Sell First or Buy First in the GTA? Why the Answer Might Surprise You in 2026

Most real estate advice tells upsizers the same thing: sell first, reduce your risk, buy when you’re ready.
That advice is often right. But right now, in the GTA, there’s a layer to this decision that most homeowners aren’t seeing.
The market has softened. Prices are down modestly across Toronto, Vaughan, and York Region communities like Thornhill and King City. And here’s the part that surprises most people:
When prices drop across the board, upsizers often come out ahead — because larger homes lose more absolute dollars than smaller ones. The cost to move up actually shrinks.
More on that math in a moment. First, let’s address the core question most GTA homeowners are wrestling with.
Should You Sell First or Buy First in Toronto and the GTA?
For most homeowners, selling first is the more financially secure approach. It gives you clarity on your equity, removes the pressure of carrying two properties, and puts you in a stronger negotiating position when you buy.
But in today’s market conditions — with more inventory, longer days on market, and softer pricing — buying first or coordinating both transactions simultaneously can create real strategic advantages for upsizers with the financial flexibility to manage it.
The right answer depends on three things: your financial position, the type of home you’re selling, and the type of home you’re targeting next.
Why This Decision Feels So Stressful
Upsizing is fundamentally different from a typical purchase. You’re managing two major transactions at once, and the uncertainty between them is where most of the anxiety lives.
The concerns I hear most often from homeowners:
- “What if I sell and can’t find the right home in time?”
- “What if I buy and my current home takes longer to sell than expected?”
- “What if the market shifts in between?”
These are legitimate concerns. But they’re also manageable with the right strategy — and in today’s market, there’s a compelling case that the window to move up is actually wider than it’s been in years.
The Upsizer Math Advantage (What Most Agents Don’t Tell You)
When prices decline across a market, the instinct for most homeowners is to wait. But upsizers who run the numbers often find the opposite is true.
Here’s why: larger homes drop more in absolute dollar value than smaller homes, even when the percentage decline is similar.
Example Using Current GTA Market Data
| Starter Home (Patterson) | Move-Up Home (King City) | |
|---|---|---|
| Value Last Year | $1,000,000 | $1,850,000 |
| Market Adjustment (~6.3%) | −$63,000 | −$116,550 |
| Approximate Value Today | $937,000 | $1,733,450 |
| Price Gap at Market Peak | $850,000 | |
| Price Gap After Adjustment | $796,450 | |
| Difference | $53,550 less to move up today | |
Because the higher-priced home declined by more actual dollars, the cost of moving up shrinks — even though both homes declined by roughly the same percentage. For many GTA homeowners, moving up today could cost tens of thousands less than it would have a year ago.
The Three Strategies GTA Upsizers Use
There is no universal right answer — but there are three clear approaches. The best one depends on your financial flexibility, the marketability of your current home, and where you’re looking to buy next.
Sell First, Then Buy
This is the most common and financially conservative approach, and for good reason. Selling first means you:
- Know your exact equity and purchase budget before committing to anything
- Negotiate without the pressure of a conditional sale clause dragging down your offer
- Eliminate the risk of carrying two mortgages simultaneously
The trade-off is timing. In a market with limited inventory for move-up properties, you may face some pressure finding the right home after your sale closes. A professional can help you structure your closing date to give yourself a reasonable search window.
Buy First Using Bridge Financing
Sometimes the right home appears before your current property sells. In those situations, some homeowners choose to purchase first and rely on bridge financing to cover the gap.
Bridge financing is a short-term loan that allows you to use your expected home sale proceeds as collateral while you complete the purchase. It’s a legitimate tool — but it introduces financial exposure that requires careful planning.
This approach works best when:
- You have strong financial reserves and a low debt profile
- Your current home is in a segment with fast, predictable sales
- The move-up property is genuinely difficult to replicate if you let it go
Coordinated Sale and Purchase
This is the most strategic approach and, when executed properly, the most seamless for families. Both transactions are structured and timed to minimize the gap between closing dates.
Tools experienced agents use to coordinate this include:
- Flexible closing dates negotiated into both agreements
- Conditional purchase clauses that protect you if your home sale falls through
- Overlapping timelines so you move directly from one property to the next
What the GTA Market Looks Like Right Now for Upsizers
Understanding current market conditions is essential before deciding which strategy to use. Here’s what the data shows across key GTA communities.
Year-Over-Year Price Changes
| Area | Change in Home Values |
|---|---|
| Toronto | −3.1% |
| Vaughan | −4.75% |
| Patterson (Thornhill Woods / Valleys of Thornhill) | −6.3% |
| King City | −7.1% |
Average Days on Market
| Market | Average Days on Market |
|---|---|
| Toronto | 52 days |
| Vaughan | 54 days |
| King City | 64 days |
Longer days on market signal a shift in negotiating dynamics. Bidding wars have become less common. Conditional offers are being accepted. Sellers are engaging in price discussions. For upsizers, this means you can sell into relatively steady demand in family-oriented communities like Thornhill Woods and the Valleys of Thornhill — while purchasing your move-up home with meaningfully more negotiating leverage than existed 18 months ago.
What I’m Seeing on the Ground in Vaughan, Thornhill Woods, and King City
The mood in this market right now is cautious. Buyers are watching. Sellers are waiting. But that hesitation is creating real opportunities for upsizers who are prepared to move with a clear strategy.
Current trends I’m seeing firsthand:
- More conditional offers being accepted — including on well-priced properties
- Fewer competing bids, particularly in the detached segment above $1.5M
- Flexible closing date negotiations becoming standard rather than exceptional
- Sellers of larger homes more willing to engage on price than they were at peak
Smaller freehold homes in established family communities continue to attract consistent demand. Larger detached homes — particularly in areas like King City — are seeing less competition. That combination is exactly the dynamic upsizers want to see.
The Move-Up Opportunity Window
Real estate markets move in cycles. Certain phases — typically when prices have softened, inventory has grown, and competition has eased — create genuine windows of opportunity for upsizers. Right now in the GTA, several of those conditions are present simultaneously:
- Modest price adjustments across Toronto and York Region
- Longer days on market creating room for negotiation
- Fewer bidding wars in the move-up segment
- More flexible terms and conditions being accepted
These conditions won’t last indefinitely. As inventory tightens and buyer confidence returns, the negotiating leverage upsizers currently hold on the purchase side will compress. The window is real — but it’s not permanently open.
The First Step Before You Decide Anything
Before choosing a strategy, you need to know what your home is actually worth in today’s market. Not what it would have sold for in 2022 — what it will sell for now. Your available equity determines:
- Your real purchase budget for the move-up property
- Whether bridge financing is a realistic option for you
- How much timing flexibility you have between transactions
Once you know your numbers, the strategy becomes far clearer. Most homeowners I speak with are either overestimating or underestimating their equity based on outdated assumptions. A professional assessment changes that.
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Understand your real equity position and move-up budget before committing to any strategy. Takes 15 minutes and changes everything.
Request Your AssessmentConclusion: The Right Move Depends on Your Position — Not the Headlines
The question of selling first or buying first isn’t about predicting where the market goes next. It’s about building a strategy around your specific equity, your financial flexibility, and the type of home you want to move into.
What makes right now interesting for GTA upsizers is that several market conditions are aligning at once — softer pricing, more negotiation room, and less competition in the move-up segment. For homeowners who have been waiting for the right moment, this period deserves a serious look.
If you’d like to talk through what this looks like for your specific situation, I’m happy to spend 15 minutes walking you through it.
15 Minutes · No Pressure
Book a Free Upsizer Strategy Session
We’ll review your equity position, discuss which strategy fits your situation, and map out a realistic timeline. No obligation — just clarity.
Book Your SessionKey Takeaways
- Selling first is the most financially secure approach for most GTA homeowners
- Market declines can reduce the cost of moving up — larger homes drop more in absolute dollars
- Smaller freehold homes in family communities are selling faster than larger detached properties
- Longer days on market and fewer bidding wars mean more negotiating leverage on the buy side
- The current window of opportunity for upsizers is real, but market conditions will eventually shift
- The most important first step is a professional home value assessment to know your real equity position
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I sell my house before buying another in Toronto?
In most cases, yes. Selling first gives you financial clarity — you know exactly what equity you have available before committing to a purchase. It also removes the risk of carrying two mortgages simultaneously and puts you in a stronger negotiating position. That said, in today’s market conditions, homeowners with strong financial reserves and a highly marketable current property have more options than they typically would.
How do people sell and buy a house at the same time in the GTA?
The most common approach is coordinating closing dates on both transactions so they align as closely as possible. Experienced agents use conditional purchase clauses, flexible closing date negotiations, and overlapping timelines to minimize the gap. Bridge financing is also available as a short-term solution when the purchase closes before the sale does.
Is now a good time to upsize in the GTA?
Current market conditions create a genuine case for upsizers. Prices have softened modestly across Toronto and York Region, days on market have increased, and bidding wars in the move-up segment have become less common. Because larger homes decline more in absolute dollars than smaller ones during a price correction, the actual cost to move up may be lower today than it was at the market’s peak.
What is bridge financing and when does it make sense?
Bridge financing is a short-term loan that lets you purchase your next home before your current property sells. It uses your expected sale proceeds as collateral. It makes sense when you have strong financial reserves, your current home is in a fast-moving segment, and you’ve found a move-up property you don’t want to lose. It introduces additional financial exposure, so it’s not the right tool for every situation.
How long does it take to sell a home in the GTA right now?
Based on current market data, homes are selling in approximately 52 days in Toronto, 54 days in Vaughan, and 64 days in King City. These timelines vary significantly based on pricing, property type, and neighbourhood. Well-priced freehold homes in established family communities tend to move faster than larger detached properties in more outlying areas.
What’s the biggest mistake GTA upsizers make?
Waiting for perfect market conditions that never quite arrive. The reality is that market conditions for upsizers are rarely as unfavourable as they appear, because the same market that reduces what you sell for also reduces what you pay. Upsizers who delay indefinitely often find themselves making the same move later — for more money — having missed a window when the price gap between their current home and their target home was at its narrowest.