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This reasonably priced Toronto home is a lesson in timing and tactics | Collector
This reasonably priced Toronto home is a lesson in timing and tactics
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This reasonably priced Toronto home is a lesson in timing and tactics

If Toronto real estate has taught us anything, it's that timing is everything... And so is staging. Because 49 Osler St. just pulled off one of the more dramatic glow-ups we've seen in a minute — going from a listing that couldn't quite land in 2025 to a full-blown bidding war darling in 2026. Let's rewind. The living room and dining room. This Junction area semi-detached spent last year doing the on-again, off-again thing with the market, popping up four separate times with a peak asking price of $1,399,999 before dipping slightly to $1,339,000 … and still not sealing the deal. One of three bathrooms. Which wasn't totally surprising in the dumpster fire of a market last year . But fast forward to 2026, and suddenly it's a completely different story. One of three bedrooms. The house hits the market again — this time listed at a very reasonable $1,089,000 — and within days , it sold for a cool $1,330,000. That's 22.1 per cent over asking, for anyone keeping score. So what changed? Honestly… vibes. The staged dining room. The 2026 version of this house leans hard into that "effortlessly cool" aesthetic that buyers absolutely eat up right now. The main floor. We're talking a super-bright, open-concept main floor with fresh 2025 renos mixed with trendy, warm, earthy decor. The kitchen. The kitchen was recently renovated, and although it's very millennial grey, the staging made it feel not sad. At 1,678 square feet of total living space, the layout is also doing a lot of heavy lifting here. Another bedroom. There are also three bedrooms and three full bathrooms. The basement. The finished basement suite quietly screams "income potential" without making the house feel like a duplex. It has both a connected and separate entrance, which is the kind of detail that makes buyers start doing mental math mid-showing. The backyard. Outside, the backyard is tiny but cute, with space for al fresco dinners and a firepit setup that feels like it belongs on a lifestyle blog. The primary bedroom. And then there are the upgrades — the less-sexy but very important stuff that makes buyers feel safe throwing six figures over asking price. The view from the living room into the kitchen. A newer roof. A 200-amp electrical upgrade. A 60-amp sub-panel in the garage is already prepped for either a serious workshop setup or your inevitable future EV. Another bathroom. It's the kind of checklist that quietly removes objections, as I'm sure the inspection report did as well. The basement unit. And then, of course, there's the location. You're steps from Dupont's growing lineup of cool spots, plus within easy reach of the Junction proper, Wallace-Emerson's creative scene, High Park and access to the UP Express and Bloor GO Station. The staged kitchen. This sale is basically a case study in how presentation and pricing strategy can completely rewrite a listing's story. In 2025, this was an almost $1.4 million house that buyers weren't biting on. An Ikea PAX wardrobe system in the primary bedroom. In 2026, it became an opportunity — dressed up with trendy staging — that triggered urgency and competition, ultimately pushing the price right back up to where it had been sitting all along. Same house. Same neighbourhood. Totally different outcome.

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