Real estate · 4 min read

Runnymede house prices June 2026: median $1,075,000, most homes selling above asking

Runnymede remains one of the West End's fastest-moving family markets in June 2026, with a median sale price near $1,075,000 and homes trading in just 11 days. Here is what the numbers show for buyers and sellers, and how the pocket compares to its neighbours.

If you are searching for what a house costs in Runnymede this spring, the short answer is that the median sale price sits at roughly $1,075,000 as of June 2026, and most listings are closing above their asking price. That combination of a seven-figure median and consistent over-ask results tells you this is a seller's market, not a buyer's one, even after several years of higher borrowing costs across Toronto.

Runnymede sits in Toronto's West End, tucked between Bloor West Village to the west and High Park to the south. It is served by Runnymede and Jane stations on Line 2, which puts riders on a single-seat trip to the downtown core. The neighbourhood is known for its character homes, mature tree-lined streets, and the landmark Runnymede Library. Those ingredients (transit, schools, parks, and housing stock that holds its value) are the backbone of the demand story here.

What the numbers show

The headline figures from the Casa Pronto market desk, as of June 2026, are straightforward and point in the same direction.

  • Median sale price: approximately $1,075,000
  • Median days on market: 11 days
  • Selling above asking: yes, most listings
  • Housing mix: detached and semi-detached homes dominate

Eleven days on market is a fast pace by any Toronto standard. It means a typical Runnymede listing goes from the first open house to a firm deal inside two weeks. When a market moves that quickly and clears above the list price at the same time, it usually reflects more qualified buyers than available homes. Sellers here are not sitting on inventory waiting for the right offer; they are fielding competing bids.

The median price of $1,075,000 reflects the fact that detached and semi-detached homes make up the bulk of what trades in Runnymede. This is not a condo-heavy pocket. Buyers are largely purchasing ground-oriented family housing, which carries a premium over apartment stock and helps explain why the median lands well into seven figures.

How Runnymede compares

Runnymede is described by the Casa Pronto market desk as among the West End's fastest-moving family markets in June 2026. That framing matters: the neighbourhood is being measured against other family-oriented West End pockets, and it is at the quick end of that group rather than the slow end.

The reasons are geographic. Runnymede borders Bloor West Village, one of the West End's best-known shopping districts, which sits immediately to the west. It also borders High Park, Toronto's largest downtown park, to the south. Buyers pay a premium for proximity to High Park, top-rated schools, and the Bloor West shopping district. In practice that means a Runnymede address competes with, and often benefits from, the reputation of two well-established neighbours without carrying the very top price tags found deeper inside Bloor West Village itself.

Direct Line 2 subway access is a second differentiator. Not every West End family market has two subway stations within its boundaries. Runnymede and Jane stations give the neighbourhood a commuting advantage that supports resale value, because the buyer pool includes downtown workers who want a house but will not give up a fast transit trip.

What it means for buyers

For buyers, the practical reality is a competitive, quick-turning market where most homes close over asking. That is the condition the data describes: an 11-day median and above-ask results leave little room to deliberate. Homes that check the family boxes (a detached or semi-detached layout, a walk to a rated school, a short trip to High Park) are the ones drawing the most attention.

It is also worth understanding what the premium is buying. The neighbourhood's appeal rests on a specific bundle: character homes, the historic Runnymede Library, mature streets, and Line 2 access. Buyers are not only purchasing square footage; they are purchasing a location that has held demand through different market cycles. This description of conditions is not financial advice, and every household's situation differs.

What it means for sellers

For sellers, the June 2026 picture is favourable. Homes are moving in 11 days, and most are selling above the list price. When detached and semi-detached family homes dominate a market and clear over-ask that quickly, well-prepared listings tend to attract multiple interested parties.

The features that draw buyers are the ones already baked into the neighbourhood: proximity to High Park, top-rated schools, and the Bloor West shopping district just to the west. Sellers whose homes sit close to those anchors are positioned in the strongest part of an already strong market.

What to watch next

The figures here are a June 2026 snapshot, and market conditions can shift with borrowing costs and the wider Toronto picture. The signals worth tracking are the same three that define the current market: the median price (whether it holds above the million-dollar mark), the days-on-market figure (whether 11 days stretches out, a sign the pace is easing), and the share of homes selling above asking (whether that flips toward at or below list). As long as those three hold, Runnymede remains a seller-favouring, fast-moving family market.

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