May 23, 2024
Housing market shows signs of stabilizing as sales and prices inch higher in March | CBC News

Housing market shows signs of stabilizing as sales and prices inch higher in March | CBC News

The number of homes being sold and the prices they’re selling for are still dramatically lower than they were a year ago, but Canada’s housing market is showing signs of rebound this spring with prices and sales volumes inching higher in March compared to February.

The Canadian Real Estate Association said Friday that the average price of a Canadian home that sold last month was $686,371. That’s up from $662,437 in February, and $612,204 in January. 

That’s the first time the national average selling price has increased for two months in a row since the fall of 2022, when the central bank’s aggressive campaign of rate hikes was well underway.

While prices inched up on a monthly basis, the average was still 13.7 per cent lower than it was in March of 2022.

It was a similar story on the sales side too, as the number of homes sold on CREA’s Multiple Listing Service (MLS) inched up by 1.4 per cent in March compared to February, but was still 34.4 per cent lower than it was this time last year.

Much of the national uptick was led by the country’s two most expensive housing markets, Toronto and Vancouver. 

“Excluding the GTA and Greater Vancouver from the calculation cuts more than $136,000 from the national average price,” CREA said.

Toronto Realtor John Pankiw says the the feverish pace of last year’s market was unlike anything he’s seen in his 20-year career selling houses. But after going ice cold for much of 2022, things are starting to heat up again.

“I’m definitely seeing an uptick in the phone ringing,” he told CBC News in an interview at an open house for a home he’s selling in the city. “I’m definitely seeing an uptick in listings coming out. However, they are still coming out at a much slower pace than what would normally be seen in a spring market.”

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