What Homes Sold for in Brampton: Real May 2026 Numbers

Quick Answer

What homes sold for in Brampton in May 2026: an average of $889,407 and a median of $835,000, according to TRREB’s Market Watch. That covers 456 sales. Sellers got 99 per cent of asking on average and homes took 27 days to sell. The full Brampton market picture has more context.

Sold prices are the numbers everyone wants and almost nobody shares over the fence. Listing prices are public. Sold prices used to sit behind the MLS, so most people end up guessing based on what the house down the street was asking. This post covers what homes sold for in Brampton in May 2026 using TRREB’s verified numbers, and shows you how to get the actual sold price for any address.

What Brampton homes actually sold for in May 2026

TRREB’s May 2026 Market Watch puts the average Brampton sale price at $889,407 across 456 sales. The median came in at $835,000. Those two numbers tell different stories, and the gap matters. The average gets pulled up by detached sales at the top end. The median tells you the middle of the pack: half of Brampton’s May sales closed below $835,000.

Both figures sit well under the GTA average of $1,069,700, which itself fell 4.6 per cent compared to May 2025, per TRREB.

The segment doing the most damage is condos. Brampton’s condo apartment benchmark dropped to $405,400 in May, down 12.87 per cent year over year. That is the hardest-hit segment in any market I track. If your neighbour sold a condo recently, there is a real chance the price came in well below what they would have got two years ago. So what homes sold for in Brampton last month depends heavily on which segment you’re looking at.

Supply tells the rest of the story. Brampton saw 1,431 new listings in May against 456 sales, so roughly three homes hit the market for every one that sold. Active inventory sat at 2,133 homes, which works out to 5.3 months of inventory. That ratio keeps a lid on prices. Buyers have options, and sellers who price off 2022 memories sit on the market.

How to find out what your neighbour’s home sold for

For years the answer was simple: ask an agent, because sold data lived behind the MLS. That has loosened. A few Ontario real estate sites now publish sold prices after closing, and the data is real. The problem is reading it raw.

A sold price without context misleads more than it informs. Take days on market. Brampton homes averaged 27 listing days in May, but 43 property days. The difference means a meaningful share of sellers terminated, relisted at a new price, and reset the clock. The “sold in 12 days” your neighbour mentions might really be sold in 60 after a failed first attempt at a higher number.

Condition, lot size, basement apartment status, and what the seller originally paid all shift the read too. Two identical-looking semis on the same street can close $40,000 apart because one had a registered legal second unit and the other had a finished rec room a buyer can’t legally rent out.

If you want the actual sold numbers for your street with that context attached, I run a free sold-data service for exactly this. Sign up at what your neighbour’s home sold for, pick your area, and I send the sales as they close, with the price history included.

Curious what your own Brampton home would sell for?

Get a free, no pressure valuation priced off actual May 2026 Brampton closings, not last year’s headlines.

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Brampton sold prices vs Mississauga and Toronto

What homes sold for in Brampton only means something next to the neighbours. Here is how May 2026 stacked up against Mississauga and Toronto, per TRREB.

Market (May 2026) Average sold price Median Sold vs asking Days to sell
Brampton $889,407 $835,000 99% 27
Mississauga $971,047 $896,500 97% 30
City of Toronto $1,108,292 $885,000 99% 26
GTA overall $1,069,700 $910,000 98% 27

Two things stand out. Mississauga sellers gave up the most off asking at 97 per cent of list, and took 30 days to do it. And Toronto’s median of $885,000 lands only $50,000 above Brampton’s, even though the average gap is more than $200,000. Toronto’s huge condo volume drags its median down while Brampton’s mix leans to detached and towns. When someone says Toronto costs $220,000 more than Brampton, that holds for averages and falls apart for the typical home that actually trades.

For sellers, 99 per cent of asking does not mean list anywhere and get it. It means homes priced correctly sold near asking in 27 days. Homes priced wrong became part of the 2,133 active listings, or joined the 43-day relist crowd.

Frequently asked questions

How can I see what a house sold for in Brampton?

Some Ontario real estate sites now show sold prices after closing, and any Brampton agent can pull the full sold record from the MLS, including price history, previous sales, and relists. I also send street-level sold reports through my sold-data page. The MLS record gives the most context, which is what makes the number useful.

What did the average Brampton home sell for in May 2026?

$889,407 across 456 sales, according to TRREB’s May 2026 Market Watch. The median was $835,000, meaning half of all Brampton sales closed below that mark. The condo apartment benchmark sat at $405,400, down 12.87 per cent from a year earlier.

Do Brampton homes sell over or under asking?

Slightly under on average. Brampton’s sale-to-list ratio was 99 per cent in May 2026 per TRREB, so a home listed at $850,000 typically closed near $841,500. That average hides a split. Sharply priced homes still draw multiple offers, while overpriced listings sit, terminate, and relist lower.

Bottom line

Brampton homes sold for an average of $889,407 in May 2026, a median of $835,000, and 99 per cent of asking, with condos down nearly 13 per cent year over year. Those are the real numbers behind whatever your neighbour told you at the fence. If you want to know what that means for your own place, there are two ways I can help. Pull the actual sold data for your street through the sold-data page, or get a free home evaluation priced off May’s closings. No pressure either way. The numbers do the talking.

Mats Moy, Brampton realtor

Mats Moy

Sales Representative | Robbio Nicolle Real Estate Team at Real Broker Ontario

Brampton realtor covering Brampton, Toronto, Mississauga, Etobicoke, and the wider GTA. Data-first, no hype. Featured on YouTube at The Market with Mats Moy with 500K+ views.

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