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

Updated

Ottawa — Canada’s national capital — offers a stable market with strong government employment, relative affordability compared to Toronto, and a high quality of life. Here is your guide to buying in Ottawa.

Ottawa market snapshot (2026)

MetricValue
Average resale price (all types)~$650,000–$720,000
Average detached~$700,000–$850,000
Average townhouse~$450,000–$575,000
Average condo~$350,000–$450,000
Sales-to-new-listings ratio~50%–60% (balanced)
Average days on market22–35 days
Primary demand driverFederal government + tech sector
LRT impactPrices rising along Confederation Line and Trillium Line corridors

Average prices by neighbourhood

Central Ottawa

NeighbourhoodDetachedTownhouseCondo
Rockcliffe Park$1.5M–$3M+N/AN/A
The Glebe$900K–$1.5M$600K–$800K$350K–$550K
Westboro / Hintonburg$800K–$1.3M$500K–$700K$350K–$500K
Old Ottawa South$800K–$1.3M$500K–$700K$350K–$450K
Sandy Hill$600K–$1M$400K–$600K$300K–$400K
Centretown$500K–$800K$400K–$550K$300K–$450K
Little Italy / Preston$600K–$900K$450K–$600K$300K–$400K

Established suburbs

NeighbourhoodDetachedTownhouseCondo
Alta Vista$650K–$950K$450K–$600K$300K–$400K
Nepean$600K–$850K$400K–$550K$280K–$380K
Hunt Club$550K–$750K$380K–$500K$270K–$350K
Beacon Hill / Cyrville$500K–$700K$350K–$475K$260K–$340K
Orléans$550K–$750K$400K–$550K$275K–$370K

Suburban growth areas

NeighbourhoodDetachedTownhouseCondo
Barrhaven$550K–$750K$400K–$550K$280K–$370K
Kanata$600K–$850K$400K–$575K$280K–$380K
Stittsville$575K–$750K$400K–$525K$280K–$360K
Riverside South$550K–$700K$400K–$525K$280K–$360K
Findlay Creek$550K–$700K$400K–$525K$270K–$350K
Manotick$650K–$1MN/AN/A

Ottawa vs Gatineau comparison

FactorOttawaGatineau
Average detached$700K–$850K$450K–$600K
Average townhouse$450K–$575K$300K–$400K
Average condo$350K–$450K$220K–$320K
Land transfer taxOntario LTT (no municipal LTT)Quebec welcome tax
Income taxOntario ratesQuebec rates (higher)
School systemEnglish and French boardsFrench boards (English limited)
Real estate processLawyer-basedNotary-based
LanguageBilingual (English-dominant)Bilingual (French-dominant)

Closing costs in Ottawa

CostAmount
Ontario Land Transfer Tax$6,475 (on $500K) to $14,475 (on $900K)
No municipal LTT$0 (Ottawa does not have one — unlike Toronto)
Legal fees$1,500–$2,000
Title insurance$200–$400
Home inspection$400–$600
Appraisal$300–$500
Moving costs$800–$2,000
Total (on $650K purchase)~$12,000–$14,000

First-time buyer LTT rebate

FeatureDetails
Ontario PLTT rebateUp to $4,000
Toronto MLTT rebateN/A (Ottawa has no municipal LTT)
Net LTT on $500K (first-time)~$2,475 (vs $6,475 without rebate)

Government employment and the housing market

How government demand shapes Ottawa real estate

FactorImpact
Stable incomeGovernment workers are low-risk borrowers — mortgage approvals are straightforward
Bilingual premiumBilingual positions attract buyers to centrally located bilingual neighbourhoods
Return-to-office3-day RTO mandate increases demand near federal campuses (downtown, Tunney’s Pasture, Gatineau)
LRT and commutingConfederation Line connects south (Greenboro/South Keys) to west (Tunney’s Pasture) — homes near LRT stations see price premiums
Phoenix pay issuesHistorically complicated mortgage applications — most issues now resolved but some edge cases remain
Government hiring cyclesElection years and post-election hiring/cutting directly affect demand

Federal employment hubs and nearby housing

HubNearby NeighbourhoodsPrice Range (Detached)
Downtown / ParliamentCentretown, Sandy Hill, Lowertown$500K–$800K
Tunney’s PastureWestboro, Hintonburg, Mechanicsville$700K–$1.2M
Confederation HeightsAlta Vista, Hunt Club, Billings Bridge$550K–$800K
Gatineau campusesHull, Aylmer (QC)$400K–$600K

LRT impact on real estate

Ottawa’s LRT (Confederation Line and Trillium Line) has influenced property values along the corridor:

Station AreaImpact
Bayview / LeBretonMajor redevelopment — new condos, mixed-use, increasing values
Parliament / RideauPremium downtown access — condo demand strong
St-Laurent / CyrvilleEstablished areas benefiting from transit access — modest price increases
BlairEast-end terminus — Orléans buyers use park-and-ride
Tunney’s PastureWest-end hub near federal offices — strong demand
South Keys / Leitrim (Trillium Line)Southern corridor — emerging residential growth

Ottawa-specific buying considerations

Bilingual market

FactorDetails
Bilingual buyersAccess to both English and French neighbourhoods and school systems
French immersion schoolsPopular — can drive demand in specific catchment areas
Neighbourhood languageVanier, Orléans, and south Ottawa have strong francophone communities
Contract languageReal estate contracts in Ontario are in English; in Gatineau, French

Climate considerations

FactorDetails
Winter heatingBudget $200–$400/month for natural gas heating (detached home)
Snow removalCity plows main roads; residential driveways need clearing ($300–$600/season if contracted)
Foundation typeFull basements are standard — important for insulation and frost line compliance
Ice dam riskCommon on older homes — check attic insulation and ventilation

First-time buyer programs in Ottawa

ProgramBenefit
Ontario PLTT rebateUp to $4,000
No Toronto MLTTAutomatic savings vs Toronto buyers
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/HST New Housing RebatePartial rebate on new construction

Tips for buying in Ottawa

  1. No municipal LTT — closing costs are significantly lower than in Toronto
  2. Consider Gatineau if you work for the federal government — prices are 20%–35% lower, but factor in Quebec income tax
  3. Budget for heating — Ottawa winters are colder than Toronto, and heating costs are meaningful
  4. Check LRT proximity — stations along the Confederation Line offer convenience and commuting savings
  5. Explore Barrhaven, Kanata, and Stittsville for the best family-home value
  6. Verify the home’s insulation — many older Ottawa homes (pre-1980) need insulation upgrades
  7. Government mortgage tip — some lenders offer preferred rates for federal employees; ask about “plan group” or “group rate” mortgages
  8. Factor in bilingualism — if your children need French immersion, research school catchment areas before buying
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