The simple version: April was mostly a house month. Three houses sold, the house median rounded to $850k, and townhouses had no sales.
April snapshot
April 2026 Snapshot
Start with the sales count. April was small, so the charts are useful for context, not for making every property type sound more certain than it is.
By property type
April 2026 by Property Type
The house numbers are the only April numbers with enough sales to say much. Condos and townhouses need longer context.
Houses
Median sold price - April 2026
$850k3 house sales in April. The average rounded to $1M, but the median is the cleaner number to remember.
Townhouses
April sales
0No townhouse sales showed up in April. Even the trailing 12-month count is only 1, so this page does not publish a townhouse price average.
Condos
April sales
1One condo sale is not enough for an April condo average. The better reference is the trailing 12-month condo median, which rounded to $500k across 10 sales.
What happened in April
There were 4 Old North residential sales in April: 3 houses, 1 condo, and 0 townhouses. With a month this small, the sales count matters as much as the price number.
For houses, the median sold price rounded to $850k and the average rounded to $1M. I would not lead with the average unless the comparable house is clearly in that upper range. One expensive sale can move it.
For condos and townhouses, April alone does not tell you much. The better condo reference is the trailing 12 months: 10 condo sales with a median around $500k. Townhouses were still too thin even across the year.
April 2026 sold stats by property type
This is the quick table: count, average, median, median days on market, and sale-to-list. Thin categories are marked instead of padded out.
| Type | Sales | Average sold price | Median sold price | Median DOM | Avg sale-to-list |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houses | 3 | $1M | $850k | 12 days | 96% |
| Townhouses | 0 | No sales | No sales | No sales | No sales |
| Condos | 1 | Too thin | Too thin | Too thin | Too thin |
Price fields are rounded to the nearest $25,000. A category with fewer than three sales is marked too thin because one sale can distort the number.
The longer-window check
When April is too small, the 12-month view is more useful.
| Type | Sales | Average sold price | Median sold price | Median DOM | Avg sale-to-list |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houses, trailing 12 months | 54 | $800k | $675k | 19 days | 98% |
| Townhouses, trailing 12 months | 1 | Too thin | Too thin | Too thin | Too thin |
| Condos, trailing 12 months | 10 | $475k | $500k | 44 days | 96% |
This table uses May 2025 through April 2026 aggregate residential sales inside Old North. Townhouse volume is still too small for a reliable public average.
What this means if you own here
The takeaway changes by property type.
If you own a house
- Use the $850k April median as the cleaner headline, not the $1M average.
- 12 days median DOM says good houses were still moving, but it does not replace block-level pricing.
- Street, condition, parking, yard, updates, and Western exposure still change the answer fast.
If you own a townhouse or condo
- For townhouses, April gives you no price signal.
- For condos, the 12-month median around $500k is more useful than one April sale.
- Building, fees, parking, layout, and unit condition matter more than a neighbourhood-wide average.