Toronto · ON
Downtown Toronto is the financial, cultural, and culinary heart of the city — a dense, walkable core stretching from the lake to Bloor and from Bathurst to the Don Valley. Glass towers line Bay Street and the waterfront while heritage low-rises survive on Queen West and along College. Most residents commute on foot or by TTC; the King and Queen streetcar lines, four subway stations, and Union Station make car ownership optional. Expect studios and one-bedroom condos to dominate inventory, with limited but premium-priced detached stock in St. Lawrence and Cabbagetown. The area is best for professionals, students at U of T and TMU, and anyone who values nightlife, theatre, and Lake Ontario access. New residents should budget for higher condo fees (Downtown buildings average $0.75–$0.90/sqft monthly) and tight parking. Convass lists every active downtown rental and for-sale unit directly from owners — no realtor middlemen.
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Create a search alertFAQ — Downtown Toronto
Question 01
As of 2025, a 1-bedroom in Downtown Toronto averages about $2,450 per month for unfurnished apartments. Furnished units, short-term rentals, and condos with parking included can run $2,800–$3,200. Buildings closer to King and Bay typically command a 10–15% premium versus equivalent units near Sherbourne or Jarvis. Convass shows live ask prices directly from owners so you can compare without realtor fees.
Question 02
Downtown Toronto has the deepest condo resale market in Canada, which means liquidity is excellent — units typically sell within 30 days at fair market value. The trade-off is condo fees ($0.75–$0.90 per square foot per month) and rising special assessments in older buildings. If you plan to live in the unit for at least 5 years and value walkability, downtown ownership generally outperforms renting once your mortgage payment matches local rent.
Question 03
Downtown Toronto is served by the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) and Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB). Top-rated public elementary schools include Ryerson Community School, Lord Lansdowne Junior Public, and Church Street Junior. For secondary, Jarvis Collegiate Institute and Northern Secondary School (just north) are strong choices. University of Toronto (St. George campus) and Toronto Metropolitan University are both in the core.
Question 04
No. Downtown Toronto scored 96/100 on Walk Score and 100/100 on Transit Score — most residents either don't own a car or pay $250–$400/month for a parking spot. Car-share services (Communauto, Zipcar) and bike-share (Bike Share Toronto) cover the rare car-need. Save the carrying costs and put them toward rent or your mortgage instead.
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