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:
| Area | Avg Detached | Avg Townhouse | Avg Condo | Character |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oliver / Downtown | N/A (few detached) | $250K–$350K | $175K–$300K | High-rise, walkable, river valley, young professionals |
| Strathcona / Old Strathcona | $500K–$750K | $350K–$450K | $250K–$350K | Whyte Avenue, arts, restaurants, U of A proximity |
| Garneau / University | $450K–$650K | $300K–$400K | $220K–$320K | University of Alberta, walkable, character homes |
| Glenora / Westmount | $600K–$1.0M+ | $350K–$500K | $280K–$400K | Established prestige, river valley views, older homes |
| Riverbend / Terwillegar | $450K–$650K | $300K–$400K | $230K–$320K | Family suburb, parks, ravine access |
| Windermere / Keswick | $500K–$700K | $350K–$450K | $250K–$350K | Newer luxury, master-planned, south side |
| Mill Woods | $350K–$500K | $250K–$350K | $180K–$250K | Diverse, established, LRT extension |
| Castle Downs / Lake District | $350K–$500K | $250K–$350K | $180K–$250K | North side, family-friendly, lakes |
| West Edmonton | $400K–$550K | $280K–$380K | $200K–$280K | Near WEM, suburban, established |
| Sherwood Park | $450K–$650K | $300K–$400K | $250K–$350K | Strathcona County, premium suburban, Refinery Row employment |
| St. Albert | $450K–$600K | $300K–$400K | $250K–$350K | Family-focused, top schools, Sturgeon River, own city |
| Spruce Grove / Stony Plain | $350K–$475K | $250K–$350K | $200K–$280K | West of Edmonton, small-town feel, affordable |
| Fort Saskatchewan | $350K–$475K | $250K–$350K | $200K–$280K | Northeast, industrial employment, river setting |
| Leduc / Beaumont | $375K–$500K | $275K–$375K | $220K–$300K | South, airport proximity, growing communities |
No land transfer tax advantage
Like Calgary, Edmonton benefits from Alberta’s absence of land transfer tax:
| Purchase Price | Edmonton (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.
| Factor | Infill (Inner City) | Suburban (New Build) |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $500K–$800K (new infill detached) | $400K–$600K (comparable size) |
| Lot size | Smaller (25–33 ft wide) | Larger (40–50 ft, some wider) |
| Commute | Shorter, transit-accessible | Car-dependent, 20–40 min commute |
| Design | Modern, multi-level, rooftop decks | Builder-standard, open concept, attached garage |
| Neighbourhood maturity | Established trees, shops, walkability | New amenities coming, initially minimal |
| Appreciation | Higher potential — inner-city land appreciates faster | Moderate — land is abundant in Edmonton |
| GST | 5% GST on new builds | 5% GST on new builds |
| Character | Mid-century homes mixed with modern infill | Homogeneous 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
| Property | Price | Down Payment | Mortgage | Rate (5-yr fixed) | Min Household Income |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-bed condo | $200,000 | $10,000 (5%) | $190,000 | 4.89% | $40,000 |
| 2-bed condo | $275,000 | $13,750 (5%) | $261,250 | 4.89% | $55,000 |
| Townhouse | $325,000 | $16,250 (5%) | $308,750 | 4.89% | $65,000 |
| Detached (Mill Woods) | $400,000 | $20,000 (5%) | $380,000 | 4.89% | $80,000 |
| Detached (Riverbend) | $500,000 | $25,000 (5%) | $475,000 | 4.89% | $100,000 |
| Detached (Strathcona) | $650,000 | $40,000 (6.2%) | $610,000 | 4.89% | $130,000 |
Total cost to buy in Edmonton
Complete budget: $450,000 detached (first-time buyer, 5% down)
| Category | Amount |
|---|---|
| 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
| Cost | Monthly |
|---|---|
| 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 Line | Status | Areas Affected |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Line (south) | Operational — Century Park to NAIT | University, Southgate, Century Park |
| Metro Line (north) | Operational — NAIT to Blatchford | NAIT, Blatchford (new development) |
| Valley Line Stage 1 (SE) | Operational — Downtown to Mill Woods | Bonnie Doon, Mill Woods town centre |
| Valley Line West | Under construction — Downtown to Lewis Farms | 124 Street, West Edmonton, Misericordia |
| Capital Line South Extension | Planned — Century Park to Ellerslie/Heritage Valley | Heritage 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