
Toronto real estate cybersecurity is under serious threat.Toronto Real Estate Under Attack is not a scare tactic—it’s a reality for brokerages, builders, and property managers across the GTA. Cybercriminals know how much money and personal information moves through your business every day, and they are actively looking for weak spots they can exploit.
If you own or run a real estate, construction, or property management company, this is now part of your risk profile, right alongside financing, vacancies, and interest rates. The incidents below show what’s already happening in our backyard and why owners can’t afford to ignore it any longer.
Real Incidents Hitting GTA Real Estate and Construction
These are not hypotheticals or overseas stories; they involve familiar names and Canadian organizations.
- Living Realty breach in the GTA
In January 2026, breach‑tracking services listed Living Realty (livingrealty.com), a well‑known GTA brokerage, as a victim of a data compromise linked to a group called “SECUROTROP.” The listing shows that brokerage systems tied to real deals and client information are now firmly on criminals’ radar, with details being circulated on dark‑web and ransomware monitoring sites. - Ransomware hitting Ontario construction firms
Bird Construction, a major Ontario construction company, publicly disclosed that a ransomware attack locked up parts of its systems. Security articles tie the attack to the Maze ransomware group, which is notorious for stealing large volumes of data and threatening to leak it if victims don’t pay; reporting notes that around 60 GB of data was taken in this case. That kind of theft can expose employee records, contracts, financial details, and other sensitive information you would never want posted online. - A look at a large Canadian data breach
In a different part of the financial world, the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO) confirmed a cybersecurity incident that affected roughly 750,000 people and exposed highly sensitive information like social insurance numbers and account details. It’s not a real estate story, but it shows the scale of attacks now happening in Canada and the kind of detailed personal data attackers are after.
The takeaway: if a well‑known brokerage, a large construction firm, and a national regulator can be hit, any mid‑sized or growing real estate business in the GTA is fair game.
Why Owners Like You Are in the Crosshairs
From an attacker’s point of view, real estate and property management companies are attractive for very simple reasons.
- You handle big money
Deposits, closing funds, progress draws, rent rolls—your business moves large amounts of money with tight timelines, which makes it easier for criminals to pressure you into paying or to redirect funds if they get into your systems or email. - You store valuable personal data
Tenant applications, IDs, banking details, employment letters, sometimes even medical information tied to accommodation requests—all of that lives somewhere in your systems or with your vendors. In other Canadian breaches, similar data has ended up in the hands of criminals and been used for identity theft and sophisticated scams. - You rely on many vendors and platforms
Marketing agencies, listing platforms, property management software, law firms, cloud storage, email services—every one of these connections is another doorway that might be left slightly open. - You are juggling growth, not just security
Many owners pushed hard into online portals, remote work, and new tools over the past few years without the time to redesign security from the ground up. Attackers are very good at finding the unpatched server, the misconfigured cloud account, or the exposed admin login.
How These Attacks Usually Start
Most serious incidents start with a handful of familiar moves, not some movie‑style hack.
- Phishing and fake email
In the CIRO case, the investigation pointed to a phishing email as the initial step that led to the compromise of sensitive investor data. In real estate, the same tactic is used to change wiring instructions, intercept deposit details, or gain access to cloud systems your team relies on every day. - Ransomware and data theft
The Bird Construction incident shows the pattern clearly: ransomware encrypts files, attackers claim they’ve stolen gigabytes of data, and they publicly name the company on a leak site to force a payout. Even if you have backups, once data is stolen, criminals can leak or sell it later. - Compromised websites and portals
A brokerage or developer website built on a common content‑management system can be breached if it’s not updated or properly locked down. Once attackers get in, they can look for paths into your CRM, document repositories, or file shares where all the sensitive deal and tenant information sits. - Weak links in the vendor chain
Larger Canadian investigations have highlighted how third‑party vendors, filing services, and online portals can become entry points. If a partner doesn’t have good controls, your brand and your clients’ data can still be dragged into a breach.
What the Law and Your Tenants Expect
Beyond the headlines, there are real rules and expectations around how you handle people’s information.
- Federal privacy rules still apply
Under PIPEDA, the federal privacy law covering commercial activities, businesses are expected to safeguard the personal information they collect, use, and disclose. Legal guidance aimed at landlords makes it clear that mishandling tenant credit reports, rental histories, or other details—including sharing them without proper consent and safeguards—can violate those rules. - Tenants and residents have privacy rights
Tenant‑focused legal resources in Ontario stress that landlords must respect privacy, including how they collect, store, and share personal details. Public housing and seniors’ housing providers in Toronto have formal “information breach” policies that define a breach as any unauthorized access, disclosure, or loss of personal or confidential information and require notification and follow‑up when that happens.
If your company suffers a visible breach, you’re not just dealing with IT problems—you’re facing reputational damage, potential complaints and investigations, and a wave of questions from tenants, buyers, investors, and partners.
Practical Next Steps for Owners
The good news is you don’t need to become a cybersecurity expert to make meaningful improvements; you just need to be deliberate about a few key areas.
- Lock down email and logins
- Protect your core business data
- Keep your website and portals maintained
- Ask more from your vendors
- Have an incident playbook ready
How Secur‑IT Data Solutions Helps GTA Real Estate Owners
This is exactly where Secur‑IT Data Solutions steps in for Toronto and GTA real estate, construction, and property management companies. We focus on practical, done‑for‑you security so owners can keep their attention on deals, projects, and tenants—not log files and alerts.
Here’s what that looks like in plain language:
- 24/7 monitoring and incident response
Our team provides managed detection and response, watching your environment around the clock for the phishing, ransomware, and account‑takeover patterns that are hitting firms like Bird Construction and other Canadian businesses. When something looks wrong, we investigate and act, instead of leaving you to figure it out on your own. - Dark‑web and breach exposure checks
We can scan for signs that your company, staff email addresses, or domains are being mentioned on dark‑web and leak sites, then translate those findings into concrete actions you can take. That helps you get ahead of problems like stolen credentials or document leaks instead of discovering them after an incident. - Protection for your users, sites, and cloud systems
We harden email, identities, and access to critical systems with measures like MFA, advanced email filtering, and secure remote access, tailored to how your team actually works. We also secure the websites, portals, and cloud platforms you use to manage listings, tenants, and projects through vulnerability assessments and ongoing monitoring. - Real‑world testing and risk assessments
Our specialists perform penetration testing and vulnerability assessments to uncover the same kinds of weaknesses attackers look for in brokerage, builder, and property management environments. You get clear priorities and a roadmap, not a stack of technical jargon. - Compliance, policies, and staff training
We help owners line up their policies and controls with privacy and security expectations under Canadian regulations, then train staff so they actually know what to do with that. That includes practical awareness sessions focused on the email scams and day‑to‑day behaviours that cause most breaches.
If you’d like to know where you stand today, Secur‑IT Data Solutions can start with a focused assessment for your brokerage, development company, or property management firm and a dark‑web exposure check tied specifically to your domains and key staff accounts.
References
- Living Realty / SECUROTROP listing – Ransomware.live Canada map:
https://www.ransomware.live/map/CA - Bird Construction / Maze overview – Infosecurity Magazine:
https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/bird-construction-compromised-in/ - CIRO data breach – CTV News report:
https://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/article/ciro-says-about-750k-peoples-data-affected-by-cybersecurity-incident/ - CIRO incident technical summary – Rescana:
https://www.rescana.com/post/ciro-data-breach-exposes-sensitive-information-of-750-000-canadian-investors-in-major-2025-cyberattack - Tenant privacy and PIPEDA for landlords – Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada:
https://www.priv.gc.ca/en/privacy-topics/landlords-and-tenants/privacy-in-the-landlord-and-tenant-relationship/ - Landlords and PIPEDA obligations – McCague Borlack LLP:
https://mccagueborlack.com/emails/articles/landlords.html - Tenant privacy and statutory duties – AAB law firm:
https://aab.legal/EN/landlord-services/common-concerns/tenant-privacy - Information breach policy – Toronto Seniors Housing:
https://www.torontoseniorshousing.ca/policies/information-breach-policy/ - Cyber breach announcement – Canadian National Association of Real Estate Appraisers:
https://cnarea.ca/cyber-breach-announcement/

Krikor Tengerian is the CEO and founder of Secur-IT Data Solutions, a Toronto-based cybersecurity firm focused on helping Canadian organizations secure their infrastructure and critical systems. With over 25 years of experience across cybersecurity and IT infrastructure, he has supported organizations in hardening networks, protecting critical workloads, and aligning security controls with business and regulatory requirements.
Krikor actively shapes the direction and themes of Secur-IT’s educational content, collaborating with AI tools to structure, refine, and expand articles while providing the real-world context, use cases, and review to keep them accurate and practical for readers. He regularly shares insights on OT security, threat detection, incident response, and Canadian cybersecurity compliance to help industrial and commercial organizations better understand and reduce their cyber risk.
