Housing Crisis in Canada Explained — Causes, Data & What It Means for You
Updated
Canada is in the midst of its most severe housing affordability crisis in history. Home prices in major cities have tripled in 15 years, rent has surged, and an entire generation is struggling to enter the market. This guide explains the root causes with data, tracks the policy response, and maps out what it means for buyers, renters, and investors.
The numbers — how bad is it?
Price growth over time
City
Avg. Home Price (2010)
Avg. Home Price (2020)
Avg. Home Price (2025)
15-Year Change
Toronto
$431,000
$930,000
$1,100,000
+155%
Vancouver
$577,000
$1,030,000
$1,175,000
+104%
Ottawa
$292,000
$475,000
$650,000
+123%
Montreal
$279,000
$420,000
$560,000
+101%
Calgary
$396,000
$410,000
$590,000
+49%
Halifax
$237,000
$330,000
$520,000
+119%
Hamilton
$298,000
$630,000
$810,000
+172%
Price-to-income ratio
The price-to-income ratio measures how many years of gross household income it takes to buy an average home.
City
Price-to-Income (2000)
Price-to-Income (2015)
Price-to-Income (2025)
Considered Affordable
Toronto
4.5
8.2
12.5
Under 5.0
Vancouver
5.8
11.0
13.2
Under 5.0
Montreal
3.2
4.8
6.5
Under 5.0
Ottawa
3.5
4.5
7.2
Under 5.0
Calgary
3.8
4.8
5.8
Under 5.0
Halifax
3.0
3.8
6.2
Under 5.0
National average
3.5
5.5
8.0
Under 5.0
Every major Canadian city now exceeds the “affordable” threshold. Toronto and Vancouver are among the least affordable cities on Earth by this measure.
Rent growth
City
Avg. 1BR Rent (2019)
Avg. 1BR Rent (2025)
Change
Toronto
$2,100
$2,500
+19%
Vancouver
$1,950
$2,550
+31%
Calgary
$1,150
$1,700
+48%
Montreal
$1,200
$1,650
+38%
Ottawa
$1,400
$1,900
+36%
Halifax
$1,050
$1,650
+57%
Rents have surged even faster than home prices in some markets, squeezing renters who are trying to save for a down payment.
Root causes — why this is happening
1. Supply shortage
Factor
Data
Annual housing starts (2023)
~240,000 units
Annual population growth (2023)
~1.2 million (PR + temporary residents)
CMHC’s required pace
500,000–600,000 starts per year
Current gap
Building roughly half of what is needed
Cumulative supply deficit
Estimated 1.5–2 million homes short (various estimates)
2. Population growth outpacing construction
Year
Population Growth
Housing Starts
Ratio (People per New Home)
2019
580,000
209,000
2.8:1
2020
150,000 (COVID)
218,000
0.7:1
2021
370,000
271,000
1.4:1
2022
1,050,000
262,000
4.0:1
2023
1,250,000
240,000
5.2:1
2024
~900,000 (reduced immigration targets)
~230,000
3.9:1
Canada averaged 2.5 people per housing unit historically. At 4–5 people per new unit, demand dramatically exceeds supply.
3. Zoning and regulatory barriers
Barrier
Impact
Single-family zoning
60–70% of residential land in major cities restricted to detached homes — blocks duplexes, triplexes, mid-rise buildings
Municipal approval timelines
2–5+ years from application to building permit in many jurisdictions
Development charges
$50,000–$150,000+ per unit in the GTA — added directly to home prices
NIMBYism
Local opposition blocks density projects, especially mid-rise and townhouse infill
Height restrictions
Limit density near transit stations where it should be highest
Inclusionary zoning
Required affordable units can slow or kill projects economically
4. Construction cost increases
Input
Price Increase (2019–2025)
Lumber
+40–60% (volatile)
Concrete
+25–35%
Steel
+30–50%
Labour
+20–30% (skilled trade shortage)
Development charges (Ontario)
+50–100% in some municipalities
Overall build cost
+30–50% per square foot
5. Investor demand and housing as investment
Factor
Impact
Principal residence exemption
Tax-free capital gains on your home incentivizes treating housing as your primary investment
Capital gains inclusion rate
50% inclusion rate (recently increased to 66.7% above $250K for individuals) still favorable compared to income tax
Interest rate environment
Ultra-low rates from 2009–2022 inflated asset prices
Investor share of purchases
25–30% of home purchases in Ontario and BC are by investors
Speculative pre-construction
Assignment sales, multiple pre-construction units per investor
6. Geographic concentration
70% of Canada’s population growth flows to Toronto. Vancouver, and Montreal metro areas — the markets with the least available land and the highest existing prices.
Government policy responses
Federal measures
Policy
Year
Impact
Mortgage stress test
2018
Reduced buying power by ~20%; slowed price growth temporarily
Foreign buyer ban
2023–2027
Minimal impact — foreign buyers were already a small share
30-year insured amortization
2024
Increased accessibility but may push prices higher
$1.5M insured cap
2024
More buyers in $1M+ markets; may push prices in that segment
Reduced immigration targets
2024–2025
First reduction in years; may slow demand growth
Housing Accelerator Fund
2023
$4B to speed up municipal approvals; tied to zoning reform
First Home Savings Account
2023
Tax-advantaged saving for first-time buyers
Underused Housing Tax
2022
1% annual tax on vacant/underused residential property owned by non-Canadians
Anti-flipping tax
2023
Short-term gains (under 12 months) taxed as business income
Provincial measures
Province
Key Measures
Ontario
Bill 23 (More Homes Built Faster Act) — removed development charges for some housing types, allowed up to 3 units per lot, streamlined approvals
British Columbia
Speculation and vacancy tax, foreign buyer additional PTT, allowed up to 4 units on single-family lots, transit-oriented density mandates
Minor zoning reforms; immigration-driven demand in Montreal
What this means for you
For first-time buyers
Reality
Strategy
Prices are unlikely to drop significantly
Waiting has historically cost more than buying — but buy what you can afford, not what you hope to afford
Saving a down payment takes longer
Use FHSA (tax-deductible), HBP ($60K from RRSP), and first-time buyer incentives
Competition is fierce in desirable areas
Consider secondary markets, condos, duplexes, or new-build suburbs
Mortgage qualification is strict
Get pre-approved early; maximize your qualifying income (reduce debts, increase reported income)
Cash-flow management is critical
Use the 30-year amortization for affordability; consider house hacking (duplex/basement suite)
For renters
Reality
Strategy
Rents are rising toward ownership costs
At some point, buying becomes comparable — run the rent-vs-buy calculation for your market
Rent control exists in some provinces
Ontario (pre-2018 buildings), BC, Quebec, Manitoba — protects current tenants but limits new supply
Rental vacancy rates are extremely low
1–2% in most cities — limited negotiating power for tenants
Saving while renting is harder
Automate savings; use FHSA for tax-deductible down payment savings
For investors
Reality
Strategy
Cash flow is negative in many markets
At current rates and prices, most single-unit rentals do not cash flow — investors are betting on appreciation
Regulatory risk is increasing
Rent control expansion, anti-flipping tax, higher capital gains inclusion rate — government is targeting investor demand
Supply shortage supports prices
Long-term appreciation likely in supply-constrained markets
Secondary markets offer better cash flow
Smaller cities and towns with lower purchase prices and decent rents
For existing homeowners
Reality
Strategy
Your home is likely your largest asset
The supply shortage has made homeowners wealthier on paper
Selling and renting is risky
In a rising market, selling and waiting can mean being priced out
HELOC access is strong
With high home equity, you have access to low-cost credit for renovations, investing, or helping children with down payments
Downsizing may not save as much as expected
If you are moving within the same market, the price gap may be smaller than anticipated
Will it get better?
What needs to happen
Solution
Likelihood
Timeline
Build 500,000+ homes per year
Low — major policy and industry changes needed
5–10+ years to reach this pace
Zoning reform
Moderate — happening slowly (ON Bill 23, BC density rules)
3–5 years for meaningful impact
Reduced immigration
Moderate — targets reduced for 2025–2026
1–2 years for demand impact
Lower interest rates
Likely — rates already declining from peak
Stimulates demand AND supply
Construction productivity gains
Slow — modular/prefab growing but still niche
5–10 years
Public housing investment
Low — minimal political appetite for large-scale public housing
Unlikely at scale needed
Most likely scenario
The housing crisis is structural and will not be resolved quickly. Modest supply improvements, slightly reduced immigration, and policy tweaks will slowly improve affordability at the margins. But a return to 2015 price-to-income ratios is extremely unlikely without a severe economic downturn. The most probable path is slow, grinding improvement — not a dramatic correction.