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Canada Adds 54,000 Jobs in November: What the New Numbers Mean for the Economy

Canada’s labour market delivered another surprise in November 2025, adding 54,000 new jobs and pushing the unemployment rate down to 6.5%, its lowest point in 16 months. This marks the third consecutive month of strong job growth, signalling a labour market rebound after months of sluggish performance.

In this analysis, we break down where the jobs came from, who benefited the most, and what this means for Canadians heading into the new year.


📉 Unemployment Rate Drops as Labour Market Tightens

Statistics Canada reported that unemployment decreased from 6.9% in October to 6.5% in November. Interestingly, this drop happened partly because 26,000 people left the labour force, which helped reduce the jobless rate.

Between September and November, Canada added a total of 181,000 jobs, defying economists' expectations of job losses amid economic uncertainty and U.S. tariff pressures.


📌 Where the Jobs Came From

Not all sectors contributed equally. According to StatCan, the biggest growth occurred in:

1️⃣ Health Care & Social Assistance (+46,000 jobs)

This sector led the gains, reflecting Canada’s ongoing need for healthcare workers and support professionals.

2️⃣ Accommodation & Food Services

Hospitality continued to recover as demand strengthened post-summer.

3️⃣ Natural Resources

Modest but meaningful growth supported by energy and mining activity.


📉 Sectors That Lost Jobs

Some industries weren’t as fortunate:

  • Wholesale & Retail Trade (-34,000 jobs)

  • Manufacturing also reported job losses — expected in a tariff-sensitive economic environment.


👥 Youth Employment Surges

A major driver of November’s job numbers: Canadian youth (15–24).

  • +50,000 youth jobs, building on another +21,000 in October.

  • The youth employment rate rose to 55.3%, recovering from a record low in July.

This is the first consistent youth employment growth in 2025 — a strong indicator that younger workers are finally re-entering the job market with better prospects.


💰 Wage Growth Remains Steady

Average hourly wages increased 3.6% in November, slightly above October’s growth rate. With inflation moderating, this suggests real wages may be slowly improving for many Canadians.


🏦 What This Means for the Bank of Canada

These numbers arrive just days before the Bank of Canada’s final interest rate decision of the year.
A tightening labour market typically signals economic strength, but wage growth and sector shifts may push the Bank to carefully balance inflationary risks.


📊 Final Thoughts: A Labor Market Rebound With Caveats

Canada’s job market is showing strong resilience:

✔ Consistent multi-month job gains
✔ Youth employment revival
✔ Strong hiring in essential sectors like health care

But challenges remain:

✖ Retail and manufacturing weakness
✖ High rates of involuntary part-time work
✖ Fewer people participating in the labour force

For workers, this could mean more opportunity in specific sectors — especially health and social services — while businesses may face tighter hiring conditions ahead.



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GTA Condo Market Summary – November 2025

 

Data-Driven Overview of Prices, Sales, DOM & Regional Trends

The Greater Toronto Area (GTA) condo resale market continued its slow, buyer-favoured pattern in November 2025, with sharp declines in sales activity, moderate price adjustments, and longer selling times across most regions. Both TRREB and third-party market summaries confirm that buyers remain cautious, even as interest rates trend downward and inventory stabilizes.


1. GTA-Wide Condo Performance (November 2025)

Sales activity dropped sharply, recording one of the steepest annual declines in the condo segment:

  • Total GTA condo sales: ~1,299 units (-21.7% YoY)

  • GTA average condo price: $663,290 (-3.8% YoY)

  • Average Days on Market (DOM): up 18% from the previous quarter

This decline in sales is more significant than the broader housing market’s -15.8% YoY drop in total GTA home sales.
However, prices have remained relatively stable, suggesting sellers are holding firm while buyers wait for better economic signals.

Source: TRREB Market Watch & TRREB Quick Market Overview Charts



2. 416 vs 905: Diverging Price Patterns

Toronto (416) Condo Market

Toronto carries the bulk of condo activity and continues to show better price resilience:

  • 416 condo sales: 880 units (-21.8% YoY)

  • 416 average price: ~$701,259 (-1.7% YoY)

Although sales volume dropped, prices dipped very modestly, partly due to strong demand in downtown and transit-centric neighbourhoods.


905 Region Condo Market

The 905 experienced much deeper price corrections:

  • 905 condo sales: ~419 units (-21.4% YoY)

  • 905 average price: ~$583,578 (-8.7% YoY)

Why the larger drop?

  • More investor-heavy buildings

  • Greater competition from new completions

  • Less stable location premiums compared to Toronto’s core

Summary:
416 = stability
905 = affordability + more price declines

Source: summary of TRREB November data


3. Days on Market Rising Across the GTA

TRREB’s Q3 and November data confirm a clear shift:

  • Condo DOM increased by ~18.2% quarter-over-quarter

  • Many units now sit 30–45+ days before receiving serious offers

  • Previously listed properties show high PDOM (60–90+ days)

This rise in market time gives buyers more leverage:

  • Easier negotiation

  • More conditional offers

  • Lower competition per listing

Source: TRREB Quick Market Overview



4. Price Context: Year-over-Year Movement

Here’s how November 2024 compares to November 2025:

Region

Avg Price 2024

Avg Price 2025

YoY Change

Toronto (416)

~$713K

~$701K

-1.7%

905 Region

~$640K

~$584K

-8.7%

GTA Overall

~$689K

~$663K

-3.8%

Interpretation:
Despite weaker activity, condo prices have not collapsed. Instead, they have reset modestly, especially in 416.
The 905 region—more sensitive to investor sentiment—experienced the largest adjustment.


5. Quarter 3 (2025) Context: Why November Looks the Way It Does

TRREB’s Q3-2025 condo report outlines the pattern leading into November:

  • 4,375 condo sales in Q3 (+2.5% YoY)

  • Average price: $649,168 (-6.4% YoY)

  • Toronto average: $677,095 (down from $713,678 in Q3-2024)

  • New listings: down 2.7% YoY

This suggests most of the price correction happened earlier in 2025, while November mainly reflects slower buyer sentiment rather than a new downturn.

Source: TRREB Q3 Condo Market Report


6. Macroeconomic Drivers: Rates & Jobs

Interest Rates

  • Bank of Canada lowered its policy rate to the 2.25%–2.75% neutral range by late 2025

  • Mortgage affordability improved slightly

  • But rate cuts alone did not boost sales, especially for condos

Sources: Reuters,

Employment

  • Toronto unemployment hovered around 7.8% in late 2025

  • Higher insecurity among first-time buyers → slower condo absorption

  • TRREB reinforced that employment confidence is essential for a 2026 market recovery

Sources: CREA, Toronto Employment Survey


7. City-by-City Snapshot (Summary Form)

Toronto

  • Strong rental demand supports pricing

  • Investor-heavy micro-markets still weak

  • Transit-connected areas remain stable (Downtown, Midtown, East End)

Mississauga (Peel)

  • Price softness in Square One high-rise cluster

  • Downsizer demand stable in Port Credit & Lakeview

  • Investors sensitive to rent levels vs carrying costs

Vaughan / Markham (York)

  • VMC & Highway 7 corridor remain active but layout/view premium is huge

  • Buyers comparing newer vs older towers aggressively

Pickering / Ajax / Whitby / Oshawa (Durham)

  • Best affordability in GTA

  • GO-station-adjacent condos outperform

  • Demand strongest among first-time buyers

Oakville / Burlington / Milton (Halton)

  • Boutique buildings stable

  • Larger units attractive to downsizers

  • Fewer transactions = more price volatility


8. Market Takeaways in One Look

Buyer Market Indicators

✔ Sales down sharply
✔ DOM up
✔ Price softness in 905
✔ More negotiation space

Seller Market Survival Tips

✔ Price based on 2025 sold data, not 2021 peaks
✔ Superior staging + photography required
✔ Be open to conditional offers
✔ Consider incentives (fee credits, flexible closings)

Investor Insights

✔ Resale value far stronger than pre-construction
✔ Urbanation shows pre-con sales at 35-year lows, making resale more appealing
✔ Cash-flow analysis more important than appreciation in short term

Source: Zoocasa.com


Final Summary

The November 2025 GTA condo market is defined by:

  • Lower sales, not collapsing prices

  • Tighter buyer psychology, driven by job concerns

  • Stable pricing in 416, deeper adjustments in 905

  • Rising DOM, increasing negotiation power

  • Strong value proposition in resale vs pre-construction

As we move into 2026, the key question will be buyer confidence—when interest rates, employment expectations, and affordability align, the condo market is positioned for a gradual rebound rather than a rapid recovery.


 


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📧 Email: samichy@torontobase.com
🌐 Web: www.torontobased.com | www.torontobase.ca

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GTA Real Estate Market Report – November 2025

Market Report – November 2025

Stability Beneath the Surface as Buyers Wait for Confidence to Return

November 2025 delivered a revealing snapshot of the Greater Toronto Area housing market. While year-over-year comparisons remain negative, the month-to-month trends suggest the market may be entering a stabilizing phase. This is a transition market—one where both opportunities and risks exist depending on how buyers and sellers approach it.

According to the latest Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB) data, there were 5,010 home sales in November, a 15.8% decline from the 5,947 sales recorded in November 2024. New listings also declined slightly, coming in at 11,134, about 4 percent lower than a year ago. The average selling price across the GTA dipped to $1,039,458, down 6.4 percent year-over-year. These indicators continue to reflect a more cautious environment where many consumers remain on the sidelines.

However, a deeper look shows that November was not simply a repeat of the previous year’s slowdown. On a seasonally adjusted month-over-month basis, both sales and prices held relatively steady. TRREB reports that the average selling price for November edged slightly higher compared to October, and the MLS® Home Price Index Composite showed only marginal movement. In other words, while the market is softer than last year, it is not weakening at the same pace—and may be starting to form a base.


A Market Defined by Hesitation, Not Withdrawal

One of the most important observations in TRREB’s November release is the emphasis on consumer confidence, or rather, the lack of it. Households are clearly interested in taking advantage of:

  • Lower borrowing costs

  • Reduced competition

  • Softer selling prices

But interest does not yet translate into action. Buyers remain hesitant due to lingering concerns about economic uncertainty, employment stability, and global trade developments. TRREB notes that encouraging employment news and improved economic indicators in November are positive signs, but meaningful shifts in consumer behaviour often lag behind such announcements.

This distinction matters. The market is not losing buyers permanently; it is simply delaying them. Once confidence improves, these sidelined buyers can re-enter the market quickly, creating a surge in activity. This suggests that 2026 has the potential for a more meaningful rebound—especially if interest rates remain stable or move slightly lower.


A Well-Supplied Market Offering Buyers More Leverage

The GTA continues to benefit from a healthy level of resale inventory. Homes are spending more time on the market than they did last year, giving buyers more choice and more negotiating room. Even as new listings were down compared to last year, the overall supply available is sufficient to avoid the kind of tight conditions that previously drove rapid price appreciation.

This environment means:

  • Buyers can take more time before making decisions.

  • Conditional offers (financing, inspection, status review) are being accepted more often.

  • Properties priced above market often sit without offers, reinforcing the need for accurate positioning and strategy.

TRREB cautions, however, that this balance may not last indefinitely. As existing inventory gets absorbed, new construction must play a larger role to keep the market supplied. If development slows or gets delayed—something Ontario has experienced in past cycles—the GTA could quickly swing back to tighter conditions.

For now, buyers who want more control and choice in their home search have an advantage they may not have in a year.


Segment Breakdown: The Gap Between Condos and Low-Rise Homes

The November data reinforces the traditional price hierarchy within the GTA:

  • Detached homes remain the most expensive, reflecting land scarcity and ongoing demand from move-up families and multi-generational households.

  • Townhouses and semi-detached homes sit in the middle, filling the critical “missing middle” segment where affordability and space intersect.

  • Condo apartments continue to be the most accessible ownership option for first-time buyers and investors.

TRREB highlighted the continued need for housing that bridges the gap between condominium apartments and traditional detached homes. Future demand will remain strong for stacked towns, urban towns, semis, and compact detached homes in transit-oriented areas. These property types offer an affordable pathway for buyers moving out of condos but not yet ready for higher-priced detached homes.

For agents and investors, this segment represents one of the most strategic opportunities going into 2026 and beyond.


Economic Signals Shaping 2026

November’s surprising economic resilience adds another layer of optimism. TRREB references:

  • Stronger-than-expected employment growth

  • Improved economic activity despite global trade pressures

  • Long-term benefits from major infrastructure projects

The combination of a stable job market and improving economic conditions can significantly influence buyer confidence. When consumers feel secure in their long-term financial outlook, they are more likely to make major decisions such as buying a home. If the current momentum continues, it could shift the housing market’s trajectory by early or mid-2026.

Government action also remains important. TRREB continues advocating for incentives to build more homes, emphasizing that increased housing supply directly supports affordability, economic growth, and market stability.


What This Market Means for Buyers, Sellers, and Investors

For Buyers

This period offers opportunities that were not available in previous years:

  • More inventory

  • Less competition

  • Greater negotiating flexibility

  • Reduced pressure to waive conditions

If you are planning to buy in 2026, the current environment may allow you to secure more value before demand intensifies again.

For Sellers

Success in today’s market requires strategy:

  • Pricing must reflect current market conditions, not the highs of 2021–2022 or early 2024.

  • Strong digital marketing—photography, video, targeted advertising—is essential to stand out.

  • Homes that present well and are priced correctly continue to attract strong interest.

Even in a balanced market, well-positioned properties still achieve excellent results.

For Investors

Opportunities exist in:

  • Transit-oriented condo markets

  • Properties with rental potential (e.g., basement units, duplex conversions)

  • Townhomes and semis in high-demand neighbourhoods

With softer prices and stable rents, disciplined investors can secure assets that perform well over the long term.


Conclusion: A Market in Transition, Not Decline

November 2025 confirms that the GTA real estate market is transitioning, not tumbling. Year-over-year figures reflect a slowdown, but month-over-month data shows early signs of stabilization. Buyers are cautious, but not absent. Sellers must adapt, but well-prepared listings continue to succeed.

The shift that will drive the next chapter is consumer confidence. As economic signals strengthen, the GTA is positioned for a gradual recovery—one that could accelerate quickly once sentiment improves.

If you would like a neighbourhood-level breakdown for your home, investment property, or buying plans, I can prepare a detailed analysis based on your specific location and goals.

Prepared by Sami Chowdhury, Broker
RE/MAX Realtron Realty Inc., Brokerage


End Notes & References

This GTA November 2025 Market Report is based on verified data published by the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB). All statistics, charts, and year-over-year or month-over-month comparisons referenced in this report were sourced directly from the official November 2025 Market Watch, Quick Market Overview Charts, and related TRREB publications.

For full details, Please click the follow links:

Official TRREB Market Watch – November 2025

Quick Market Overview Charts – TRREB

These resources provide comprehensive breakdowns of GTA sales, new listings, pricing trends, home types, and regional performance insights.

If you require a neighborhood-specific breakdown or customized real estate analysis for your property, please contact me directly for a personalized report.

 


🏡 Ready to Start Your Real Estate Journey?
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Explore a wide range of specialized listings with access to powerful tools and search portals tailored to your needs:

Stay ahead of the curve. Get the latest real estate news and insights right here.


📩 Need help navigating your options?
Reach out for expert advice and market insights:

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BROKER
📧 Email: samichy@torontobase.com
🌐 Web: www.torontobased.com | www.torontobase.ca

Let’s make your next move a smart one.


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Lakeview Oshawa Real Estate Market Report – November 2025 

Lakeview Oshawa: November 2025 Market Overview

November 2025 was one of the most revealing months for the Lakeview neighbourhood in Oshawa. This lakeside community, once known mainly as a modest, working-class pocket, has now firmly established itself as one of the most strategic, affordability-focused micro-markets in the eastern GTA.

The November sales activity, covering transactions between November 1 and November 30, 2025, provides a clear snapshot of how buyers and sellers are behaving in this area. The data set drawn from your MLS-style reports includes a mix of semi-detached homes, detached bungalows, and 1½-storey houses, mostly freehold and all appealing to cost-conscious buyers.

Several key patterns stand out:

  • Most homes sold within days rather than weeks

  • Multiple properties achieved sale prices above their list price

  • Renovated or modernized homes attracted the strongest competition

  • Affordability, relative to nearby Durham and GTA markets, remained the dominant driver

Semi-detached homes, which make up a significant portion of Lakeview’s stock, led the way in both volume and price strength. Renovated semis, in particular, delivered standout performance because buyers increasingly lack the budget, time, or appetite for major post-purchase renovations. In a higher-rate environment, people want homes that are “move-in ready” from day one.

Despite the broader affordability challenges across Ontario and tougher qualification rules under the mortgage stress test (buyers must qualify at the greater of their contract rate plus two percent or 5.25 percent), Lakeview continues to outperform comparable entry-level markets. That resilience is rooted in several advantages:

  • Quick access to Highway 401 for commuters

  • Direct proximity to Lake Ontario, the Waterfront Trail, and multiple parks

  • Price levels that are still meaningfully below Pickering, Ajax, and Scarborough

  • Strong perception among first-time buyers that Lakeview is one of Durham’s most realistic entry points

The rest of this report breaks down November 2025 in depth—by property type, micro-neighbourhood, buyer motivations, seller strategy, and future outlook—so that buyers, sellers, and investors can make informed and confident decisions.


Sales Snapshot: What Sold in November 2025

Your November data set includes several representative transactions across different parts of Lakeview. To keep privacy intact, we’ll reference each property only by closest major intersection, not by address.

Semi-Detached Homes – Key Examples

Among the semi-detached homes, we saw:

  • A semi in the Cedar Street & Phillip Murray Avenue pocket selling in the low $600,000s after light competition

  • A semi near Stevenson Road South & Renaissance Drive selling in the high $570,000s with strong over-asking activity

  • A semi in the Cedar Street & Killarney Court area selling in the mid–$630,000s

  • Another semi near Cedar Street & Phillip Murray Avenue exceeding the $600,000 mark after upgrades and staging

  • A semi in an interior court near the Lakeview and Beaverbrook area selling near the mid–$640,000s, very close to asking

Although each property had its own features, these homes collectively defined the semi-detached segment for the month.

Detached Homes – Key Examples

Detached inventory was limited but instructive:

  • A bungalow near Ritson Road South & Conant Street sold around $575,000

  • A 1½-storey detached home near Simcoe Street South & Conant Street also sold for about $575,000

These two detached examples provide a baseline for understanding ceiling prices and buyer preferences in Lakeview’s older freehold stock.


Semi-Detached Homes: The Anchor of the Lakeview Market

Semi-detached homes are the core product in Lakeview and continue to set the tone for pricing and buyer expectations.

From your sample of semi-detached sales, prices ranged from the mid–$550,000s to the mid–$640,000s. When we average those results, Lakeview’s semi-detached homes in November 2025 land around $605,700.

That number matters for two key reasons:

  1. It’s significantly higher than what similar homes in this neighbourhood achieved just a few years ago, when many semis still traded below the $500,000 mark.

  2. It effectively defines the “price anchor” for the neighbourhood. Buyers now perceive the low $600,000s as a normal range for a good semi in Lakeview.

Why Semi-Detached Homes Outperformed

Several forces converged to make semis the star of the market.

1. Entry-Level Price Point With Real Space
Compared to buying a condo or stacked townhome, a semi in Lakeview offers a lot: three bedrooms, two or more baths, a private yard, and driveway parking. For buyers priced out of Ajax, Pickering, and even parts of Oshawa to the north, this combination of space and affordability is compelling.

2. Appeal to Commuters
Lakeview’s quick access to Highway 401, along with reasonable commuting times to Pickering, Scarborough, and downtown Toronto, makes the area attractive to working professionals. As GO Transit and regional transit talk progresses, buyers increasingly see Lakeview as a solid long-term bet.

3. Renovation Premium
A semi near Cedar & Phillip Murray that had been nicely updated—with modern flooring, a refreshed kitchen, improved lighting, and a finished basement—commanded a noticeable premium over less updated comparables. Buyers are clearly willing to pay extra for turnkey condition, especially now that renovation costs remain elevated.

4. Investor-Friendly Features
Many semis in Lakeview include side entrances and basements that can be modernized into in-law or income suites (subject to municipal rules). This flexibility appeals to landlords, multi-generational families, and first-time buyers who like the option of future rental income.


Micro-Locations Inside the Semi-Detached Segment

Lakeview isn’t a large neighbourhood geographically, but it behaves like several small markets stitched together. Each micro-zone responds differently depending on lifestyle features, lot sizes, and housing stock.

Cedar Street & Phillip Murray Avenue – Waterfront Lifestyle Zone

Semi-detached homes in the Cedar & Phillip Murray area benefited from:

  • Short walks to Lake Ontario

  • Easy access to Stone Street Park, sports fields, and a running track

  • The waterfront multi-use trail and nearby community centre

A renovated semi in this zone sold quickly in the low $600,000s, highlighting the premium that buyers attach to walkable access to the lake and parks. Even without luxury finishes, homes here enjoy a lifestyle lift that translates into stronger offers.

Stevenson Road South & Renaissance Drive – Family Crescent Zone

Semis near Stevenson & Renaissance (including those on surrounding crescent streets) performed strongly as well. This pocket typically provides:

  • Larger-than-average interior square footage for a semi

  • Quiet, low-traffic streets ideal for families

  • Reasonable lot sizes and decent parking

  • Proximity to schools, parks, and everyday shopping

A semi in this micro-zone achieved a sale price roughly 6 percent above its list price and sold within a couple of weeks, showing that family buyers continue to prioritize stability, space, and predictable neighbourhood character.

Cedar Street & Killarney Court – Investor Meets First-Time Buyer

Around Cedar & Killarney, you see a blend of:

  • Finished basements

  • Flexible layouts

  • Good depth lots

  • An increasing number of interior updates

A semi here reached roughly $636,000 in November. Investors appreciate the potential for rental income, while first-time buyers are drawn to the combination of modernized interiors and relative affordability.


List-to-Sale Ratios and DOM for Semis

Aggregating your November semi-detached transactions, we see the following patterns:

  • Semis listed in the high $540,000s to high $590,000s often sold above asking, achieving roughly 101–106 percent of list price.

  • The one semi listed closer to $650,000 sold very near asking, reflecting buyer resistance as prices push higher.

On average, semi-detached homes achieved around 103–104 percent of their list price.

In terms of days on market:

  • Well-presented semis in good condition typically sold in 4–14 days

  • A power-of-sale property that required more work stayed on the market for over 30 days

This reinforces the idea that Lakeview is a fast-moving, low-inventory pocket where serious buyers are ready to act quickly when the right home appears.


What Buyers Wanted in November 2025

The November results clearly show what Lakeview buyers prioritized:

  • Modern finishes – Updated flooring, paint, and lighting were major pluses

  • Functional layouts – Homes that felt open or easily usable attracted better feedback

  • Finished basements – Extra living space was highly valued, whether for family or future rental use

  • Side entrances – Important for those considering in-law suites or separate entry scenarios

  • Good parking – Driveways accommodating two or more vehicles mattered

  • Turnkey condition – Buyers preferred homes they could move into without major renovation projects

  • Micro-location advantages – Proximity to the lake, green space, or a quiet crescent supported stronger offers

By contrast, homes that needed significant structural or cosmetic work, had outdated mechanical systems, or presented poorly in photos and showings attracted less competition and took longer to sell.


Detached Homes: Land, Utility, and Ceiling Prices

Detached homes represent a smaller slice of the Lakeview market, but the two detached sales in your November dataset provide an important lens into buyer psychology.

One detached sale was a bungalow near Ritson Road South & Conant Street, and the other a 1½-storey home near Simcoe Street South & Conant Street. Both sold for roughly $575,000.

What $575,000 for Detached Tells Us

Seeing both detached properties settle at the same price point—and below the semi-detached average—sends a clear signal:

  • Older detached homes that need updating are not automatically worth more than renovated semis

  • Interior condition and perceived livability now carry more weight than the simple fact of being detached

  • The mid–$570,000s appear to mark a ceiling for unrenovated detached homes of this type in Lakeview at this time

In most markets, you would expect detached homes to command a 20–30 percent premium over semis. In Lakeview’s November data, that pattern reverses: renovated semi-detached homes near the lake and in desirable pockets often outperform dated detached homes on older streets.


Bungalow Case Study – Near Ritson Road South & Conant Street

The bungalow near Ritson & Conant illustrates the trade-off between land and interior condition:

  • Sold for about $575,000

  • Took just over a month to sell

  • Sat on a large lot, roughly in the 48 × 135-foot range

  • Offered three bedrooms, one bathroom, and a partially finished basement

  • Presented as livable but clearly not modernized

Here, buyers were primarily paying for land size and location flexibility. A large lot at this price point is rare across most of Durham Region. The single-level layout appeals to seniors, small families, or investors planning to rework the space. But the modest interior size and dated finishes capped the price buyers were willing to pay.

Ceiling for Unrenovated Bungalows

Based on this example and the surrounding context, unrenovated bungalows in Lakeview seem to top out around the mid–$570,000s, unless they offer exceptional features or locations.


1½-Storey Case Study – Near Simcoe Street South & Conant Street

The 1½-storey detached near Simcoe & Conant tells a slightly different story:

  • Also sold for roughly $575,000

  • Sold very quickly, in just a few days

  • Sits on a deep lot, around 50 × 150 feet

  • Includes three bedrooms, two bathrooms

  • Features a large heated workshop-style garage

In this case, the primary draw was not the interior; it was the functional utility—lot size plus an oversized, heated garage that appeals to tradespeople, car enthusiasts, and home-based business operators.

Even though the interior needed modernization, the property’s unique features allowed it to sell quickly at a price similar to the bungalow that took much longer to move.


Detached Market Summary

Across these detached examples, we can summarize November’s detached performance as follows:

  • Detached average price: approximately $575,000

  • Days on market: roughly 4–34 days, depending heavily on condition and special features

  • Buyer priorities: lot size, parking, workshops, and privacy often outranked interior upgrades

Detached buyers in Lakeview 2025 were clearly value-focused. Many were willing to accept older interiors if they could secure better land, utility buildings, or multi-purpose use.


Price Patterns, DOM Trends, and Inventory Behaviour

Bringing the semi-detached and detached data together, November 2025 showed the following:

  • Semi-detached average: around $605,700

  • Detached average: around $575,000

  • Spread between the two: roughly 5 percent

Rather than detached homes leading the market, condition and location led the market. Renovated semis in prime micro-zones regularly exceeded older detached homes that needed work.

On the days-on-market side:

  • Well-prepared freehold homes usually sold in 4–14 days

  • Power-of-sale and heavily dated listings could remain on the market for about a month or more

Inventory remained low overall. There was no sign of oversupply; instead, well-priced listings under $650,000 tended to be absorbed quickly, often with multiple offers.


Micro-Neighbourhoods and Buyer Psychology

The November data strongly reinforces the importance of micro-location inside Lakeview:

  • Cedar & Phillip Murray: Premium for walkability, lake access, and recreation amenities

  • Stevenson & Renaissance: Family-oriented crescent streets with solid value retention

  • Ritson & Conant: Deep-lot, older homes attractive to investors and renovators

  • Simcoe & Conant: High-utility properties with workshops or business-friendly setups

  • Cedar & Killarney: Mix of updated homes, finished basements, and good rental demand

Across all these zones, buyer psychology shared a consistent theme:

  • Turnkey or near-turnkey homes triggered urgency and stronger offers

  • Price sensitivity climbed sharply above $650,000

  • Features such as separate entrances, flexible basements, and large parking areas were heavily rewarded

  • Lake and park proximity created a lifestyle premium that buyers were willing to pay for

  • Quiet streets and good neighbourhood feel often mattered more than pure square footage


Lakeview vs Nearby Markets: The Affordability Valve

In a broader regional context, Lakeview operates as an affordability valve for the eastern GTA.

Approximate entry-level freehold price ranges:

  • Scarborough: about $850,000–$900,000+

  • Pickering: around $900,000–$1,000,000

  • Ajax: roughly $880,000–$950,000

  • Courtice: often $750,000–$820,000 for comparable product

  • Lakeview Oshawa: semi-detached average around $605,700

This means buyers moving from Scarborough, Pickering, or Ajax can often:

  • Reduce their mortgage size significantly

  • Double their lot size compared to some urban pockets

  • Move from condo-town product into semi-detached or detached freehold

  • Access the lake, parks, and a less congested environment

As a result, Lakeview remains one of the few GTA markets where a freehold home under $650,000 is still realistic.


Seller Strategy: Lessons From November 2025

For Lakeview homeowners considering selling, November’s data offers clear guidance:

  1. Pricing Just Below Market Creates Energy
    Listing in the $549,900–$599,000 range for appropriate homes created strong interest, multiple offers, and over-asking sale prices. This approach works especially well for updated, well-presented homes.

  2. Investing in Cosmetic Renovations Pays Off
    New flooring, modern kitchens, refreshed bathrooms, paint, and finished basements delivered high ROI in both sale price and speed of sale.

  3. Presentation and Marketing Matter
    Professional photos, staging, clean spaces, and strong online presence are no longer optional—they are essential components of a top-dollar sale.

  4. Condition Determines Strategy for Older or Distressed Homes
    For power-of-sale or heavily dated properties, more aggressive pricing, transparency, and sometimes pre-inspections are needed to overcome buyer hesitation.


Affordability, Financing, and the Importance of Price Bands

In November 2025, the Bank of Canada overnight rate sat around 2.50 percent, and typical mortgage rates often fell in the mid–4 percent range. Yet because of the stress test, insured buyers still had to qualify at the higher of contract plus two percent or 5.25 percent.

For a $600,000 purchase with 20 percent down:

  • Down payment: $120,000

  • Mortgage: about $480,000

  • Monthly payment at around 5 percent: roughly $2,575

  • Taxes and insurance: approximately $250–$300 combined

  • Total ownership cost: in the $2,825–$2,900 range, plus utilities

Households with combined incomes around $100,000–$130,000 can often manage these payments with careful budgeting. However, once purchase prices climb much above $650,000, both monthly payments and stress test requirements start to eliminate a meaningful chunk of the buyer pool.

This is why:

  • Homes under $600,000 draw more showings and offers

  • Listings in the $550,000–$650,000 band are the most competitive

  • Homes listed closer to or above $700,000 must justify their price with obvious, standout value


2026 Outlook for Lakeview

Looking ahead, Lakeview appears well positioned for steady performance:

  • Modest price growth in the range of 3–7 percent is realistic if interest rates stabilize or trend slightly lower

  • Any easing in the stress test or perception of rate relief will likely push additional buyers into the sub-$650,000 market

  • Renovated semis in prime micro-areas may move into the high $600,000s, and premium homes near the lake could test or exceed the $700,000 level

  • Detached homes, which lagged semis in 2025, have more room to appreciate if owners invest in modernization

  • Investor interest is likely to strengthen as investors recognize the combination of relatively low purchase prices, strong rental demand, and good cap-rate potential

Overall, Lakeview remains one of the GTA’s most compelling value markets for both end users and investors.


Investment Takeaways

For investors evaluating Lakeview:

  • Renovated semi-detached homes offer strong resale value and tenant appeal

  • Properties with separate entrances and finished basements are prime candidates for income suites (where legal and compliant)

  • Homes on larger lots near corridors like Ritson, Simcoe, or within walking distance of the lake may offer long-term redevelopment or garden-suite potential

  • Micro-zones near Cedar & Phillip Murray provide waterfront lifestyle value that supports both resale and rental pricing

  • Homes with oversized garages or workshops near major routes attract tradespeople and home-business users who are willing to pay for utility

Properties that tend to underperform are those that combine multiple negatives: old heating systems, major deferred maintenance, very limited parking, cramped kitchens, and poor curb appeal. These can still be opportunities for experienced investors, but they require sharper acquisition pricing and a clear renovation plan.


Final Thoughts

November 2025 confirmed that Lakeview Oshawa remains one of the most undervalued yet high-opportunity pockets in Durham Region.

The month’s data showed:

  • Quick sales for well-priced freehold homes

  • Strong over-asking results for renovated semis

  • Detached homes with strong land value trading at sensible prices

  • Buyers consistently prioritizing micro-location, condition, and lifestyle access

  • Investors and first-time buyers both active in the same price band

For buyers, Lakeview is still one of the very few GTA communities where you can find:

  • A yard

  • A driveway

  • Three bedrooms

  • A basement

  • Proximity to parks and Lake Ontario

  • A freehold purchase price under roughly $650,000

For sellers, the message is that thoughtful preparation, smart pricing, and strong marketing can still produce excellent results—even in a higher-rate environment.

For investors, Lakeview continues to offer a combination of entry-level purchase prices, strong rental demand, and realistic long-term appreciation that is increasingly rare across the GTA.


Got it — no specific property addresses, only closest intersections. Here’s the revised full blog with all addresses removed and replaced by intersection-based descriptions.

You can paste this directly into your website.


Lakeview Oshawa Real Estate Market Report – November 2025

Lakeview Oshawa: November 2025 Market Overview

November 2025 was one of the most revealing months for the Lakeview neighbourhood in Oshawa. This lakeside community, once known mainly as a modest, working-class pocket, has now firmly established itself as one of the most strategic, affordability-focused micro-markets in the eastern GTA.

The November sales activity, covering transactions between November 1 and November 30, 2025, provides a clear snapshot of how buyers and sellers are behaving in this area. The data set drawn from your MLS-style reports includes a mix of semi-detached homes, detached bungalows, and 1½-storey houses, mostly freehold and all appealing to cost-conscious buyers.

Several key patterns stand out:

  • Most homes sold within days rather than weeks

  • Multiple properties achieved sale prices above their list price

  • Renovated or modernized homes attracted the strongest competition

  • Affordability, relative to nearby Durham and GTA markets, remained the dominant driver

Semi-detached homes, which make up a significant portion of Lakeview’s stock, led the way in both volume and price strength. Renovated semis, in particular, delivered standout performance because buyers increasingly lack the budget, time, or appetite for major post-purchase renovations. In a higher-rate environment, people want homes that are “move-in ready” from day one.

Despite the broader affordability challenges across Ontario and tougher qualification rules under the mortgage stress test (buyers must qualify at the greater of their contract rate plus two percent or 5.25 percent), Lakeview continues to outperform comparable entry-level markets. That resilience is rooted in several advantages:

  • Quick access to Highway 401 for commuters

  • Direct proximity to Lake Ontario, the Waterfront Trail, and multiple parks

  • Price levels that are still meaningfully below Pickering, Ajax, and Scarborough

  • Strong perception among first-time buyers that Lakeview is one of Durham’s most realistic entry points

The rest of this report breaks down November 2025 in depth—by property type, micro-neighbourhood, buyer motivations, seller strategy, and future outlook—so that buyers, sellers, and investors can make informed and confident decisions.


Sales Snapshot: What Sold in November 2025

Your November data set includes several representative transactions across different parts of Lakeview. To keep privacy intact, we’ll reference each property only by closest major intersection, not by address.

Semi-Detached Homes – Key Examples

Among the semi-detached homes, we saw:

  • A semi in the Cedar Street & Phillip Murray Avenue pocket selling in the low $600,000s after light competition

  • A semi near Stevenson Road South & Renaissance Drive selling in the high $570,000s with strong over-asking activity

  • A semi in the Cedar Street & Killarney Court area selling in the mid–$630,000s

  • Another semi near Cedar Street & Phillip Murray Avenue exceeding the $600,000 mark after upgrades and staging

  • A semi in an interior court near the Lakeview and Beaverbrook area selling near the mid–$640,000s, very close to asking

Although each property had its own features, these homes collectively defined the semi-detached segment for the month.

Detached Homes – Key Examples

Detached inventory was limited but instructive:

  • A bungalow near Ritson Road South & Conant Street sold around $575,000

  • A 1½-storey detached home near Simcoe Street South & Conant Street also sold for about $575,000

These two detached examples provide a baseline for understanding ceiling prices and buyer preferences in Lakeview’s older freehold stock.


Semi-Detached Homes: The Anchor of the Lakeview Market

Semi-detached homes are the core product in Lakeview and continue to set the tone for pricing and buyer expectations.

From your sample of semi-detached sales, prices ranged from the mid–$550,000s to the mid–$640,000s. When we average those results, Lakeview’s semi-detached homes in November 2025 land around $605,700.

That number matters for two key reasons:

  1. It’s significantly higher than what similar homes in this neighbourhood achieved just a few years ago, when many semis still traded below the $500,000 mark.

  2. It effectively defines the “price anchor” for the neighbourhood. Buyers now perceive the low $600,000s as a normal range for a good semi in Lakeview.

Why Semi-Detached Homes Outperformed

Several forces converged to make semis the star of the market.

1. Entry-Level Price Point With Real Space
Compared to buying a condo or stacked townhome, a semi in Lakeview offers a lot: three bedrooms, two or more baths, a private yard, and driveway parking. For buyers priced out of Ajax, Pickering, and even parts of Oshawa to the north, this combination of space and affordability is compelling.

2. Appeal to Commuters
Lakeview’s quick access to Highway 401, along with reasonable commuting times to Pickering, Scarborough, and downtown Toronto, makes the area attractive to working professionals. As GO Transit and regional transit talk progresses, buyers increasingly see Lakeview as a solid long-term bet.

3. Renovation Premium
A semi near Cedar & Phillip Murray that had been nicely updated—with modern flooring, a refreshed kitchen, improved lighting, and a finished basement—commanded a noticeable premium over less updated comparables. Buyers are clearly willing to pay extra for turnkey condition, especially now that renovation costs remain elevated.

4. Investor-Friendly Features
Many semis in Lakeview include side entrances and basements that can be modernized into in-law or income suites (subject to municipal rules). This flexibility appeals to landlords, multi-generational families, and first-time buyers who like the option of future rental income.


Micro-Locations Inside the Semi-Detached Segment

Lakeview isn’t a large neighbourhood geographically, but it behaves like several small markets stitched together. Each micro-zone responds differently depending on lifestyle features, lot sizes, and housing stock.

Cedar Street & Phillip Murray Avenue – Waterfront Lifestyle Zone

Semi-detached homes in the Cedar & Phillip Murray area benefited from:

  • Short walks to Lake Ontario

  • Easy access to Stone Street Park, sports fields, and a running track

  • The waterfront multi-use trail and nearby community centre

A renovated semi in this zone sold quickly in the low $600,000s, highlighting the premium that buyers attach to walkable access to the lake and parks. Even without luxury finishes, homes here enjoy a lifestyle lift that translates into stronger offers.

Stevenson Road South & Renaissance Drive – Family Crescent Zone

Semis near Stevenson & Renaissance (including those on surrounding crescent streets) performed strongly as well. This pocket typically provides:

  • Larger-than-average interior square footage for a semi

  • Quiet, low-traffic streets ideal for families

  • Reasonable lot sizes and decent parking

  • Proximity to schools, parks, and everyday shopping

A semi in this micro-zone achieved a sale price roughly 6 percent above its list price and sold within a couple of weeks, showing that family buyers continue to prioritize stability, space, and predictable neighbourhood character.

Cedar Street & Killarney Court – Investor Meets First-Time Buyer

Around Cedar & Killarney, you see a blend of:

  • Finished basements

  • Flexible layouts

  • Good depth lots

  • An increasing number of interior updates

A semi here reached roughly $636,000 in November. Investors appreciate the potential for rental income, while first-time buyers are drawn to the combination of modernized interiors and relative affordability.


List-to-Sale Ratios and DOM for Semis

Aggregating your November semi-detached transactions, we see the following patterns:

  • Semis listed in the high $540,000s to high $590,000s often sold above asking, achieving roughly 101–106 percent of list price.

  • The one semi listed closer to $650,000 sold very near asking, reflecting buyer resistance as prices push higher.

On average, semi-detached homes achieved around 103–104 percent of their list price.

In terms of days on market:

  • Well-presented semis in good condition typically sold in 4–14 days

  • A power-of-sale property that required more work stayed on the market for over 30 days

This reinforces the idea that Lakeview is a fast-moving, low-inventory pocket where serious buyers are ready to act quickly when the right home appears.


What Buyers Wanted in November 2025

The November results clearly show what Lakeview buyers prioritized:

  • Modern finishes – Updated flooring, paint, and lighting were major pluses

  • Functional layouts – Homes that felt open or easily usable attracted better feedback

  • Finished basements – Extra living space was highly valued, whether for family or future rental use

  • Side entrances – Important for those considering in-law suites or separate entry scenarios

  • Good parking – Driveways accommodating two or more vehicles mattered

  • Turnkey condition – Buyers preferred homes they could move into without major renovation projects

  • Micro-location advantages – Proximity to the lake, green space, or a quiet crescent supported stronger offers

By contrast, homes that needed significant structural or cosmetic work, had outdated mechanical systems, or presented poorly in photos and showings attracted less competition and took longer to sell.


Detached Homes: Land, Utility, and Ceiling Prices

Detached homes represent a smaller slice of the Lakeview market, but the two detached sales in your November dataset provide an important lens into buyer psychology.

One detached sale was a bungalow near Ritson Road South & Conant Street, and the other a 1½-storey home near Simcoe Street South & Conant Street. Both sold for roughly $575,000.

What $575,000 for Detached Tells Us

Seeing both detached properties settle at the same price point—and below the semi-detached average—sends a clear signal:

  • Older detached homes that need updating are not automatically worth more than renovated semis

  • Interior condition and perceived livability now carry more weight than the simple fact of being detached

  • The mid–$570,000s appear to mark a ceiling for unrenovated detached homes of this type in Lakeview at this time

In most markets, you would expect detached homes to command a 20–30 percent premium over semis. In Lakeview’s November data, that pattern reverses: renovated semi-detached homes near the lake and in desirable pockets often outperform dated detached homes on older streets.


Bungalow Case Study – Near Ritson Road South & Conant Street

The bungalow near Ritson & Conant illustrates the trade-off between land and interior condition:

  • Sold for about $575,000

  • Took just over a month to sell

  • Sat on a large lot, roughly in the 48 × 135-foot range

  • Offered three bedrooms, one bathroom, and a partially finished basement

  • Presented as livable but clearly not modernized

Here, buyers were primarily paying for land size and location flexibility. A large lot at this price point is rare across most of Durham Region. The single-level layout appeals to seniors, small families, or investors planning to rework the space. But the modest interior size and dated finishes capped the price buyers were willing to pay.

Ceiling for Unrenovated Bungalows

Based on this example and the surrounding context, unrenovated bungalows in Lakeview seem to top out around the mid–$570,000s, unless they offer exceptional features or locations.


1½-Storey Case Study – Near Simcoe Street South & Conant Street

The 1½-storey detached near Simcoe & Conant tells a slightly different story:

  • Also sold for roughly $575,000

  • Sold very quickly, in just a few days

  • Sits on a deep lot, around 50 × 150 feet

  • Includes three bedrooms, two bathrooms

  • Features a large heated workshop-style garage

In this case, the primary draw was not the interior; it was the functional utility—lot size plus an oversized, heated garage that appeals to tradespeople, car enthusiasts, and home-based business operators.

Even though the interior needed modernization, the property’s unique features allowed it to sell quickly at a price similar to the bungalow that took much longer to move.


Detached Market Summary

Across these detached examples, we can summarize November’s detached performance as follows:

  • Detached average price: approximately $575,000

  • Days on market: roughly 4–34 days, depending heavily on condition and special features

  • Buyer priorities: lot size, parking, workshops, and privacy often outranked interior upgrades

Detached buyers in Lakeview 2025 were clearly value-focused. Many were willing to accept older interiors if they could secure better land, utility buildings, or multi-purpose use.


Price Patterns, DOM Trends, and Inventory Behaviour

Bringing the semi-detached and detached data together, November 2025 showed the following:

  • Semi-detached average: around $605,700

  • Detached average: around $575,000

  • Spread between the two: roughly 5 percent

Rather than detached homes leading the market, condition and location led the market. Renovated semis in prime micro-zones regularly exceeded older detached homes that needed work.

On the days-on-market side:

  • Well-prepared freehold homes usually sold in 4–14 days

  • Power-of-sale and heavily dated listings could remain on the market for about a month or more

Inventory remained low overall. There was no sign of oversupply; instead, well-priced listings under $650,000 tended to be absorbed quickly, often with multiple offers.


Micro-Neighbourhoods and Buyer Psychology

The November data strongly reinforces the importance of micro-location inside Lakeview:

  • Cedar & Phillip Murray: Premium for walkability, lake access, and recreation amenities

  • Stevenson & Renaissance: Family-oriented crescent streets with solid value retention

  • Ritson & Conant: Deep-lot, older homes attractive to investors and renovators

  • Simcoe & Conant: High-utility properties with workshops or business-friendly setups

  • Cedar & Killarney: Mix of updated homes, finished basements, and good rental demand

Across all these zones, buyer psychology shared a consistent theme:

  • Turnkey or near-turnkey homes triggered urgency and stronger offers

  • Price sensitivity climbed sharply above $650,000

  • Features such as separate entrances, flexible basements, and large parking areas were heavily rewarded

  • Lake and park proximity created a lifestyle premium that buyers were willing to pay for

  • Quiet streets and good neighbourhood feel often mattered more than pure square footage


Lakeview vs Nearby Markets: The Affordability Valve

In a broader regional context, Lakeview operates as an affordability valve for the eastern GTA.

Approximate entry-level freehold price ranges:

  • Scarborough: about $850,000–$900,000+

  • Pickering: around $900,000–$1,000,000

  • Ajax: roughly $880,000–$950,000

  • Courtice: often $750,000–$820,000 for comparable product

  • Lakeview Oshawa: semi-detached average around $605,700

This means buyers moving from Scarborough, Pickering, or Ajax can often:

  • Reduce their mortgage size significantly

  • Double their lot size compared to some urban pockets

  • Move from condo-town product into semi-detached or detached freehold

  • Access the lake, parks, and a less congested environment

As a result, Lakeview remains one of the few GTA markets where a freehold home under $650,000 is still realistic.


Seller Strategy: Lessons From November 2025

For Lakeview homeowners considering selling, November’s data offers clear guidance:

  1. Pricing Just Below Market Creates Energy
    Listing in the $549,900–$599,000 range for appropriate homes created strong interest, multiple offers, and over-asking sale prices. This approach works especially well for updated, well-presented homes.

  2. Investing in Cosmetic Renovations Pays Off
    New flooring, modern kitchens, refreshed bathrooms, paint, and finished basements delivered high ROI in both sale price and speed of sale.

  3. Presentation and Marketing Matter
    Professional photos, staging, clean spaces, and strong online presence are no longer optional—they are essential components of a top-dollar sale.

  4. Condition Determines Strategy for Older or Distressed Homes
    For power-of-sale or heavily dated properties, more aggressive pricing, transparency, and sometimes pre-inspections are needed to overcome buyer hesitation.


Affordability, Financing, and the Importance of Price Bands

In November 2025, the Bank of Canada overnight rate sat around 2.50 percent, and typical mortgage rates often fell in the mid–4 percent range. Yet because of the stress test, insured buyers still had to qualify at the higher of contract plus two percent or 5.25 percent.

For a $600,000 purchase with 20 percent down:

  • Down payment: $120,000

  • Mortgage: about $480,000

  • Monthly payment at around 5 percent: roughly $2,575

  • Taxes and insurance: approximately $250–$300 combined

  • Total ownership cost: in the $2,825–$2,900 range, plus utilities

Households with combined incomes around $100,000–$130,000 can often manage these payments with careful budgeting. However, once purchase prices climb much above $650,000, both monthly payments and stress test requirements start to eliminate a meaningful chunk of the buyer pool.

This is why:

  • Homes under $600,000 draw more showings and offers

  • Listings in the $550,000–$650,000 band are the most competitive

  • Homes listed closer to or above $700,000 must justify their price with obvious, standout value


2026 Outlook for Lakeview

Looking ahead, Lakeview appears well positioned for steady performance:

  • Modest price growth in the range of 3–7 percent is realistic if interest rates stabilize or trend slightly lower

  • Any easing in the stress test or perception of rate relief will likely push additional buyers into the sub-$650,000 market

  • Renovated semis in prime micro-areas may move into the high $600,000s, and premium homes near the lake could test or exceed the $700,000 level

  • Detached homes, which lagged semis in 2025, have more room to appreciate if owners invest in modernization

  • Investor interest is likely to strengthen as investors recognize the combination of relatively low purchase prices, strong rental demand, and good cap-rate potential

Overall, Lakeview remains one of the GTA’s most compelling value markets for both end users and investors.


Investment Takeaways

For investors evaluating Lakeview:

  • Renovated semi-detached homes offer strong resale value and tenant appeal

  • Properties with separate entrances and finished basements are prime candidates for income suites (where legal and compliant)

  • Homes on larger lots near corridors like Ritson, Simcoe, or within walking distance of the lake may offer long-term redevelopment or garden-suite potential

  • Micro-zones near Cedar & Phillip Murray provide waterfront lifestyle value that supports both resale and rental pricing

  • Homes with oversized garages or workshops near major routes attract tradespeople and home-business users who are willing to pay for utility

Properties that tend to underperform are those that combine multiple negatives: old heating systems, major deferred maintenance, very limited parking, cramped kitchens, and poor curb appeal. These can still be opportunities for experienced investors, but they require sharper acquisition pricing and a clear renovation plan.


Final Thoughts

November 2025 confirmed that Lakeview Oshawa remains one of the most undervalued yet high-opportunity pockets in Durham Region.

The month’s data showed:

  • Quick sales for well-priced freehold homes

  • Strong over-asking results for renovated semis

  • Detached homes with strong land value trading at sensible prices

  • Buyers consistently prioritizing micro-location, condition, and lifestyle access

  • Investors and first-time buyers both active in the same price band

For buyers, Lakeview is still one of the very few GTA communities where you can find:

  • A yard

  • A driveway

  • Three bedrooms

  • A basement

  • Proximity to parks and Lake Ontario

  • A freehold purchase price under roughly $650,000

For sellers, the message is that thoughtful preparation, smart pricing, and strong marketing can still produce excellent results—even in a higher-rate environment.

For investors, Lakeview continues to offer a combination of entry-level purchase prices, strong rental demand, and realistic long-term appreciation that is increasingly rare across the GTA.


 


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This website may only be used by consumers that have a bona fide interest in the purchase, sale, or lease of real estate of the type being offered via the website. The data relating to real estate on this website comes in part from the MLS® Reciprocity program of the PropTx MLS®. The data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed to be accurate.