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Buying a Home in Edmonton — Complete Guide (2026)

Updated

Edmonton offers one of the best value propositions for homebuyers in all of Canada. No land transfer tax, affordable home prices, high average wages (thanks to the energy sector), and a growing tech and logistics economy make it possible to own a detached home on a modest income. This guide covers everything you need to know.

Edmonton market overview

Edmonton is organized into sectors, with each offering different price points and lifestyles:

AreaAvg DetachedAvg TownhouseAvg CondoCharacter
Oliver / DowntownN/A (few detached)$250K–$350K$175K–$300KHigh-rise, walkable, river valley, young professionals
Strathcona / Old Strathcona$500K–$750K$350K–$450K$250K–$350KWhyte Avenue, arts, restaurants, U of A proximity
Garneau / University$450K–$650K$300K–$400K$220K–$320KUniversity of Alberta, walkable, character homes
Glenora / Westmount$600K–$1.0M+$350K–$500K$280K–$400KEstablished prestige, river valley views, older homes
Riverbend / Terwillegar$450K–$650K$300K–$400K$230K–$320KFamily suburb, parks, ravine access
Windermere / Keswick$500K–$700K$350K–$450K$250K–$350KNewer luxury, master-planned, south side
Mill Woods$350K–$500K$250K–$350K$180K–$250KDiverse, established, LRT extension
Castle Downs / Lake District$350K–$500K$250K–$350K$180K–$250KNorth side, family-friendly, lakes
West Edmonton$400K–$550K$280K–$380K$200K–$280KNear WEM, suburban, established
Sherwood Park$450K–$650K$300K–$400K$250K–$350KStrathcona County, premium suburban, Refinery Row employment
St. Albert$450K–$600K$300K–$400K$250K–$350KFamily-focused, top schools, Sturgeon River, own city
Spruce Grove / Stony Plain$350K–$475K$250K–$350K$200K–$280KWest of Edmonton, small-town feel, affordable
Fort Saskatchewan$350K–$475K$250K–$350K$200K–$280KNortheast, industrial employment, river setting
Leduc / Beaumont$375K–$500K$275K–$375K$220K–$300KSouth, airport proximity, growing communities

No land transfer tax advantage

Like Calgary, Edmonton benefits from Alberta’s absence of land transfer tax:

Purchase PriceEdmonton (AB)Winnipeg (MB)Toronto (ON)Vancouver (BC)
$400,000$210$5,650$4,475 (city) + $4,475 (prov)$6,000
$500,000$250$7,650$6,475 + $6,475$8,000
$700,000$330$11,650$10,475 + $10,475$13,000

Infill vs suburban — Edmonton’s unique choice

Edmonton has both a massive suburban new-build market and a growing infill movement. The city’s decision to allow widespread densification means infill projects are increasingly common.

FactorInfill (Inner City)Suburban (New Build)
Price$500K–$800K (new infill detached)$400K–$600K (comparable size)
Lot sizeSmaller (25–33 ft wide)Larger (40–50 ft, some wider)
CommuteShorter, transit-accessibleCar-dependent, 20–40 min commute
DesignModern, multi-level, rooftop decksBuilder-standard, open concept, attached garage
Neighbourhood maturityEstablished trees, shops, walkabilityNew amenities coming, initially minimal
AppreciationHigher potential — inner-city land appreciates fasterModerate — land is abundant in Edmonton
GST5% GST on new builds5% GST on new builds
CharacterMid-century homes mixed with modern infillHomogeneous new development

Infill hotspots

  • Ritchie — south of Whyte Ave, strong appreciation, new infill townhomes
  • Belgravia — near U of A, quiet residential, semi-detached infill
  • Inglewood / Bonnie Doon — east side infill, river valley proximity
  • Westmount / Groat Estates — close to downtown, substantial lots, character conversion

Condo market — proceed with caution

Edmonton’s condo market deserves special attention because it has underperformed:

Why Edmonton condos have struggled

  • Overbuilding — Developers built aggressively in 2012–2017 during high oil prices; supply exceeded demand
  • Oil price crash — The 2014–2016 downturn reduced migration and employment, leaving inventory sitting
  • Condo fees — Many newer buildings have high fees ($400–$600+) that eat into affordability advantage
  • Price stagnation — Many condos purchased in 2014–2017 are still worth less than what buyers paid

If you do buy a condo

  • Target established buildings in strong locations (Oliver, Strathcona, Garneau)
  • Avoid 1-bedroom units unless buying purely for price — they have the weakest appreciation
  • Check the reserve fund — newer buildings may have inadequate reserves if they cut fees to attract buyers
  • Review condo documents carefully — look for special assessments, insurance claims, fee increases
  • 2-bed+ in established areas have performed better and have stronger rental demand

Income needed to buy in Edmonton

PropertyPriceDown PaymentMortgageRate (5-yr fixed)Min Household Income
1-bed condo$200,000$10,000 (5%)$190,0004.89%$40,000
2-bed condo$275,000$13,750 (5%)$261,2504.89%$55,000
Townhouse$325,000$16,250 (5%)$308,7504.89%$65,000
Detached (Mill Woods)$400,000$20,000 (5%)$380,0004.89%$80,000
Detached (Riverbend)$500,000$25,000 (5%)$475,0004.89%$100,000
Detached (Strathcona)$650,000$40,000 (6.2%)$610,0004.89%$130,000

Total cost to buy in Edmonton

Complete budget: $450,000 detached (first-time buyer, 5% down)

CategoryAmount
Down payment$22,500
Closing costs
Land title transfer fee$230
Legal fees$1,400
Title insurance$300
Home inspection$450
Real Property Report (RPR)$500
PST on CMHC premium — N/A (no PST in Alberta)$0
Property tax adjustment$1,200
Home insurance$1,100
Moving$1,200
Total closing costs$6,380
Total cash needed$28,880

Compare to Toronto: A similar $450K property (if it existed in Toronto) would require approximately $55,000–$60,000 in cash. Edmonton saves you roughly $30,000 in upfront costs.

Monthly costs after purchase

CostMonthly
Mortgage payment ($427.5K, 4.89%, 25yr)$2,474
Property tax$320
Home insurance$95
Utilities (gas heating is significant)$300
Total monthly housing cost$3,189

LRT and transit impact

Edmonton’s LRT network is expanding and will reshape property values:

LRT LineStatusAreas Affected
Capital Line (south)Operational — Century Park to NAITUniversity, Southgate, Century Park
Metro Line (north)Operational — NAIT to BlatchfordNAIT, Blatchford (new development)
Valley Line Stage 1 (SE)Operational — Downtown to Mill WoodsBonnie Doon, Mill Woods town centre
Valley Line WestUnder construction — Downtown to Lewis Farms124 Street, West Edmonton, Misericordia
Capital Line South ExtensionPlanned — Century Park to Ellerslie/Heritage ValleyHeritage Valley, Ellerslie — long-term opportunity

Strategy: Properties near Valley Line West stations are the current opportunity — buy before completion for above-average appreciation.

Edmonton-specific buying tips

Real Property Report (RPR)

Like Calgary, Edmonton transactions require an RPR:

  • Seller provides RPR with City of Edmonton compliance stamped
  • If non-compliant (e.g., unapproved deck, shed over property line), the seller must remedy or you negotiate
  • Budget $500–$700 if a new RPR is needed
  • Without a compliant RPR, title insurance may be required as an alternative

Winter-specific home inspection items

  • Furnace efficiency rating — high-efficiency (90%+) saves significantly on gas bills
  • Weeping tile and drainage — critical in Edmonton’s clay soil; poor drainage leads to wet basements
  • Exterior stucco condition — very common in Edmonton; damaged stucco allows moisture infiltration
  • Window seals — failed seals (condensation between panes) are common in cold climates
  • Roof and attic ventilation — ice damming is a winter risk; proper ventilation prevents it

Neighbourhood guide for buyers

Best for first-time buyers

  • Mill Woods — detached from $350K, LRT connected, diverse community
  • Castle Downs — north side family area, lakes, affordable detached homes
  • Spruce Grove — west of city, small-town feel, detached from $350K

Best for families

  • Riverbend / Terwillegar — ravines, parks, established schools, proximity to Whitemud
  • St. Albert — own city, top schools, Sturgeon River trail, family-focused
  • Windermere / Keswick — newer master-planned, south side, all amenities

Best for lifestyle / walkability

  • Strathcona / Old Strathcona — Whyte Avenue, arts, festivals, U of A proximity
  • Oliver — most walkable neighbourhood, high-rise and mid-rise, 124 Street
  • Glenora — river valley views, established prestige, near downtown

Best for investment

  • Ritchie / Bonnie Doon — infill activity, appreciating, near future LRT
  • Blatchford — new community on former airport land, carbon-neutral development
  • Near Valley Line West stations — buy before LRT completion
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