April 2026

401 Corridor Proximity: Does Location Add Millions to Value?

Industrial Appraisal Insights Warehouse vs Last Mile Logistics: How Proximity to the 401 Corridor Shifts Industrial Appraisals by Millions When I look at an industrial property in Toronto or the GTA, I do not start by asking how many square feet it has. I start by asking what kind of operator can use it, how fast goods can move in and out, and how close it is to the 401 corridor. That one detail can change an industrial appraisal far more than most owners expect. 5.0% Industrial availability in GTA — Q4 2025 $16.38 Per sq ft rental rate — 9th straight quarter of decline 11.1M Sq ft of new industrial supply delivered in 2025 Industrial real estate is not just about storage. It is about speed, access, labour, shipping efficiency, and how well a building fits today’s logistics demand. Even with that volume of new product, absorption stayed positive — which tells you the market is still active and selective rather than weak. Why the 401 Corridor Matters So Much The 401 corridor is not just a highway. In Toronto real estate terms, it is the spine that ties together distribution, shipping, labour access, and regional movement of goods. For commercial property appraisal in Toronto, proximity to highway access keeps showing up in industrial pricing conversations — and for good reason. For industrial users, time is money. A warehouse close to the 401 can move inventory faster, reach a wider customer base, and reduce transport friction. That efficiency matters to tenants, and when tenants value a location more highly, appraisers do too. The Toronto region continues to see highway improvements and rehabilitation work tied to Highway 401 — which shows just how central this route remains to the city’s entire transportation system. Warehouse and Last Mile Logistics Are Not the Same Asset Traditional Warehouse Bulk storage & long-haul distribution Farther from urban core — lower land cost Valued by size, ceiling height & loading capacity Regional operations focus Last Mile Logistics Closer to end customer for faster delivery Smaller order volumes, frequent vehicle movement Benefits from dense population & 401 access Can trade at a significantly higher value That difference can create a major appraisal gap. A bulk warehouse in a more remote industrial node may still be valuable, but a last mile facility with tighter access to the core and to major highways can trade at a very different level because the market views its location as more strategic. How Appraisers Translate Location Into Value When appraisers complete a professional property valuation in Toronto, we do not simply label one building a warehouse and another a logistics asset and stop there. We look at what the building can actually do for a tenant. This is where industrial property valuation in Toronto becomes highly local. A facility in Vaughan may benefit from direct highway connections and strong distribution demand. Mississauga often trades on airport access and highway connectivity. Scarborough offers access to Highway 401 and dense labour pools, while Markham and Etobicoke each bring their own market logic based on user type, access, and building stock. At Seven Appraisal Inc., a warehouse is never just a warehouse in Toronto. It is a business tool — and the market prices that tool based on how well it serves the user. The Physical Traits That Can Move Value Quickly Once location is established, the building itself starts to matter. Clear height is one of the most visible examples — a modern warehouse with generous clear height can store more product efficiently and support racking systems that older buildings cannot. Loading doors matter just as much. Dock level access is highly valued for distribution use, while drive-in doors may suit some light industrial operators. Truck court depth, turning radius, and site circulation are also critical. Column spacing, power supply, sprinkler systems, and office buildout all affect how flexible the space is for users. The more adaptable the building, the more buyers are willing to pay. This is why two industrial properties with the same square footage can appraise very differently — the market is not buying empty space. It is buying operational efficiency. What the Income Approach Reveals in Leased Industrial Properties For leased industrial buildings, income is a major part of value. Appraisers review contract rent, market rent, lease term, renewal options, tenant quality, and operating expenses. A strong lease with a reliable tenant and good rental growth potential can support a higher valuation than a vacant or weakly leased property. That is especially true near the 401 corridor. Even with positive absorption in Q4 2025, rent continued to soften — which means appraisers need to be careful not to simply apply yesterday’s pricing to today’s market. For unique land-driven industrial plays, our vacant land appraisal service in Toronto provides the ground-up analysis these situations require. Why the Value Difference Can Be So Large The phrase by millions is not exaggeration. On larger industrial assets, small changes in rent assumptions, cap rates, or redevelopment potential can create very large shifts in value. A building that supports better logistics function, faster access, and stronger tenant demand can be priced materially higher than a similar property that is farther from the 401 or less efficient for modern users. Market value is not just about what a building is — it is about how well it performs in the current market and how the market sees its future. Our team also handles certified residential real estate appraisals for clients who hold mixed-use or transitional assets alongside their industrial portfolio. Why Toronto Owners Should Care Right Now Toronto’s industrial sector is still active, but it is also more selective than it was a few years ago. Vacancy is higher than it was during the tightest years, new supply remains meaningful, and rental rates have adjusted. At the same time, the city continues to rely on the 401 corridor and surrounding infrastructure for goods movement and regional access. For owners, that means a property near

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Asset Valuation for Shareholders: When Property Appraisals Become Essential for Business and Personal Decisions

Asset Valuation for Shareholders: When Property Appraisals Become Essential for Business and Personal Decisions Real estate holdings rarely exist in simple, straightforward ownership structures. Properties often belong to corporations, partnerships, family trusts, or shared ownership arrangements where multiple parties hold interests. When these ownership structures face changes, disputes, or legal requirements, determining the exact value of those real estate assets becomes absolutely necessary. This is where professional asset valuation for shareholders enters the picture, providing the objective foundation that allows complicated situations to resolve fairly. At Seven Appraisal Inc., a significant portion of our Toronto appraisal work involves properties held in corporate structures or shared ownership arrangements. These assignments require not just valuation expertise but also understanding of the legal, tax, and business contexts that make accurate property values so critical. Whether dealing with shareholder buyouts, matrimonial property division, estate settlements, or corporate restructuring, the appraisal methodology and professional standards remain consistent, but the application and implications vary considerably. Understanding Shareholder Asset Valuation in Plain Language The term “shareholder asset valuation” sounds technical, but the concept is straightforward. When a business or investment entity owns real estate, and that business has multiple shareholders or partners, there are situations where everyone needs to agree on what that property is actually worth. The property might be an office building owned by a family corporation, a rental property portfolio held by investment partners, commercial real estate owned by a business, or even a primary residence that sits within a holding company structure for tax or estate planning purposes. Unlike properties owned by individuals where value questions arise mainly during sales, properties held in corporate or partnership structures face value questions in many situations that have nothing to do with selling. A shareholder wants to exit the business and needs their share bought out. Spouses divorce and need to divide assets that include properties held corporately. Business partners disagree about property value when considering refinancing or adding new investors. Estate executors need to divide property assets among heirs. Tax authorities want to verify declared values for various compliance purposes. In all these situations, you cannot simply guess at property values or use rough estimates. Legal requirements, tax implications, and fairness to all parties demand professional appraisals prepared by qualified appraisers who understand both real estate valuation and the specific context requiring the valuation. When Corporate-Held Properties Need Professional Appraisal Toronto businesses own real estate for many reasons. Some operate from buildings they own rather than leasing space. Others hold investment properties generating rental income. Family businesses often own the real estate separately from operating companies, with property held in one corporation and business operations in another. These ownership structures create situations where property valuation becomes necessary. Shareholder buyouts represent one of the most common triggers for property appraisals. When one partner wants to exit a business that owns real estate, the departing shareholder is entitled to fair value for their ownership interest. That value depends heavily on what the underlying real estate is worth. Without a professional appraisal, the remaining shareholders and exiting partner have no objective basis for negotiation, leading to disputes that can destroy business relationships and end up in costly litigation. Estate freezes and succession planning also require property valuations. When business owners transfer property holdings to the next generation or restructure ownership for tax purposes, Canada Revenue Agency scrutinizes these transactions carefully. Properties must transfer at fair market value, and professional appraisals provide the documentation CRA expects to see. Without proper valuations, these transactions can trigger reassessments, penalties, and tax liabilities years later. Corporate reorganizations frequently involve moving properties between related companies or changing ownership structures. Again, tax law requires these transfers to occur at fair market value. The appraisal establishes that value defensibly, protecting the company and shareholders from allegations of tax avoidance through undervalued or overvalued property transfers. Adding new investors or bringing in outside capital creates another valuation need. When someone wants to invest in a business that owns real estate, they need to know what percentage of the company their investment actually buys. That calculation depends entirely on accurately valuing all company assets, with real estate often representing the largest single asset requiring professional appraisal. Matrimonial Property Division Involving Corporate Holdings Divorce complicates everything, and when real estate sits inside corporate structures, the complications multiply. Ontario family law requires that property be divided based on values at separation date. When one or both spouses own shares in corporations that hold real estate, determining the value of those corporate shares depends on accurately valuing the underlying properties. Consider a common Toronto scenario. A couple separates and needs to divide assets. The husband owns 60 percent of a family business that operates from a building the corporation owns. The wife owns a rental property held in a holding company for tax purposes. Both need current appraisals of these properties to calculate fair equalization payments. The appraisals must reflect values as of the separation date, not current values if significant time has passed. This retrospective valuation requires appraisers to reconstruct market conditions and property values as they existed at that specific past date, ignoring everything that happened afterward. Matrimonial appraisals involving corporate-held properties also need to consider any encumbrances, related party leases, or unusual arrangements affecting value. If the business rents its building from a related corporation at below-market rates, or if the property has environmental issues the corporation has been managing, these factors affect what the real estate is actually worth to a typical buyer and must be analyzed appropriately. Lawyers handling divorce cases involving business interests rely heavily on professional real estate appraisals because courts will not accept casual estimates or opinions from interested parties. Seven Appraisal Inc. regularly works with family law attorneys across Toronto, providing the detailed, defensible valuations that satisfy court requirements and give both parties confidence in the fairness of property division. Estate Settlement and Multiple Beneficiaries When someone passes away owning properties through corporations or in partnership with others, the estate

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