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Average Home Size in Canada by Province (2026)

Updated

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

ProvinceAvg. New Detached (sq ft)Trend
British Columbia2,000–2,200↓ Shrinking (smaller lots in Metro Van)
Alberta2,200–2,400Stable — larger lots available
Saskatchewan2,100–2,300Stable
Manitoba1,900–2,100Stable
Ontario1,900–2,200↓ Shrinking (GTA density push)
Quebec1,700–1,900Stable — smaller historically
New Brunswick1,700–1,900Stable
Nova Scotia1,800–2,000Stable
PEI1,600–1,800Stable
Newfoundland1,700–1,900Stable
National average~1,900–2,100↓ Gradually shrinking

Average condo sizes by city

CityAvg. New Condo (sq ft)Avg. StudioAvg. 1-BedAvg. 2-Bed
Toronto650–700400–475500–600700–850
Vancouver650–750400–500550–650750–900
Calgary800–900450–550600–750850–1,050
Ottawa800–900450–550650–750900–1,100
Montreal750–850400–500550–700800–1,000
Edmonton800–900450–550600–750850–1,050
Halifax750–850450–550600–700850–1,000

Average home size by property type

Property TypeNational Avg. (sq ft)Range
Single-detached1,800–2,1001,200–4,000+
Semi-detached1,400–1,7001,000–2,200
Townhouse (freehold)1,300–1,700900–2,500
Condo townhouse1,100–1,500800–2,000
Condo apartment700–900350–1,500+
Duplex (per unit)900–1,300700–1,800
Mobile / manufactured900–1,400600–2,000

New home sizes over time

YearAvg. New Detached (sq ft)Avg. New Condo (sq ft)
1975~1,100N/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

FactorImpact
Rising land costsBuilders use smaller lots to keep prices somewhat accessible
Higher construction costsLumber, labour, and materials have increased — smaller homes cost less to build
Zoning densificationMunicipal plans favour higher density — townhouses and condos replace detached homes
Smaller householdsAverage Canadian household size has dropped from 3.7 (1971) to ~2.4 (2026)
Affordability pressureBuyers cannot afford the same size as a decade ago
Investor / rental demandDevelopers 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

IssueDetails
Minimum size regulationsSome cities have considered or implemented minimum unit sizes (e.g., Toronto proposed 350 sq ft minimum)
LiveabilityUnits under 500 sq ft are challenging for long-term living, especially for families
Resale riskVery small units may have limited resale appeal as buyer preferences evolve
StorageMicro-condos sacrifice storage — auxiliary storage lockers are sold separately
Work-from-homePost-pandemic demand for home office space makes sub-600 sq ft units less desirable

Minimum condo sizes by city (where regulated)

CityMinimum Unit SizeNotes
TorontoNo official minimum (proposed 350 sq ft)Debate ongoing
Vancouver~398 sq ft (studio); ~538 sq ft (1-bed)Guidelines, not hard rules
MontrealNo official minimumMarket-driven
CalgaryNo official minimumMarket-driven

Canada vs the world

CountryAvg. New Home (sq ft)Comparison
Australia~2,200Largest in the world
Canada~2,000Second or third largest
United States~2,000Comparable to Canada
New Zealand~1,600Mid-range
France~1,200Smaller European standard
Germany~1,000Smaller; apartment-heavy culture
United Kingdom~800Notably small by global standards
Japan~1,000Compact; dense urban centres
Hong Kong~500Among the smallest globally

How much space do you need?

HouseholdRecommended (sq ft)Comfortable (sq ft/person)
Single person600–900600–900
Couple800–1,200400–600
Couple + 1 child1,200–1,600400–530
Couple + 2 children1,500–2,200375–550
Couple + 3+ children2,000–3,000400–500
Multigenerational2,500–4,000+Depends on configuration

Square footage and home value

MarketDetached Price/Sq FtCondo 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.

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