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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 LTTclosing 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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