge parking lots