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

Updated

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)

MetricValue
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 market30–50 days
Rental vacancy rateLow (~2%–3%)
Investor activityStrong — plex market is core to Montreal RE

Average prices by borough / area

Montreal Island — central

Borough / AreaDetachedPlexCondo
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 MontrealN/AN/A$400K–$700K

Montreal Island — east and north

BoroughDetachedPlexCondo
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

AreaDetachedPlexCondo
NDG (Notre-Dame-de-Grâce)$700K–$1.1M$600K–$1M$350K–$475K
Côte-Saint-Luc$650K–$1M$550K–$850K$300K–$400K
Hampstead$1M–$2.5MN/AN/A
Pointe-Claire$600K–$900KN/A$300K–$400K
Dorval / Lachine$500K–$750K$450K–$700K$280K–$375K
Beaconsfield / Baie-d’Urfé$700K–$1.3MN/A$300K–$400K

Off-island

AreaDetachedTownhouseCondo
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

TierStandard RateMontreal Rate (2026)
First $58,9000.5%0.5%
$58,901–$294,6001.0%1.0%
$294,601–$500,0001.5%1.5%
$500,001–$1,000,0002.0%2.5%
Over $1,000,0002.5%3.0%

Welcome tax examples (Montreal)

Purchase PriceWelcome 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

ExemptionDetails
Transfer between spousesExempt
Transfer between parent and childExempt (direct family)
First-time buyer?No welcome tax exemption for first-time buyers in Quebec
New constructionWelcome tax still applies

The Quebec notary system

How it differs from Ontario

FeatureQuebec (Notary)Ontario (Lawyer)
Who handles closingNotary (notaire)Real estate lawyer
RoleNeutral public officer — serves both partiesActs for the buyer (seller has their own lawyer)
Title examinationNotary searches the Quebec Land RegistryLawyer does title search
Deed languageFrench (required by law; English translation can be provided)English
Deed of saleNotarized deed (acte de vente) — authentic actTransfer/deed registered on title
Cost$1,500–$2,500$1,500–$2,500
Additional legal adviceYou can independently hire a lawyer for advice (recommended for complex transactions)Your lawyer represents your interests

Quebec purchase process

StepDetails
1. Promise to PurchaseThe offer document (équivalent to Agreement of Purchase and Sale in Ontario)
2. ConditionsFinancing, inspection — standard
3. Building inspectionHighly recommended — Quebec has no mandatory seller disclosure form
4. Notary selectionEither party can suggest, but buyer typically chooses
5. Pre-closingNotary examines title, prepares deed, calculates adjustments
6. SigningBoth parties sign the deed of sale at the notary’s office
7. RegistrationNotary registers the deed at the Quebec Land Registry
8. Key handoverPossession per the agreed date

Closing costs in Montreal

CostAmount
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

FactorDetails
What is a plex?Duplex (2 units), triplex (3 units), or multiplex (4+ units) — the backbone of Montreal housing
Owner-occupiedLiving in one unit and renting the others is the most common approach
FinancingCMHC-insured mortgage available for owner-occupied up to 4 units
Rental incomeLenders use 50%–80% of rental income to help qualify
Tenant rulesQuebec’s TAL (Tribunal administratif du logement) heavily favours tenants
Lease transferWhen 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

RuleDetails
Lease renewalTenants have automatic right to renew — landlord cannot refuse without TAL approval
Rent increasesRegulated by TAL guidelines — typically CPI-linked, often 2%–5%
EvictionExtremely 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 increasesUnlike 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

FactorDetails
Bill 96Strengthens French-language requirements in Quebec — impacts business contracts and some commercial transactions
Deed of saleMust be in French. Parties can request English translation but the French version is authoritative
Real estate agentsMany are bilingual in Montreal, especially on the West Island and in anglophone communities
NeighbourhoodsPredominantly English: Westmount, NDG, CSL, Pointe-Claire, Beaconsfield. Bilingual: Plateau, Villeray. Predominantly French: East end, Laval, South Shore

Certificate of location

FeatureDetails
What it isQuebec’s equivalent of a survey + legal description
What it showsProperty boundaries, encroachments, easements, zoning compliance, building location
Who provides itSeller (usually required to be less than 10 years old)
Cost if new one needed$1,500–$2,500 (land surveyor — arpenteur-géomètre)
Why it mattersLenders require it; reveals encroachments, non-conformities, or zoning issues

First-time buyer programs in Montreal

ProgramBenefit
No welcome tax exemptionQuebec does not offer a first-time buyer welcome tax rebate
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/QST New Housing RebatePartial rebate on new construction
Quebec Home Buyers’ Tax Credit$1,500 non-refundable Quebec credit for first-time buyers

Tips for buying in Montreal

  1. Budget for the welcome tax — no first-time buyer exemption exists in Quebec
  2. Choose your notary carefully — they handle the entire closing process; ask for a bilingual notary if you prefer English
  3. Get a building inspection — Quebec has no mandatory seller disclosure form, so inspection is critical
  4. Understand tenant rights — if buying a plex, existing leases transfer and eviction is very difficult
  5. Check the certificate of location — ensure it is current and shows no major encroachments or non-conformities
  6. Consider the tax trade-off with Laval / South Shore — lower purchase prices but similar Quebec income taxes
  7. Factor in Quebec income tax — among the highest in Canada; this affects your overall affordability calculation
  8. Look at plexes for investment — Montreal’s plex culture offers excellent owner-occupied investment opportunities with rental income offsetting your mortgage
  9. Bill 96 awareness — if you prefer English, research how language laws may affect your experience in specific neighbourhoods
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