Burlington Condo Market Summer 2026: The Buyer's Window Is Open | The Mother Daughter Team™
Market Insights · July 2026

Burlington's Condo Market:
The Buyer's Window Is Open

Why summer 2026 is quietly one of the best times in years to buy a Burlington condo — and what to do about it.

By Kristina Kritikos, REALTOR® · 8 min read · July 2026

Something Quiet Is Happening in
Burlington's Condo Market

Every summer, the real estate market exhales. The spring rush fades, open house signs thin out, and buyers who got outbid in May quietly take stock. This seasonal slowdown is predictable — and for those who understand it, it's one of the most powerful buying windows of the year.

In July 2026, that window is open. And in Burlington's condominium segment specifically, it may be more valuable than it's been in several years.

Here's what's happening: Burlington's condo market has been quietly absorbing inventory since late 2025. Freehold homes — detached and semi-detached — have been more competitive, with multiple-offer scenarios still occurring on well-priced properties. But condos? They've been a different story. Days on market are longer. Sellers are more flexible. And the Bank of Canada's rate-cutting cycle, which has brought 5-year fixed rates down meaningfully from their 2023–2024 peaks, has dramatically improved the affordability math.

The result is a window that won't stay open forever: quality Burlington condos priced in the $450,000–$650,000 range are sitting longer than they should, sellers are negotiating, and the buyer competition that typically drives prices is thinner than it's been in years.

"Burlington condos in the $450K–$650K range are sitting longer than they should. For a qualified, patient buyer, this is exactly the environment you've been waiting for."

Burlington Condo Market Snapshot — July 2026
  • Average days on market (condo): 34 days (vs. 22 days for detached)
  • Active condo listings: Up approximately 18% year-over-year
  • 5-year fixed mortgage rate: approximately 4.65–4.85%
  • Average condo price, Burlington: $548,000
  • Price trend: Flat to marginally down vs. spring 2026 peak

Why Condos Specifically —
and Why Now

To understand why Burlington condos represent such compelling value right now, you need to understand why they've been overlooked.

Starting in 2022, rising interest rates hit condo buyers harder than freehold buyers for a simple reason: the investor segment dried up almost overnight. Condos that were snapped up as income properties at 2% rates became challenging to cash-flow at 5–6%. Investors stepped back, supply grew, and prices softened. What was already a smaller demand pool — first-time buyers, downsizers, professionals — wasn't large enough to absorb the surplus.

Fast-forward to mid-2026. The Bank of Canada has now made eight consecutive rate cuts since mid-2024, bringing the policy rate down from its 5% peak to approximately 2.75%. This translates to meaningfully lower mortgage payments. A buyer purchasing a $560,000 condo with 20% down at today's 5-year fixed rate of approximately 4.75% pays roughly $2,450/month — compared to over $2,900/month at the 2023 peak rate of 6.5%.

That's nearly $450/month cheaper. For a first-time buyer or downsizer on a fixed income, that's not a marginal difference. That's the difference between qualifying and not qualifying. Between comfortable and stretched.

And yet: most buyers haven't connected these dots yet. The spring market focused energy on freehold. The investor class is still cautious. Which means the best condo opportunities in Burlington are sitting right now, somewhat underappreciated, waiting for the buyers who understand what the numbers are saying.

The Affordability Math
Has Shifted Dramatically

Let's put real numbers to what rate cuts have done for condo affordability in Burlington. The table below compares the carrying cost of a $550,000 condo across three rate environments — 2023 peak, spring 2026, and today.

Scenario 5-Yr Fixed Rate Monthly Payment* Annual Savings vs. Peak
2023 Peak 6.5% ~$3,080
Spring 2026 5.25% ~$2,690 ~$4,680/yr
Summer 2026 (Today) 4.75% ~$2,510 ~$6,840/yr

*$550,000 purchase, 20% down, 25-year amortization. Estimate only — does not include condo fees, property tax, or insurance.

Nearly $7,000 per year cheaper to carry than two years ago. On the same property. In the same building. That's real money — and it directly expands who can comfortably purchase.

This shift is especially meaningful for:

  • First-time buyers who were squeezed out in 2023–2024 and are now re-entering a market that finally works at their income level
  • Downsizers selling a larger home and looking to eliminate maintenance while generating cash — the monthly payment reduction frees up meaningful income
  • Investors who ran the numbers in 2023 and walked away — those numbers look significantly better at today's rates

Four Reasons Summer Is
Actually the Right Time to Buy

1. Fewer Buyers Competing Against You

Spring is the busiest season. By July, casual buyers have paused, families are focused on summer, and the number of active competing purchasers drops significantly. This translates directly to less bidding pressure, more time to consider, and greater negotiating leverage.

2. Motivated Sellers Who Missed Spring

A seller listing in July either missed the spring window or couldn't sell during it. Either way, their motivation is typically higher than a spring seller with a packed open house. Summer sellers are more willing to negotiate on price, closing date, and inclusions.

3. More Time to Do It Right

In a spring multiple-offer environment, buyers often waive conditions under pressure. In summer's quieter market, you can request home inspections, review status certificates properly, and secure financing without artificial urgency. Better decisions come from better information.

4. Fall Activity Arrives Faster Than You Expect

Burlington's fall market typically picks up by mid-September. Buyers who purchase in July and August close before the fall rush and often see immediate equity gains as fall activity restores competition. Waiting for fall means competing again — and paying the price.

What Makes a Burlington Condo
Worth Buying Right Now

Not every Burlington condo is a smart buy at today's prices. The summer window rewards buyers who know what they're looking for. Here's how we evaluate condo purchases for our clients in the current environment:

  • Building age and reserve fund health. Request the status certificate before making an offer. A well-funded reserve means no surprise special assessments. Buildings constructed after 2000 typically have better mechanical systems and lower ongoing maintenance costs.
  • Condo fee composition and trajectory. Understand exactly what the monthly fee covers — heating, hydro, water, and amenities. A lower fee isn't always better if it means items are excluded. Look at the last three years of fee increases; anything above 4–5% annually warrants scrutiny.
  • Unit size and usability. Burlington's best-value condos in the $500K–$620K range typically offer 900–1,300+ sq ft — meaningfully more space than comparable Toronto or Mississauga units at similar prices. Prioritize units with actual bedrooms (not dens), dedicated storage, and efficient layouts over flashy amenities.
  • Underground parking and in-suite laundry. These two features have an outsized impact on both livability and resale value. A Burlington condo with both commands a meaningfully faster sale and higher price at resale than one without.
  • Location within Burlington. Downtown Burlington (near Brant Street and the waterfront) commands premium resale. Mid-Burlington (near Appleby GO, Mapleview) offers strong rental demand and commuter appeal. North Burlington offers larger units at lower prices, ideal for upsizers or families who want condo living without downsizing square footage.
  • Days on market and price history. A unit that's been listed for 45+ days and has had one or two price reductions has a motivated seller. This is where your best deals are in summer — not the freshly listed property with unrealistic expectations.

What If You're Selling a Condo
This Summer?

If you're a condo owner thinking about selling, the honest answer is: summer is challenging, but it's not impossible. The sellers who succeed in a summer condo market are the ones who accept the reality of the moment and work with it rather than against it.

Price to the Current Market — Not Last Year

The biggest mistake Burlington condo sellers make in 2026 is pricing to spring 2025 comparable sales. The market has shifted. An honest, data-backed list price gets you a clean sale. An aspirational price gets you months of carrying costs and a discounted final result.

Presentation Is Everything

Summer buyers are often more deliberate and less emotionally pressured than spring buyers. They're comparing carefully. Professional photography, virtual tours, and clean, depersonalized staging are not optional — they're the difference between a showing and a skip.

Be Flexible on Closing Date

Summer buyers are often first-time buyers or downsizers coordinating complex moves. Offering flexibility on the closing date — 60 or 90 days rather than 30 — can be the detail that converts a showing into an offer. It costs you nothing but can mean everything to the right buyer.

Consider Listing Before Labour Day

Listings that hit the market in the last two weeks of August are often lost in the noise of fall re-entry. If you're going to sell this summer, list by early August — before buyer attention fragments into back-to-school and fall prep. A clean summer listing gets focused attention.

Where to Buy: Burlington's
Condo Neighbourhoods Ranked

Burlington isn't one condo market — it's several micro-markets with meaningfully different value propositions. Here's how we advise clients to think about location within the city:

Downtown Burlington — Highest Demand, Highest Resale

Buildings within walking distance of Brant Street, the waterfront, and Spencer Smith Park consistently command the fastest sales and strongest resale prices. Expect to pay a 10–15% premium over similar mid-Burlington units. For buyers who value walkability and lifestyle above all else — this is your neighbourhood. Current price range: $540,000–$750,000 for 2BR units.

Mid-Burlington (Appleby / Mapleview) — Best Commuter Value

Close to the GO Train, major retail, and quick QEW access, this corridor attracts professionals and young families who prioritize commute efficiency over walkability. Units here offer excellent square footage at a lower per-foot price than downtown. Strong rental demand makes this a smart choice for investors. Current price range: $480,000–$620,000 for 2BR units.

Dynes Road / New Street Corridor — Best Value Per Square Foot

Established mid-Burlington buildings along the Dynes/New Street corridor offer the most square footage per dollar of any condo area in the city. These well-maintained buildings — many featuring indoor pools, gyms, games rooms, and full amenity suites — attract downsizers and buyers who want space without sacrifice. Current price range: $440,000–$580,000 for 2BR+ units.

North Burlington (Alton Village / Tyandaga) — Family-Oriented, More Space

Newer condo developments in North Burlington often include townhouse-style units and stacked towns at competitive prices, with proximity to top-rated schools and family amenities. Ideal for buyers transitioning from renting or moving from Hamilton who want Burlington's school system without the downtown premium. Current price range: $430,000–$560,000.

The Bottom Line:
Don't Wait for Fall

The phrase "wait for the market to improve" is one of the most expensive sentences in real estate. Markets don't announce their turning points. They're only obvious in hindsight.

Summer 2026 is offering Burlington condo buyers a combination of conditions that rarely align this cleanly: meaningfully lower mortgage rates, elevated inventory that hasn't been absorbed, reduced buyer competition, and motivated sellers who've been on the market through spring. That's not one tailwind — that's four at once.

The fall market will reintroduce competition. Interest rates may tick back up as the economy responds to monetary stimulus. The inventory that's sitting today will likely clear through summer and fall. Buyers who move in July and August will likely look back at this window the same way buyers who acted in early 2020 or late 2019 look back — as the moment they made a great long-term decision under temporarily favorable conditions.

If you're thinking about a Burlington condo — for yourself, for a family member, or as an investment — we'd genuinely love to talk through the numbers. Not a sales conversation. A real conversation about what makes sense for your situation and your timeline.

Kristina Kritikos REALTOR®
Kristina Kritikos
REALTOR® · The Mother Daughter Team™

Kristina has been helping buyers and sellers navigate Burlington and the surrounding GTA for over 20 years. She specializes in helping clients understand the market clearly and make decisions with confidence — not urgency. Questions about this article? She's happy to talk.

Ready to Talk Burlington
Condos This Summer?

Whether you're buying your first condo, downsizing, or looking for investment value, we can help you find the right property and negotiate the right deal in today's market.

Get in Touch Today
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