Canadian homes are among the largest in the world — but new builds are shrinking. Here is a comprehensive look at home sizes across the country.
Average home size by province
New single-detached homes
| Province | Avg. New Detached (sq ft) | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| British Columbia | 2,000–2,200 | ↓ Shrinking (smaller lots in Metro Van) |
| Alberta | 2,200–2,400 | Stable — larger lots available |
| Saskatchewan | 2,100–2,300 | Stable |
| Manitoba | 1,900–2,100 | Stable |
| Ontario | 1,900–2,200 | ↓ Shrinking (GTA density push) |
| Quebec | 1,700–1,900 | Stable — smaller historically |
| New Brunswick | 1,700–1,900 | Stable |
| Nova Scotia | 1,800–2,000 | Stable |
| PEI | 1,600–1,800 | Stable |
| Newfoundland | 1,700–1,900 | Stable |
| National average | ~1,900–2,100 | ↓ Gradually shrinking |
Average condo sizes by city
| City | Avg. New Condo (sq ft) | Avg. Studio | Avg. 1-Bed | Avg. 2-Bed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | 650–700 | 400–475 | 500–600 | 700–850 |
| Vancouver | 650–750 | 400–500 | 550–650 | 750–900 |
| Calgary | 800–900 | 450–550 | 600–750 | 850–1,050 |
| Ottawa | 800–900 | 450–550 | 650–750 | 900–1,100 |
| Montreal | 750–850 | 400–500 | 550–700 | 800–1,000 |
| Edmonton | 800–900 | 450–550 | 600–750 | 850–1,050 |
| Halifax | 750–850 | 450–550 | 600–700 | 850–1,000 |
Average home size by property type
| Property Type | National Avg. (sq ft) | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Single-detached | 1,800–2,100 | 1,200–4,000+ |
| Semi-detached | 1,400–1,700 | 1,000–2,200 |
| Townhouse (freehold) | 1,300–1,700 | 900–2,500 |
| Condo townhouse | 1,100–1,500 | 800–2,000 |
| Condo apartment | 700–900 | 350–1,500+ |
| Duplex (per unit) | 900–1,300 | 700–1,800 |
| Mobile / manufactured | 900–1,400 | 600–2,000 |
Historical trends
New home sizes over time
| Year | Avg. New Detached (sq ft) | Avg. New Condo (sq ft) |
|---|---|---|
| 1975 | ~1,100 | N/A (few condos) |
| 1985 | ~1,400 | ~900 |
| 1995 | ~1,700 | ~850 |
| 2005 | ~2,200 | ~850 |
| 2010 | ~2,300 (peak) | ~800 |
| 2015 | ~2,100 | ~750 |
| 2020 | ~2,000 | ~700 |
| 2025 | ~1,950 | ~680 |
The peak for new detached homes was approximately 2005–2010. Since then, sizes have declined by roughly 10%–15%.
Why homes are getting smaller
| Factor | Impact |
|---|---|
| Rising land costs | Builders use smaller lots to keep prices somewhat accessible |
| Higher construction costs | Lumber, labour, and materials have increased — smaller homes cost less to build |
| Zoning densification | Municipal plans favour higher density — townhouses and condos replace detached homes |
| Smaller households | Average Canadian household size has dropped from 3.7 (1971) to ~2.4 (2026) |
| Affordability pressure | Buyers cannot afford the same size as a decade ago |
| Investor / rental demand | Developers build smaller units that sell at accessible price points |
| Work-from-home (counter-trend) | Some buyers are seeking larger homes since 2020 — partially offsetting the trend |
Condo size concerns
The shrinking condo problem
| Issue | Details |
|---|---|
| Minimum size regulations | Some cities have considered or implemented minimum unit sizes (e.g., Toronto proposed 350 sq ft minimum) |
| Liveability | Units under 500 sq ft are challenging for long-term living, especially for families |
| Resale risk | Very small units may have limited resale appeal as buyer preferences evolve |
| Storage | Micro-condos sacrifice storage — auxiliary storage lockers are sold separately |
| Work-from-home | Post-pandemic demand for home office space makes sub-600 sq ft units less desirable |
Minimum condo sizes by city (where regulated)
| City | Minimum Unit Size | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Toronto | No official minimum (proposed 350 sq ft) | Debate ongoing |
| Vancouver | ~398 sq ft (studio); ~538 sq ft (1-bed) | Guidelines, not hard rules |
| Montreal | No official minimum | Market-driven |
| Calgary | No official minimum | Market-driven |
Canada vs the world
| Country | Avg. New Home (sq ft) | Comparison |
|---|---|---|
| Australia | ~2,200 | Largest in the world |
| Canada | ~2,000 | Second or third largest |
| United States | ~2,000 | Comparable to Canada |
| New Zealand | ~1,600 | Mid-range |
| France | ~1,200 | Smaller European standard |
| Germany | ~1,000 | Smaller; apartment-heavy culture |
| United Kingdom | ~800 | Notably small by global standards |
| Japan | ~1,000 | Compact; dense urban centres |
| Hong Kong | ~500 | Among the smallest globally |
How much space do you need?
| Household | Recommended (sq ft) | Comfortable (sq ft/person) |
|---|---|---|
| Single person | 600–900 | 600–900 |
| Couple | 800–1,200 | 400–600 |
| Couple + 1 child | 1,200–1,600 | 400–530 |
| Couple + 2 children | 1,500–2,200 | 375–550 |
| Couple + 3+ children | 2,000–3,000 | 400–500 |
| Multigenerational | 2,500–4,000+ | Depends on configuration |
Square footage and home value
| Market | Detached Price/Sq Ft | Condo Price/Sq Ft |
|---|---|---|
| Toronto | $500–$900 | $700–$1,200 |
| Vancouver | $600–$1,100 | $800–$1,400 |
| Calgary | $300–$450 | $350–$550 |
| Ottawa | $300–$500 | $400–$600 |
| Montreal | $300–$500 | $400–$650 |
Condos often have a higher price per square foot than detached homes — even though detached homes cost more in total — because land value is distributed differently across the property types.