After two years of rate hikes, cooling prices, and cautious buyers sitting on the sidelines, Canada's housing market entered 2025 in a state of transition. The Bank of Canada began cutting rates in mid-2024, bringing the overnight rate down from its 5% peak. What does this mean for prices, sales volumes, and affordability across Canada's major markets? Here's the full picture.
The Bank of Canada's aggressive rate hiking cycle — from 0.25% in early 2022 to 5.0% by mid-2023 — pushed variable mortgage rates above 7% and caused fixed rates to spike above 5–6%. The BoC held rates at 5% through most of 2023 before beginning to cut in June 2024.
Most major forecasters — CREA, RBC, TD Economics, CMHC — project modest national price gains of 3–7% for 2025, driven by:
However, gains will not be uniform. Some markets are forecast to significantly outperform the national average while others remain flat or see modest declines.
| City | Current Avg Price | 2025 Forecast Change | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calgary | ~$600,000 | +8% to +12% | Migration, energy sector, supply shortage |
| Edmonton | ~$430,000 | +8% to +10% | Affordability advantage, interprovincial migration |
| Ottawa | ~$650,000 | +4% to +6% | Government employment stability |
| Montreal | ~$550,000 | +4% to +6% | Improving affordability relative to Toronto/Vancouver |
| Halifax | ~$470,000 | +3% to +5% | Atlantic immigration, remote workers |
| Toronto GTA | ~$1,100,000 | +2% to +5% | Rate relief, pent-up demand; condo segment lagging |
| Vancouver | ~$1,200,000 | +2% to +4% | Extreme affordability constraints limiting upside |
| Winnipeg | ~$360,000 | +4% to +6% | Stable, affordable, consistent demand |
Canada's condo market — particularly in Toronto and Vancouver — faces unique headwinds in 2025. A large volume of pre-construction condos purchased in 2021–2022 at the market peak are now completing and being handed over to buyers. Many of these buyers face significant challenges:
Toronto condo prices have been flat to slightly negative year-over-year through late 2024 and into early 2025. Recovery in the condo segment may lag detached and townhome markets by 1–2 years.
Canada's housing supply crisis hasn't been solved — it's been marginally addressed. CMHC's 2023 report identified a need for 3.5 million additional homes by 2030. Despite accelerated construction in some markets, annual housing starts remain well below this pace nationally.
Calgary and Edmonton have seen strong construction activity that is keeping prices somewhat in check despite strong demand. Toronto and Vancouver remain supply-constrained, with zoning, construction costs, and labour shortages all limiting new supply.
Canada welcomed record numbers of newcomers in 2023 and 2024. The federal government has since moderated immigration targets slightly, acknowledging housing pressure. Planned permanent resident admissions of approximately 395,000 in 2025 (down from the 485,000 peak) still represent significant ongoing demand for housing.
Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, and Atlantic Canada remain relatively affordable by Canadian standards. With rates declining, demand is recovering. Buyers in these markets who act in early-to-mid 2025 may be ahead of a meaningful price recovery.
With price-to-rent ratios still extremely elevated and affordability deeply stretched, buyers in Canada's priciest cities face a difficult calculation. Rate relief helps on monthly payments but doesn't address the fundamental valuation problem. For buyers with long time horizons (10+ years) and strong down payments, the case for buying is reasonable. For those with shorter horizons or limited down payments, renting while accumulating FHSA/RRSP savings may be the smarter play.
Rate holds (typically 90–120 days) allow buyers to lock in current rates before purchasing. If rates are expected to decline further, this provides a ceiling without costing anything. Getting pre-approved now is a low-cost option that preserves flexibility.
The seller's market dynamic that dominated 2020–2022 is not fully back. In most markets, reasonable time-on-market and fair pricing are still required. Overpriced listings will sit. In strong markets like Calgary, multiple offers are returning on well-priced properties. In Toronto's condo market, sellers face the most challenging conditions since 2018.
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