Canada's Housing Supply Crisis: Causes, Impact, and What It Means for Your Mortgage
Updated
Canada’s housing supply shortage is one of the most significant structural forces driving home prices and mortgage costs. Unlike interest rates, which move in cycles, the supply gap has been building for decades — and there is no quick fix.
The scale of Canada’s housing supply gap
How big is the shortage?
Metric
Estimate
Source
Additional homes needed by 2030
3.5 million (beyond current plans)
CMHC (2022 report, updated 2024)
Current annual housing starts
~220,000–250,000
CMHC
Annual starts needed
~500,000–600,000
Various estimates (CMHC, Scotiabank)
Supply gap
~250,000–350,000 units per year
Difference between starts and need
Population growth (2023)
1.27 million (record)
Statistics Canada
Population growth (2024)
~500,000 (reduced targets)
Government of Canada
Canada vs peer countries
Country
Population (millions)
Housing Starts (annual, recent)
Starts per 1,000 People
Canada
41
~240,000
~5.8
United States
335
~1,400,000
~4.2
Australia
26
~170,000
~6.5
United Kingdom
68
~200,000
~2.9
France
68
~380,000
~5.6
Canada’s per-capita housing starts are not the lowest among peer nations — but they’re insufficient given the pace of population growth and the existing deficit.
Why Canada can’t build fast enough
1. Zoning and permitting delays
Municipal zoning is the single biggest bottleneck:
Bottleneck
Impact
Restrictive zoning
Large portions of urban land zoned exclusively for single-family homes
Approval timelines
Average 2–5 years from application to construction start in major cities
NIMBY opposition
Residents oppose density increases near their homes
Councillor vetoes
Individual councillors can block or delay projects in their wards
Inconsistent rules
Zoning varies dramatically across municipalities within the same metro area
Example (Toronto): A mid-rise development proposal near a transit station can take 3–5 years to navigate the planning approval process, including multiple community meetings, design reviews, and committee hearings — before a single shovel hits the ground.
2. Labour shortages
The construction industry faces a structural workforce shortage:
Issue
Details
Aging workforce
22% of construction workers are over 55
Insufficient training pipeline
Apprenticeship completions have not kept pace with demand
Competition from other sectors
Tech, energy, and services compete for workers
Immigration credential recognition
Skilled tradespeople from other countries face lengthy certification processes
Estimated shortfall
BuildForce Canada projects 300,000+ worker shortfall by 2030
3. Development charges and fees
Municipalities fund infrastructure through development charges levied on builders — and these costs are passed to buyers:
Municipality
Development Charges (per unit, approximate)
Toronto
$100,000–$150,000
Ottawa
$50,000–$80,000
Brampton
$80,000–$120,000
Vancouver
$60,000–$100,000 (including various levies)
Calgary
$20,000–$40,000
Edmonton
$20,000–$30,000
In Toronto, development charges alone can add $100,000+ to the cost of a new condo unit — a cost that is ultimately reflected in the purchase price and the size of the mortgage.
4. Rising construction costs
Cost Component
Trend (2020–2026)
Lumber
Volatile — peaked 200%+ above 2019 levels, moderated but still elevated
Steel
Up 30–50% from pre-pandemic levels
Concrete
Up 15–25%
Labour
Hourly wages up 20–30%
Land
Up 30–100%+ in major urban centres
Financing
Construction loans priced higher with elevated interest rates
Higher construction costs mean higher asking prices for new homes, which sets a floor for the entire market.
5. Infrastructure constraints
New housing requires supporting infrastructure:
Infrastructure Need
Challenge
Water and sewer
Many municipalities at or near capacity
Transit
Development without transit creates car dependency and congestion
Schools
New neighbourhoods need schools — planning and funding lag
Electrical grid
Growing demand, especially with EV adoption
Healthcare
Hospitals and clinics don’t scale as fast as housing
How the supply shortage affects your mortgage
1. Higher home prices = larger mortgages
Market
Average Home Price (2026, approx.)
Mortgage at 10% Down
Monthly Payment (5%, 25yr)
Toronto
$1,050,000
$945,000
~$5,500
Vancouver
$1,150,000
$1,035,000
~$6,050
Ottawa
$630,000
$567,000
~$3,310
Calgary
$550,000
$495,000
~$2,890
Montreal
$530,000
$477,000
~$2,790
Halifax
$480,000
$432,000
~$2,520
If supply kept up with demand, these prices would be lower — and borrowers would need smaller mortgages.
2. Shelter costs drive inflation
Shelter costs account for roughly 30% of the Consumer Price Index. When housing supply is tight:
Effect
Impact on Mortgages
Rents rise (shelter CPI component)
Keeps headline CPI elevated
Home prices rise (mortgage interest cost in CPI)
Further pushes CPI higher
BoC constrained from cutting rates
Variable rates remain elevated
Bond markets price in persistent inflation
Fixed rates remain elevated
The supply shortage creates a feedback loop: it keeps inflation high, which keeps rates high, which keeps mortgage costs high.
3. More competition for available homes
Supply Shortage Effect
Mortgage Consequence
Multiple bidding wars
Buyers pay above asking → larger mortgages
Fewer conditions accepted
Buyers waive inspection, financing conditions → more risk
Pressure to overbid
Buyers stretch their qualification limits
Fewer rental options
More demand for ownership → pushes prices further
4. Rental market pressure
With insufficient housing supply, the rental market tightens too: