House-hunting in Toronto, scored and shared
From downtown condos to the brick semis of the old city and family homes out in Etobicoke and Scarborough, Toronto's market is broad, pricey and competitive. A score per home — and per dollar — keeps a long shortlist from turning into a bidding-war blur.
Compare Toronto homes on what matters to you
Whether you're weighing up Leslieville, The Annex, Roncesvalles or anywhere else around Toronto, the hard part is the same: too many listings, not enough clarity. Groundwork lets you score each place against your own priorities and ranks the shortlist automatically — so the standouts rise to the top instead of getting lost in a tab graveyard.
A local angle worth scoring
Winter heating, insulation and the walk to the TTC or GO line are worth real points in a Toronto home; so is the condo's maintenance fee.
Searching Toronto with someone else
Buying with a partner or renting with housemates across Toronto? Invite them by email and you all score the same shared shortlist — the decision gets made on what you rated together, not on who saw the last place. It updates live, right there at the inspection.
Popular Toronto areas people compare in Groundwork
- Leslieville, Toronto
- The Annex, Toronto
- Roncesvalles, Toronto
- Etobicoke, Toronto
- Scarborough, Toronto
- Liberty Village, Toronto
Ready to start your shortlist?
Add your first place and score it in under a minute — no signup. Bring your people in whenever you're ready.
Common questions
Is Groundwork free to use in Toronto?
Yes — it's free for buyers and renters everywhere, Toronto included, and you can start scoring without creating an account.
Does it work for Toronto rentals as well as buying?
It does. Switch a hunt to Rent mode and the price field, value-for-money score and exports all move to a weekly-rent basis — handy in a fast Toronto rental market.
Can I compare properties from different Toronto areas?
Yes. Add places from anywhere around Toronto, score them the same way, and Groundwork ranks them side by side so different areas become genuinely comparable.