There are just under 150 condo and condo-townhome listings active across Brantford and Brant County right now, with the typical ask in the low $400,000s and entry-level units starting under $250,000. A condo costs less up front than a detached house and hands off the roof, the lawn, and the snow — but you carry a monthly fee and live by the building's rules. Here's the honest read on whether that trade is right for you, and every live listing on the map below.
Roughly half of these are apartment-style units and half are condo townhomes. If you're weighing a condo against a freehold home, the new vs. resale math and the first-time buyer guide are worth a read first. Prefer a specific neighbourhood? Start with Brantford communities.
Every active condo and condo townhome on the market, straight from the MLS®. Pan, zoom, and click any pin for the details.
As of mid-2026 there are just under 150 condo and condo-townhome listings active across Brantford and Brant County. The typical asking price sits in the low $400,000s, with entry-level apartment units starting under $250,000 and larger or newer units running past $1,000,000. Condos generally cost less up front than a detached house, but the monthly condo fee is a real cost you carry on top of the mortgage.
Both. Roughly half of the condo-tenure listings are apartment-style units and about half are condo townhomes — a townhouse you own outright inside, with the exterior, roof, and grounds handled by the condo corporation. Condo townhomes are popular with first-time buyers and downsizers who want more space than an apartment without the full maintenance load of a freehold home.
The monthly condo fee funds the building's shared costs — usually the exterior, roof, snow and lawn, common areas, building insurance, and a reserve fund for big repairs. Some include water or heat; most don't include hydro. The number matters as much as the price: two similar units can have very different fees, and a low fee can mean an underfunded reserve. Always check the fee and the status certificate before you commit.
It fits if you want to stop doing yard work, snow, and roof maintenance, or you want to get into ownership at a lower entry price than a detached house. It fits less well if you want full control over the building, a big yard, or you dislike monthly fees and condo rules. There's no single right answer — it depends on your stage and what you actually want to spend weekends doing.
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