Montreal offers one of the best value propositions for Canadian homebuyers — affordable prices, a vibrant culture, and a strong rental market. However, Quebec’s unique legal and regulatory framework requires careful navigation.
Montreal market snapshot (2026)
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Average home price (all types, Greater Montreal) | ~$550,000–$620,000 |
| Average detached | ~$575,000–$700,000 |
| Average plex (duplex/triplex) | ~$650,000–$900,000 |
| Average condo | ~$400,000–$475,000 |
| Average townhouse | ~$450,000–$550,000 |
| Sales-to-new-listings ratio | ~50%–60% (balanced) |
| Average days on market | 30–50 days |
| Rental vacancy rate | Low (~2%–3%) |
| Investor activity | Strong — plex market is core to Montreal RE |
Average prices by borough / area
Montreal Island — central
| Borough / Area | Detached | Plex | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Westmount | $1.5M–$5M+ | $1M–$2M | $500K–$1M |
| Outremont | $1.2M–$3M+ | $800K–$1.5M | $400K–$700K |
| Town of Mount Royal | $1M–$2.5M | $700K–$1.2M | $350K–$500K |
| Plateau Mont-Royal | $700K–$1.2M | $650K–$1.1M | $375K–$550K |
| Mile End | $700K–$1.1M | $600K–$1M | $350K–$500K |
| Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie | $600K–$900K | $550K–$900K | $325K–$450K |
| Villeray | $550K–$800K | $500K–$800K | $300K–$425K |
| Griffintown / Old Montreal | N/A | N/A | $400K–$700K |
Montreal Island — east and north
| Borough | Detached | Plex | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ahuntsic-Cartierville | $550K–$800K | $500K–$800K | $300K–$400K |
| Saint-Léonard | $500K–$700K | $500K–$750K | $280K–$375K |
| Anjou | $450K–$650K | $450K–$700K | $270K–$350K |
| Rivière-des-Prairies | $450K–$650K | $450K–$700K | $260K–$340K |
| Montréal-Nord | $400K–$550K | $400K–$650K | $250K–$320K |
| Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve | $500K–$700K | $500K–$800K | $300K–$400K |
Montreal Island — west
| Area | Detached | Plex | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| NDG (Notre-Dame-de-Grâce) | $700K–$1.1M | $600K–$1M | $350K–$475K |
| Côte-Saint-Luc | $650K–$1M | $550K–$850K | $300K–$400K |
| Hampstead | $1M–$2.5M | N/A | N/A |
| Pointe-Claire | $600K–$900K | N/A | $300K–$400K |
| Dorval / Lachine | $500K–$750K | $450K–$700K | $280K–$375K |
| Beaconsfield / Baie-d’Urfé | $700K–$1.3M | N/A | $300K–$400K |
Off-island
| Area | Detached | Townhouse | Condo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laval | $500K–$700K | $350K–$475K | $275K–$375K |
| Longueuil / Brossard | $475K–$700K | $350K–$475K | $275K–$375K |
| Terrebonne / Mascouche | $425K–$600K | $325K–$425K | $250K–$325K |
| Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu | $375K–$550K | $300K–$400K | $225K–$300K |
| Châteauguay | $400K–$550K | $300K–$400K | $225K–$300K |
Quebec welcome tax (droit de mutation)
Calculation
| Tier | Standard Rate | Montreal Rate (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| First $58,900 | 0.5% | 0.5% |
| $58,901–$294,600 | 1.0% | 1.0% |
| $294,601–$500,000 | 1.5% | 1.5% |
| $500,001–$1,000,000 | 2.0% | 2.5% |
| Over $1,000,000 | 2.5% | 3.0% |
Welcome tax examples (Montreal)
| Purchase Price | Welcome Tax |
|---|---|
| $400,000 | ~$4,280 |
| $500,000 | ~$5,780 |
| $600,000 | ~$8,280 |
| $800,000 | ~$13,280 |
| $1,000,000 | ~$18,280 |
Welcome tax exemptions
| Exemption | Details |
|---|---|
| Transfer between spouses | Exempt |
| Transfer between parent and child | Exempt (direct family) |
| First-time buyer? | No welcome tax exemption for first-time buyers in Quebec |
| New construction | Welcome tax still applies |
The Quebec notary system
How it differs from Ontario
| Feature | Quebec (Notary) | Ontario (Lawyer) |
|---|---|---|
| Who handles closing | Notary (notaire) | Real estate lawyer |
| Role | Neutral public officer — serves both parties | Acts for the buyer (seller has their own lawyer) |
| Title examination | Notary searches the Quebec Land Registry | Lawyer does title search |
| Deed language | French (required by law; English translation can be provided) | English |
| Deed of sale | Notarized deed (acte de vente) — authentic act | Transfer/deed registered on title |
| Cost | $1,500–$2,500 | $1,500–$2,500 |
| Additional legal advice | You can independently hire a lawyer for advice (recommended for complex transactions) | Your lawyer represents your interests |
Quebec purchase process
| Step | Details |
|---|---|
| 1. Promise to Purchase | The offer document (équivalent to Agreement of Purchase and Sale in Ontario) |
| 2. Conditions | Financing, inspection — standard |
| 3. Building inspection | Highly recommended — Quebec has no mandatory seller disclosure form |
| 4. Notary selection | Either party can suggest, but buyer typically chooses |
| 5. Pre-closing | Notary examines title, prepares deed, calculates adjustments |
| 6. Signing | Both parties sign the deed of sale at the notary’s office |
| 7. Registration | Notary registers the deed at the Quebec Land Registry |
| 8. Key handover | Possession per the agreed date |
Closing costs in Montreal
| Cost | Amount |
|---|---|
| Welcome tax | ~$4,280–$18,280 (see table above) |
| Notary fees | $1,500–$2,500 |
| Building inspection | $400–$700 |
| Certificate of location (survey equivalent) | $0 (seller provides) or $1,500–$2,500 if new one needed |
| Appraisal | $300–$500 (if required by lender) |
| Moving costs | $800–$2,000 |
| Total (on $600K purchase) | ~$11,000–$14,000 |
Quebec-specific buying considerations
Plex investing
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| What is a plex? | Duplex (2 units), triplex (3 units), or multiplex (4+ units) — the backbone of Montreal housing |
| Owner-occupied | Living in one unit and renting the others is the most common approach |
| Financing | CMHC-insured mortgage available for owner-occupied up to 4 units |
| Rental income | Lenders use 50%–80% of rental income to help qualify |
| Tenant rules | Quebec’s TAL (Tribunal administratif du logement) heavily favours tenants |
| Lease transfer | When buying a plex, existing leases transfer to the new owner — you cannot evict tenants to occupy unless specific conditions are met |
Tenant protection in Quebec
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Lease renewal | Tenants have automatic right to renew — landlord cannot refuse without TAL approval |
| Rent increases | Regulated by TAL guidelines — typically CPI-linked, often 2%–5% |
| Eviction | Extremely difficult — even for owner-occupation, you must compensate and prove genuine need |
| Repossession (reprise de logement) | New owner can repossess one unit for personal use, but must give 6 months’ notice and may owe relocation costs |
| No above-guideline increases | Unlike Ontario, there is no formal mechanism for above-guideline increases in Quebec |
| Section F (dwelling condition) | Mandatory disclosure of rental amount to new tenant — prevents resetting rent between tenants |
Language considerations
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Bill 96 | Strengthens French-language requirements in Quebec — impacts business contracts and some commercial transactions |
| Deed of sale | Must be in French. Parties can request English translation but the French version is authoritative |
| Real estate agents | Many are bilingual in Montreal, especially on the West Island and in anglophone communities |
| Neighbourhoods | Predominantly English: Westmount, NDG, CSL, Pointe-Claire, Beaconsfield. Bilingual: Plateau, Villeray. Predominantly French: East end, Laval, South Shore |
Certificate of location
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| What it is | Quebec’s equivalent of a survey + legal description |
| What it shows | Property boundaries, encroachments, easements, zoning compliance, building location |
| Who provides it | Seller (usually required to be less than 10 years old) |
| Cost if new one needed | $1,500–$2,500 (land surveyor — arpenteur-géomètre) |
| Why it matters | Lenders require it; reveals encroachments, non-conformities, or zoning issues |
First-time buyer programs in Montreal
| Program | Benefit |
|---|---|
| No welcome tax exemption | Quebec does not offer a first-time buyer welcome tax rebate |
| 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/QST New Housing Rebate | Partial rebate on new construction |
| Quebec Home Buyers’ Tax Credit | $1,500 non-refundable Quebec credit for first-time buyers |
Tips for buying in Montreal
- Budget for the welcome tax — no first-time buyer exemption exists in Quebec
- Choose your notary carefully — they handle the entire closing process; ask for a bilingual notary if you prefer English
- Get a building inspection — Quebec has no mandatory seller disclosure form, so inspection is critical
- Understand tenant rights — if buying a plex, existing leases transfer and eviction is very difficult
- Check the certificate of location — ensure it is current and shows no major encroachments or non-conformities
- Consider the tax trade-off with Laval / South Shore — lower purchase prices but similar Quebec income taxes
- Factor in Quebec income tax — among the highest in Canada; this affects your overall affordability calculation
- Look at plexes for investment — Montreal’s plex culture offers excellent owner-occupied investment opportunities with rental income offsetting your mortgage
- Bill 96 awareness — if you prefer English, research how language laws may affect your experience in specific neighbourhoods