If there's one thing you can always count on in Toronto, it's construction. The city pretty much operates in a perpetual state of development. Downtown's clear priority? Condos. They're popping up everywhere – sometimes in the most inconceivable of places.
Investors have no complaints. More buildings means more options to explore for short-term rental properties. This year promises the completion of several long-awaited projects. From Yorkville to King West, we've compiled the best 2026 new construction Toronto condos to add to your shopping list.
Starting off on the city's most iconic street, SkyTower Condos is slowly assuming its final form at number one Yonge. The mixed-use high-rise condominium has been under development since 2020. Pinnacle International invested millions based on its promised appeal among top-tier buyers. Height alone is set to be a major selling point, with great views guaranteed all-around.
All 95-storeys - reaching over 313 metres in height - stand to be completed within months. Hariri Pontarini Architects' reputation is substantiated 800 times over through just as many 520 square foot to 2,300 square foot units.
SkyTower is the second of three buildings at Pinnacle One Yonge. Before it came the release of a 65-storey tower called The Prestige in 2025. Once this one begins accepting residents, focus will turn to a final third building.

1 Yonge St, Toronto, ON M5E 1E5
$946,900 to over $1,399,900
Few names carry the same architectural weight as “The One.” Located at Yonge and Bloor, this 85-storey mixed-use tower by Mizrahi Developments has dominated Toronto’s skyline during its rise. Ultra-luxury buyers will soon have the opportunity to nab their own piece of Canada's first 'supertall building' After years of anticipation – and apparent infighting among developers. Completion is projected for late-2026 and move-ins are hoped to begin in early 2027.
The One blends retail, hospitality, and high-end residential in one vertical community. Designed by Foster + Partners, every inch screams exclusivity – from custom diagonal framing elements clad in champagne bronze to hotel-serviced suites.

1 Bloor St W, Toronto, ON M4W 1A3
$2,100,000 to over $10,000,000
Frank Gehry’s long-awaited Toronto masterpiece, Forma, finally nears completion in 2026. Rising like two sculpted glass towers over King Street West, the 84-storey building’s flowing design mirrors Gehry’s world-famous aesthetic – a tribute to his own Toronto upbringing. Developed by Great Gulf, Westdale Properties, and Dream, Forma has been one of the most anticipated luxury launches in years.
Suites range from compact studios to sprawling penthouse residences, all finished to elite specification. With proximity to TIFF Bell Lightbox, eateries, and theatres, Forma anchors the city’s cultural core while promising unmatched design prestige.

266 King St W, Toronto, ON M5V 1H8
$1,149,900 to $4,600,000
Vaughan gets a vintage revival with Noble Condos, a heritage-meets-modernity development tucked near Keele and Major Mackenzie. The project takes inspiration from industrial style – think an old brick factory reborn. Completed units are hitting the market throughout 2026, appealing particularly to creative buyers and investors targeting character spaces with reliable short-term rental demand.
Each suite has been designed with an eye for detail. Think exposed brick, tall windows, and timeless finishes. Trniity Point Developments' adaptive vision preserves soul while integrating smart technologies and community amenities.

9929 Keele St W, Toronto, ON M6K 1M2
~$500,000 to +$1,000,000
Out in Downtown Etobicoke, Kipling Station Condos is essentially welded to one of the west end’s most important transit hubs. Rising 50 storeys above 5251 Dundas Street West, the CentreCourt-led tower is planned with about 552 to 572 units ranging from compact 303 square foot studios to roughly 935 square foot suites. The project launched in 2023 and remains under construction with a targeted completion in 2026, positioning early buyers to catch the next wave of density and retail around the mobility hub.
The draw here is pure connectivity: residents step directly into the integrated Kipling transit hub, linking TTC subway, GO Transit, MiWay buses and airport-bound routes in minutes. Higher floors are set up for long western and south-facing views that capture Humber Bay Shores, the downtown skyline, Square One, and sunset corridors over Mississauga. On the ground, roughly 200 square metres of retail and an emerging Etobicoke city centre add day-to-day convenience, with additional shopping and dining options building out along Dundas and Bloor.

5251 Dundas St W, Toronto, ON M9B (Downtown Etobicoke, directly at Kipling Station)
$501,000 to around $894,000
Back on University Avenue, The United BLDG Condos takes a very different approach: a restoration-driven, mixed-use tower built directly into Toronto’s institutional and financial core. Rising 55 storeys at 481 University Avenue, the Devpart project preserves and reworks the existing heritage base into a new podium that supports modern office, retail and residential uses in a single, vertical block. Occupancy is targeted for January 2026.
Roughly 224,000 square feet of commercial space and about 39,000 square feet of retail space will occupy the first nine floors, topped by around 759 to 763 condominium units spread over the tower portion. Suites are concentrated from floors 25 to 50 and are configured as studios, one-bedrooms, one-plus-den and two-bedrooms, with parking primarily reserved for larger formats. The architecture teams at B+H and ERA handle the exterior and restoration work, while interior design firm Tomas Pearce specifies engineered wood flooring, custom kitchens and quartz-topped vanities throughout the residential inventory.

481 University Ave (residential address with a dedicated entrance at 88 Centre Ave), Toronto, ON M5G 2P1
Pricing has varied across release phases, but product has generally been positioned as upper-mid to luxury for the Bay Street Corridor; fees are structured with condo-style maintenance charges.
If this extensive list of new condos in Toronto somehow didn't fulfill your search criteria, don't worry. Developers' love for the city is clear - as long as those 'Pinnacle' cranes are up and construction sites littered with Tim Hortons coffee cups, there's always a new construction project in the works.



