How AI and a Tight Fundraising Market Are Resetting the Future of Canadian Proptech

Team of professionals in a modern office lounge

The Canadian real estate industry is massive — the country’s largest contributor to GDP, even before adding construction into the mix. So it’s no surprise that Canada has evolved into a vibrant hub for proptech innovation, where both software and hardware are reshaping how people buy, sell, build, rent, and manage property.

This year delivered a wave of activity in the space, with new funding and product announcements from AI-powered real estate assistant Mave, rental software firm Rentsync, and tenant verification platform RentZoro. But behind the momentum lies a very different landscape — one defined by AI acceleration, cautious investors, and a proptech ecosystem entering a more mature phase.

These insights stem from Proptech Collective and the group’s detailed 2025 Proptech in Canada report, which signals the market’s shift toward sustainability, efficiency, and more disciplined growth.

A Tight Fundraising Market Forces Proptech to Mature

The report tracks 590 active Canadian proptech startups — but only a quarter were founded in the last five years, revealing a maturing ecosystem. At the same time, funding has tightened dramatically. Canadian proptech startups secured $450 million across 30 disclosed rounds in 2025, far below the peaks of 2021.

“Investors are more selective and want to see more traction earlier.” — Stephanie Wood, Proptech Collective

Wood, who also serves as VP at Toronto VC firm Alate Partners, notes that AI has become “the biggest tailwind” for investment, accelerating both product development and industry adoption. Lower valuations and more cautious investors have pushed startups to focus on true product‑market fit and sustainable growth rather than hyper-scaling at all costs.

AI Becomes the Industry’s North Star

A significant portion of 2025’s proptech funding gravitated toward AI-driven startups. Toronto-based Mave, for instance, secured a $5 million seed round to expand its AI platform for realtors and brokers. CEO Raz Zohar says AI is forcing brokerages to rethink customer support, automating repetitive backend tasks and allowing agents to focus on closing deals.

VCs are focusing less on “broad narratives” and more on product engagement and traction.

Mave is onboarding 8,500 realtors and dozens of Ontario brokerages — and claims that 70% use the platform weekly. It’s exactly the kind of traction investors now demand.

Startups Delay Fundraising as Profitability Becomes a Priority

Early-stage funding remained flat year-over-year, but growth rounds became scarce. Only 10 deals surpassed $10 million, including Montréal-based Dcbel’s $55 million raise and Toronto’s Augmenta, which secured $14.4 million to expand its AI-driven building design software.

With investor expectations rising, many Canadian startups that would typically raise seed funding are instead postponing fundraising to prioritize profitability. Others are launching earlier with paid pilots, thanks to AI making product development faster and more affordable.

Of course, tech’s growing role in real estate isn’t universally good. If misused, AI can inflate rents, introduce lending bias, or expose consumer data — concerns already highlighted by watchdogs such as the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

Startup Formation Slows, but Proptech Remains Resilient

Only 34 new proptech startups were founded last year — a drop from both 2024 levels and the boom years of 2019 and 2020. Still, the sector remains resilient, with fewer but more serious startups entering the space.

On the other end of the lifecycle, exit activity remained muted. Instead, the market is undergoing steady consolidation driven by strategic M&A. Rentsync, for example, acquired Vancouver-based Spacelist and Toronto’s Urbanation — its seventh acquisition to date — strengthening its data capabilities and product reach.

Government Housing Initiatives May Provide Tailwinds

With Canada facing major housing affordability and supply challenges, proptech focused on construction could see strong momentum. The federal government’s $13‑billion Build Canada Homes agency may create new opportunities for companies working in zoning automation, modular housing, field management software, and other modern construction technologies.

Wood points to companies such as Montréal-based Landerz, Toronto’s Promise Robotics, and Kitchener-Waterloo’s Bridgit as prime examples of innovators positioned to benefit.

What This Means for Real Estate Professionals

For agents and brokers — in Canada, the U.S., or here in Florida — the message is unmistakable: AI and tech-driven tools are no longer optional. They are rapidly becoming the backbone of modern real estate operations.

At Cameron Academy, we see firsthand how the next generation of real estate professionals expects AI‑powered tools, smart analytics, and streamlined digital platforms to be part of their career toolkit. As the industry evolves, so must the professionals within it — and ongoing education remains the most reliable path to staying competitive.

A special thanks to BetaKit for their original reporting and continued coverage of proptech innovation.

More Articles

Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!

The Rise of Fintech: How Technology Is Reshaping Money and Modern Careers

Fintech has evolved from simple digital banking tools into a global force transforming how we pay, borrow, invest, and manage financial data. With AI, blockchain, and open banking leading the way, fintech is opening new opportunities for consumers, businesses, and professionals across real estate, mortgage, insurance, and finance.

Large CRE Deals Surge in Q3 2025 as Market Confidence Returns

After months of hesitation, the commercial real estate market showed a major resurgence in Q3 2025. Large single‑asset transactions over $10 million jumped to $76 billion — the strongest level since 2022 — signaling renewed liquidity and growing confidence among institutional buyers. While overall volumes remain below peak highs, rising deal counts, stabilizing prices, and increased activity across industrial, multifamily, office, and retail sectors point toward a market steadily moving back toward normalization.

California’s Insurance Crisis: Politics, Wildfires, and a System on the Brink

California’s property insurance market didn’t collapse overnight—it unraveled over years of political delays, soaring wildfire losses, and mounting pressure on insurers and reinsurers. As major carriers pulled out and rate approvals stalled, millions of homeowners were left scrambling for coverage under an overwhelmed FAIR Plan. At the center of the controversy stands Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara, whose decisions, industry ties, and behind‑the‑scenes negotiations have drawn sharp criticism. The result is a destabilized market affecting homeowners, real estate professionals, lenders, and entire communities—and the question of whether current reforms can truly fix what’s broken.

Large U.S. CRE Deals Roar Back in Q3 2025, Signaling Investor Confidence

After a slow start to the year, commercial real estate showed a major resurgence in Q3 2025 as large single‑asset deals over $10 million surged past $76 billion in volume. With 1,826 major trades and the strongest growth rate in more than a decade, investor confidence appears to be returning across U.S. markets. While overall volumes still trail the record highs of 2021–2022, the renewed momentum in big‑ticket transactions points to improving liquidity, clearer pricing, and a potentially pivotal turning point for brokers, investors, and industry professionals.

California’s Insurance Meltdown: The Crisis Reshaping Real Estate, Finance, and Insurance Nationwide

California’s property insurance market has unraveled into one of the most expensive and consequential crises in U.S. history. Major carriers pulled back, wildfire risks soared, regulators stalled, and the state’s FAIR Plan exploded in size — leaving hundreds of thousands of homeowners without affordable coverage. Now, with victims underinsured, premiums surging, and a billion‑dollar bailout looming, the fallout is spilling beyond California. For real estate, mortgage, finance, and insurance professionals across the country, this is a warning of what happens when rising climate risks collide with outdated regulatory systems.

Florida’s Next Mega-Development: Winchester Ranch Set to Add Nearly 9,000 Homes in Sarasota County

Sarasota County is on the brink of one of its largest modern expansions as the Winchester Ranch project moves closer to approval. Spanning more than 3,100 acres near North Port, the planned mega-development could bring up to 8,999 homes plus major commercial and industrial space. With construction projected to begin in 2027–2028, the community has sparked both excitement over new housing opportunities and concerns about environmental impact, placing it at the center of Florida’s ongoing growth debate.