Skip to main content

Sales-to-New-Listings Ratio (SNLR) in Canada: How to Read the Market (2026)

Updated

The Sales-to-New-Listings Ratio is one of the most useful — and underused — tools for understanding Canadian real estate market conditions. Here is how to read and use it.

How SNLR is calculated

$$\text{SNLR} = \frac{\text{Number of Sales}}{\text{Number of New Listings}} \times 100%$$

Example: In a given month, a city sees 2,500 new listings and 1,500 sales.

$$\text{SNLR} = \frac{1{,}500}{2{,}500} \times 100% = 60%$$

This means 60% of new listings were absorbed by buyers — indicating a balanced-to-seller market.

Market condition thresholds

SNLR RangeMarket ConditionPrice TrendNegotiating Power
Below 40%Buyer’s marketPrices tend to declineBuyers have strong leverage
40%–60%Balanced marketPrices stableRelatively equal
Above 60%Seller’s marketPrices tend to riseSellers have leverage
Above 80%Strong seller’s marketRapid price appreciationSellers in full control — bidding wars common

These thresholds are guidelines used by CREA and most real estate analysts — they are not rigid rules.

Current SNLR by Canadian city (early 2026)

CitySNLRMarket ConditionPrice Trend
Toronto (GTA)48%–55%BalancedStable to modest growth
Vancouver (GVA)45%–52%BalancedStable
Calgary62%–70%Seller’s marketRising
Ottawa52%–58%BalancedStable to modest growth
Montreal55%–62%Balanced to seller’sModest growth
Edmonton55%–63%Balanced to seller’sModest growth
Winnipeg50%–58%BalancedStable
Halifax58%–65%Balanced to seller’sModest growth
Hamilton-Burlington45%–55%BalancedStable
Kitchener-Waterloo48%–56%BalancedStable

SNLR varies month-to-month and by property type. Check CREA or your local board for the latest data.

How SNLR changes over time

PeriodNational SNLRMarketWhat Was Happening
201955%–60%BalancedPre-pandemic stability
Early 202035%–40%Buyer’s (pandemic shock)COVID lockdowns, market freeze
Late 202070%–80%Strong seller’sPent-up demand, low rates, FOMO
202175%–85%Very strong seller’sRecord prices, bidding wars, ultra-low rates
Early 202260%–70%Seller’sStill hot but cooling as rates began rising
Late 202240%–50%Balanced to buyer’sRate hikes slowed demand significantly
202345%–55%BalancedMarket stabilizing, sluggish sales, moderate listings
202450%–58%BalancedRate cuts beginning, gradual recovery
202550%–60%BalancedMarket normalizing post-rate cycle
Early 202650%–58%BalancedStable outlook

How to use SNLR when buying

SNLR ReadingBuyer Strategy
Below 40% (buyer’s market)Take your time, negotiate hard, include conditions, offer below asking
40%–50% (soft balanced)Moderate negotiation room, conditions generally accepted
50%–60% (balanced)Standard approach — competitive offers with reasonable conditions
60%–70% (seller’s market)Be prepared to compete, clean offers, strong financing
Above 70% (hot seller’s)Offer quickly, consider reducing/removing conditions, expect bidding wars

How to use SNLR when selling

SNLR ReadingSeller Strategy
Below 40% (buyer’s market)Price competitively, invest in staging and marketing, be patient with DOM
40%–50% (soft balanced)Realistic pricing needed, prepare for negotiation
50%–60% (balanced)Price at market value, standard marketing approach
60%–70% (seller’s market)Can price at or slightly above market — expect solid offers
Above 70% (hot seller’s)Underprice to generate multiple offers (offer date strategy), expect above-asking

SNLR by property type

SNLR can vary dramatically within the same city depending on property type:

Property TypeTypical SNLR PatternWhy
Starter homes (under $500K)Higher SNLR (seller’s)High demand from first-time buyers
Family homes ($500K–$1M)At or above averageBroad buyer pool
Luxury ($2M+)Lower SNLR (buyer’s)Small buyer pool, niche market
CondosOften lower than detachedHigher inventory, pickier buyers
Detached homesOften higher than condosLess inventory, broader demand
New constructionVaries by phase and marketBuilder pricing and absorption rate are different metrics

SNLR vs other market indicators

IndicatorWhat It MeasuresSpeed of Signal
SNLRNew demand vs new supply (flow)Fast — responds quickly to market shifts
Months of inventoryHow long to sell all active listings (stock)Medium — lags as inventory builds or depletes
Average sale priceWhat buyers are payingSlow — prices lag market conditions by weeks/months
DOM (Days on Market)How long listings take to sellMedium — trends visible over 1–2 months
Price-to-list ratioSold price vs asking priceFast — shows negotiating dynamics in real time
Housing startsNew construction activityVery slow — forward-looking supply indicator

Using multiple indicators together

For the most complete picture, use SNLR alongside:

  1. SNLR — is demand absorbing supply?
  2. Months of inventory — how much inventory is accumulated?
  3. DOM — how long are properties taking to sell?
  4. Price-to-list ratio — are homes selling above or below asking?
  5. Price trends — what direction are prices moving?

When all five indicators align (e.g., high SNLR + low inventory + low DOM + above-asking sales + rising prices), the market signal is strong.

Limitations of SNLR

LimitationWhy It Matters
Aggregate dataCity-level SNLR masks neighbourhood-level differences
Property type blendingCombining condos and detached can be misleading
Seasonal variationLow listings in December inflate SNLR artificially
New listings ≠ all inventorySNLR ignores existing unsold inventory from previous months
Does not capture priceA market can have high SNLR with declining prices (if sellers are reducing)
Relisting distortionProperties that are delisted and relisted inflate the new listings count

Key takeaways

  1. SNLR below 40% = buyer’s market; 40%–60% = balanced; above 60% = seller’s market
  2. SNLR responds faster to market shifts than prices or months of inventory
  3. Always look at SNLR for your specific property type and neighbourhood — not just the city average
  4. Combine SNLR with months of inventory, DOM, and price-to-list ratio for a complete market picture
  5. CREA publishes monthly SNLR data — check it regularly if you are actively buying or selling
🏠

Get the best mortgage rate in Canada — in minutes

Homewise negotiates with 30+ banks and lenders for you. Free, 5 minutes, no credit check.

Get Started →

Affiliate disclosure: WealthNorth may earn a commission if you apply through this link. This does not affect your rate or cost.