An appraiser estimates a property's market value for a purchase, refinancing, estate, separation or dispute — a signed report that carries weight with lenders, insurers and courts, unlike a broker's informal estimate. The professional designation is the key signal. Before retaining one, verify an active designation (AACI or CRA from the Appraisal Institute of Canada, or the provincial equivalent), experience with the property type involved, and a real footing in the local market. Payotte verifies the designation individually on the official register and recommends a single appraiser per sector of Toronto.
The Toronto real estate market
As of May 2026, the MLS benchmark price in Toronto stood at $938,000, down 5.2% year-over-year. The average home, all property types combined, traded near $1,108,292. Inventory sat at roughly 4.2 months of supply, and homes took about 29 days to sell.
Scope: Ville de Toronto (prix mai 2026); indicateurs MOI/DOM = GTA avril 2026 · TRREB · May 2026. — Source : TRREB
How much does a property appraisal cost?
Published figures for a residential appraisal (financing or market value) range from $150 to $600 depending on the source and year: Ratehub cites $150–$500, Nesto $300–$500 (March 2025), WOWA $300–$600 (August 2025) and CMHC $250–$350. Sources genuinely diverge, so Payotte reports the spread rather than a blended number.
When the appraisal is ordered for a mortgage, the borrower usually pays the fee — but the appraiser's client is the lender (Appraisal Institute of Canada).
Sources: WOWA — Closing costs calculator (Aug 2025) · AIC — For property owners