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)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| 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 market | 20–35 days |
| Population growth | Strong — interprovincial migration driving demand |
| Inventory | Improving from historically low levels |
Average prices by area
Inner city
| Community | Detached | Townhouse / Semi | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mount Royal | $1.5M–$3M+ | N/A | N/A |
| Britannia / Elbow Park | $1.2M–$2.5M | $600K–$900K | N/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 |
| Beltline | N/A | $400K–$550K | $250K–$400K |
| East Village | N/A | $350K–$500K | $250K–$400K |
Established suburbs (NW / SW)
| Community | Detached | Townhouse | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| 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
| Community | Detached | Townhouse | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| 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
| Area | Detached | Townhouse | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Airdrie | $450K–$600K | $300K–$400K | 25 min north of Calgary, cheaper but growing fast |
| Cochrane | $500K–$700K | $350K–$450K | Small-town feel near the mountains |
| Chestermere | $550K–$750K | $350K–$500K | Lakeside community east of Calgary |
| Okotoks | $500K–$650K | $350K–$450K | 20 min south, family-oriented |
Alberta’s land transfer tax advantage
Alberta does not charge a land transfer tax. Instead, buyers pay small registration fees:
| Fee | Calculation | Example ($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
| Province | LTT 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
| Cost | Amount |
|---|---|
| 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 insurance | First year premium ($1,200–$2,400) |
| Property tax adjustment | Varies (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
| Factor | How It Affects Real Estate |
|---|---|
| Oil price rise | Increased employment → more buyers → price increases |
| Oil price drop | Layoffs → reduced demand → prices soften, inventory rises |
| Diversification (2020s) | Tech, logistics, finance sectors reducing Calgary’s energy dependence |
| For buyers | In 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
| Factor | New Construction | Resale |
|---|---|---|
| GST | 5% GST applies on new homes (partial rebate available under $450K) | No GST |
| Warranty | Alberta New Home Warranty Program (1-year materials, 2-year systems, 5- or 10-year structural) | No warranty |
| Customization | Choose finishes in pre-construction | Limited to what you see |
| Price | Often competitive with resale in new suburbs | Negotiation room in current market |
| Possession timeline | 8–18 months for pre-construction | 30–90 days |
Alberta-specific buying process
| Step | Alberta Details |
|---|---|
| Purchase contract | Uses AREA (Alberta Real Estate Association) standard forms |
| Conditions | Typically financing, inspection, condo document review |
| Condition deadline | Usually 7–14 days from acceptance |
| Deposit | Held in trust by listing brokerage |
| Completion | Closing happens through lawyers — funds transferred, title registered |
| Possession | Same 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
| Program | Benefit |
|---|---|
| No land transfer tax | Automatic savings vs ON/BC/QC |
| FHSA | Tax-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 Rebate | Partial rebate on new homes up to $450K |
| Alberta no PST | Save 7%+ on furniture, appliances, moving costs |
Tips for buying in Calgary
- Take advantage of the no-LTT benefit — your closing costs will be dramatically lower than in Ontario or BC
- Insist on the Real Property Report — it is Alberta-specific and critical for confirming compliance
- Consider newer SE/NE communities for the best value — Cornerstone, Redstone, and Seton offer detached homes under $600K
- 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
- Budget for property taxes — Calgary’s property tax rate is higher than Toronto or Vancouver (roughly 0.65%–0.75% of assessed value)
- Watch the energy cycle — if oil prices dip, buying opportunities emerge as inventory rises
- Consider surrounding communities — Airdrie, Cochrane, and Okotoks offer even lower prices with a short commute
- Factor in the climate — heating costs are significant ($200–$400/month in winter for a detached home)