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Buying a House in Calgary: Complete Guide to the Calgary Housing Market (2026)

Updated

Calgary offers one of the best value propositions for homebuyers in Canada — affordable detached housing, no land transfer tax, no PST, and a strong job market. Here is what you need to know.

Calgary market snapshot (2026)

MetricValue
Benchmark detached~$700,000–$780,000
Benchmark semi-detached~$550,000–$620,000
Benchmark townhouse~$400,000–$475,000
Benchmark condo apartment~$300,000–$350,000
Sales-to-new-listings ratio~55%–68% (balanced to seller’s)
Average days on market20–35 days
Population growthStrong — interprovincial migration driving demand
InventoryImproving from historically low levels

Average prices by area

Inner city

CommunityDetachedTownhouse / SemiCondo
Mount Royal$1.5M–$3M+N/AN/A
Britannia / Elbow Park$1.2M–$2.5M$600K–$900KN/A
Altadore / Marda Loop$800K–$1.3M$500K–$700K$350K–$500K
Bridgeland$700K–$1.1M$450K–$650K$300K–$450K
Kensington / Hillhurst$700K–$1.2M$450K–$650K$300K–$450K
BeltlineN/A$400K–$550K$250K–$400K
East VillageN/A$350K–$500K$250K–$400K

Established suburbs (NW / SW)

CommunityDetachedTownhouseCondo
Tuscany$600K–$800K$350K–$500K$250K–$350K
Edgemont$550K–$750K$300K–$450K$250K–$320K
Signal Hill$550K–$750K$350K–$450K$250K–$350K
Aspen Woods$800K–$1.5M$450K–$650K$300K–$450K
Springbank Hill$700K–$1.2M$400K–$600K$300K–$400K

Newer suburbs

CommunityDetachedTownhouseCondo
Nolan Hill (NW)$550K–$700K$350K–$450K$250K–$320K
Cornerstone (NE)$480K–$600K$320K–$420K$220K–$300K
Redstone (NE)$480K–$600K$320K–$420K$220K–$300K
Seton (SE)$500K–$650K$350K–$450K$250K–$320K
Mahogany (SE)$550K–$750K$350K–$500K$280K–$370K
Cranston (SE)$550K–$700K$350K–$475K$260K–$350K
Legacy (SE)$500K–$650K$350K–$450K$250K–$330K

Surrounding communities

AreaDetachedTownhouseNotes
Airdrie$450K–$600K$300K–$400K25 min north of Calgary, cheaper but growing fast
Cochrane$500K–$700K$350K–$450KSmall-town feel near the mountains
Chestermere$550K–$750K$350K–$500KLakeside community east of Calgary
Okotoks$500K–$650K$350K–$450K20 min south, family-oriented

Alberta’s land transfer tax advantage

Alberta does not charge a land transfer tax. Instead, buyers pay small registration fees:

FeeCalculationExample ($700K home, $560K mortgage)
Property title transfer$50 + $2 per $5,000 of property value$330
Mortgage registration$50 + $2 per $5,000 of mortgage amount$274
Total~$604

Comparison to other provinces

ProvinceLTT on $700,000 Home
Alberta~$604 (registration fees only)
Ontario$10,475 (provincial LTT)
Ontario (Toronto)$20,200 (provincial + municipal)
BC$13,000 (property transfer tax)
Quebec~$7,500 (welcome tax)

Total closing costs in Calgary

CostAmount
Property title transfer fee~$330
Mortgage registration fee~$275
Legal fees$1,200–$2,000
Title insurance$200–$400
Home inspection$400–$600
Appraisal$300–$500
Property insuranceFirst year premium ($1,200–$2,400)
Property tax adjustmentVaries (prorated from seller)
Moving costs$1,000–$2,500
Total (on $700K purchase)~$5,000–$8,000

This is dramatically lower than Toronto (~$30K) or Vancouver (~$17K) for a comparable purchase.

Calgary-specific buying considerations

Energy sector impact

FactorHow It Affects Real Estate
Oil price riseIncreased employment → more buyers → price increases
Oil price dropLayoffs → reduced demand → prices soften, inventory rises
Diversification (2020s)Tech, logistics, finance sectors reducing Calgary’s energy dependence
For buyersIn downturns, there are buying opportunities; in booms, competition intensifies

Interprovincial migration

Calgary has been a major destination for Canadians moving from Ontario and BC seeking:

  • Affordable detached housing ($700K vs $1.5M+ in Toronto)
  • No provincial sales tax (saving 7%–8% on purchases)
  • No land transfer tax
  • Lower cost of living overall
  • Strong job market

New home vs resale

FactorNew ConstructionResale
GST5% GST applies on new homes (partial rebate available under $450K)No GST
WarrantyAlberta New Home Warranty Program (1-year materials, 2-year systems, 5- or 10-year structural)No warranty
CustomizationChoose finishes in pre-constructionLimited to what you see
PriceOften competitive with resale in new suburbsNegotiation room in current market
Possession timeline8–18 months for pre-construction30–90 days

Alberta-specific buying process

StepAlberta Details
Purchase contractUses AREA (Alberta Real Estate Association) standard forms
ConditionsTypically financing, inspection, condo document review
Condition deadlineUsually 7–14 days from acceptance
DepositHeld in trust by listing brokerage
CompletionClosing happens through lawyers — funds transferred, title registered
PossessionSame day or the day after completion
Real Property Report (RPR)Seller is typically required to provide a current RPR showing compliance with municipal bylaws

Real Property Report (RPR)

Unique to Alberta, a Real Property Report is a legal survey-like document that shows:

  • Property boundaries
  • Location of all structures (house, garage, fence, deck)
  • Compliance stamp from the municipality

Buyers should insist on a current RPR with a compliance stamp. If structures encroach on setbacks or do not comply, it is the seller’s responsibility to resolve (or adjust the price).

First-time buyer programs in Alberta

ProgramBenefit
No land transfer taxAutomatic savings vs ON/BC/QC
FHSATax-free savings for first home (up to $40K)
Home Buyers’ Plan (HBP)Withdraw up to $60,000 from RRSP
First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit$10,000 credit ($1,500 tax savings)
GST New Housing RebatePartial rebate on new homes up to $450K
Alberta no PSTSave 7%+ on furniture, appliances, moving costs

Tips for buying in Calgary

  1. Take advantage of the no-LTT benefit — your closing costs will be dramatically lower than in Ontario or BC
  2. Insist on the Real Property Report — it is Alberta-specific and critical for confirming compliance
  3. Consider newer SE/NE communities for the best value — Cornerstone, Redstone, and Seton offer detached homes under $600K
  4. Check the flood zone — the 2013 flood affected parts of Sunnyside, Bowness, and Elbow Park; verify your property is not in a flood fringe zone
  5. Budget for property taxes — Calgary’s property tax rate is higher than Toronto or Vancouver (roughly 0.65%–0.75% of assessed value)
  6. Watch the energy cycle — if oil prices dip, buying opportunities emerge as inventory rises
  7. Consider surrounding communities — Airdrie, Cochrane, and Okotoks offer even lower prices with a short commute
  8. Factor in the climate — heating costs are significant ($200–$400/month in winter for a detached home)
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