Runnymede house prices in 2026: why the West End market keeps selling above asking
Runnymede homes are moving in under two weeks and most close above the list price. Here is what the June 2026 numbers say about prices, pace, and competition, plus how this corner of Toronto's West End stacks up against the city and what buyers and sellers should weigh now.
If you are searching for what houses cost in Runnymede right now, the short answer is a median sale price of roughly $1,075,000 as of June 2026, with listings typically clearing in about 11 days and most selling above asking. Those three figures together describe a market that favours sellers and demands preparation from buyers.
Runnymede sits in Toronto's West End, wedged between Bloor West Village to the west and High Park to the south, with Runnymede and Jane stations on Line 2 putting downtown within a single direct subway ride. That combination of character housing, mature streets, and rapid transit is the engine behind the demand described below.
What the numbers show
The headline data point is a median sale price of approximately $1,075,000 as of June 2026. The median is the midpoint of all sales, which makes it a steadier gauge than an average that a handful of very large or very small transactions can distort.
The pace is the second story. A median of 11 days on market means half of all Runnymede homes that sold went under contract in less than two weeks. In a balanced market, properties often sit for a month or more, so 11 days signals that buyer demand is comfortably ahead of the available supply.
The third figure ties the first two together: most listings are selling above asking. When homes both move quickly and close over the list price, it usually reflects competitive offer situations rather than one-off bidding flukes. Casa Pronto's market desk classes Runnymede among the West End's fastest-moving family markets for June 2026.
- Median sale price: approximately $1,075,000
- Median days on market: 11 days
- Most listings selling above asking
- Municipality: City of Toronto
- Transit: Runnymede and Jane stations, Line 2
What is driving demand
Runnymede's housing stock leans heavily on detached and semi-detached homes, which dominate the market here. That matters because families looking for room to grow have fewer condo or rental alternatives competing for their attention, so demand concentrates on the same pool of houses.
Location adds a premium. Buyers pay extra for proximity to High Park, the area's well-regarded public schools, and the Bloor West Village shopping district immediately to the west. Each of these is a recurring reason households cite for choosing the neighbourhood, and each is fixed in place, which supports steady resale value over time.
Transit is the other anchor. Direct Line 2 access from Runnymede and Jane stations means residents can reach downtown without transfers, a feature that keeps the area attractive to commuters even as work patterns shift. The library, the tree-lined streets, and the quiet residential character round out the appeal.
How Runnymede compares
Against the broader West End, Runnymede stands out for speed rather than being an outlier on price alone. Casa Pronto's desk groups it with the West End's fastest-moving family markets in June 2026, which is a comparison about turnover: homes here change hands faster than in many neighbouring pockets.
The neighbourhood also borders Bloor West Village and High Park, two of the most established destinations in the West End. Sharing a boundary with those areas tends to pull demand toward Runnymede, since buyers priced out of immediately adjacent streets often look one block over and find similar housing.
What it means for buyers
An 11-day median and a pattern of above-ask sales describe the conditions a buyer will face, not a recommendation about how to act. In practical terms, listings that look appealing may not stay available long, and the eventual sale price may land above the number on the listing.
Because detached and semi-detached homes carry the market, buyers focused on those property types are competing with the largest share of demand. Households drawn by the schools, parks, and subway access should expect those same features to attract other bidders.
What it means for sellers
For owners, the current data reflects a seller-favourable backdrop: fast turnover and frequent above-ask outcomes. A median of 11 days suggests that well-presented homes in this market have been finding buyers quickly as of June 2026.
That said, these figures are a snapshot. The median price, the days-on-market reading, and the above-ask pattern all describe June 2026 and can shift with interest rates, listing volumes, and the wider Toronto market. Sellers and buyers alike should treat the numbers as the starting point for their own research rather than a forecast.
What to watch next
The figures worth tracking are the same three that define the market today: whether the median holds near $1,075,000, whether days on market stays compressed near 11, and whether the share of above-ask sales persists. Movement in any of these would be the earliest sign that conditions are changing in either direction.
Sources
- Casa Pronto market desk, Runnymede (as of 2026-06)
- Casa Pronto neighbourhood profile, Runnymede (as of 2026-06)