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Canada Housing Market Report:CREA’s Drastic April Forecast Downgrade

IRCCGUIDE · 30 4 月, 2026 · 8 min read


HousingAI · Canada Housing Market Report

Canada Housing Market Report

Based on BCREA · CREA · Reuters · CMHC · IRCC · Ontario HST | Reading time: ~20 min | 📊 View all 205 insights →

✅ Data verified as of April 30, 2026: CREA April forecast · BCREA April 27 report · Reuters April 28 · Ontario Government

🎯 6 Data Points Defining Canada’s Housing Market (April 2026)
+1%
CREA National Sales Forecast
(↓ from +5.1% in Jan)

-10%
Toronto YOY Price Decline
(GTA oversupply)

+5.1%
Montreal March Avg Price
(CAD $656,800)

-5%
National Condo YOY
(Investor demand cooling)

CAD $130K
Ontario HST Rebate Max
(13% exempt for new homes ≤$1M)

70%
Housing Share of Household Wealth
(Reuters: Wealth effect reversing)


📉 Data Point 1: CREA’s Drastic April Forecast Downgrade

In January 2026, CREA forecasted national home sales growth of +5.1%, anticipating a strong rebound after rates stabilized. However, Q1 data fell short of expectations — March sales were down -0.1% month-over-month and -2.3% year-over-year, with spring mortgage rate increases further suppressing demand. On April 16, CREA slashed its annual sales forecast to +1% (approximately 474,972 units), while trimming the average price forecast by ~$10,000 to $688,955.
📖 CREA Downgrades 2026 Housing Outlook: Should First-Time Buyers Wait or Buy Now?

January Forecast
+5.1% sales growth
April Update
+1.0% sales growth
Downgrade
-4.1 ppts
Volume Reduction
~20,000 units

💡 CREA specifically noted: Ontario and BC remain the weakest markets in 2026, with sales growth near zero or slight declines — far below the national average. This cross-validates with BCREA’s BC-specific forecast (sales -2.1%) released the same day.
📖 2026 Canada Real Estate Forecast Downgrade: Oil Price Shock Triggers Rate Rebound


🏔️ Data Point 2: BC — From “+12% Optimistic” to “-2.1% Reality”

In January 2026, BCREA forecasted a strong rebound for BC sales at +12% (78,690 units) and a price increase of +3% to $982,800. However, in its Q2 Housing Market Update released April 27, BCREA Chief Economist Brendon Ogmundson admitted: “2026 has started very challenging”, slashing the annual forecast to sales -2.1% (~69,000 units) and average price -1.4% ($939,800).

IndicatorJan ForecastApril UpdateChange
BC Sales+12%-2.1%↓ ~10,000 units
BC Average Price+3% ($982,800)-1.4% ($939,800)↓ $43,000
March Actual Price$939,846 (YOY -2%)4.4% below Jan forecast

Active listings hit highest level since 2015, with Greater Vancouver’s sales-to-active-listings ratio at just 14.2% — below 20% confirms a buyer’s market. Ogmundson emphasized that the market needs a “longer period of stability” to release pent-up demand, with sales forecast to rebound 7.7% in 2027 — contingent on inventory digestion and rate stability.
📖 Vancouver Condo Market 2026: Prices Down 7.8%, Inventory 38% Above 10-Year Average


🗺️ Data Point 3: K-Shaped Divergence — Who’s Up? Who’s Down?
City/RegionLatest PriceYOY ChangeMarket Status
Toronto/GTA~$1.05M composite-10%Buyer’s market, condos especially soft
Vancouver~$1.17M composite-4%Buyer’s market, high-end dragging
MontrealMarch $656.8K+5.1%Seller’s market, plex at record highs
📖 Montreal: Detached Up 7% But Condos Are Drowning
Calgary~$580K+2-3%Balanced
📖 Calgary Weekly: Detached Inventory at Just 2.1 Months
Saskatoon$435,200Record highInventory crisis
📖 Saskatoon Home Prices Hit Record $435,200

Montreal’s countertrend strength deserves attention: both single-family homes and plex prices hit record highs in March. Quebec housing activity remains above its 10-year average. Core drivers: affordability advantage — Montreal’s average price is just 62% of Toronto’s and 56% of Vancouver’s — plus Quebec is less affected by federal temporary resident restrictions, keeping demand relatively stable.


🏢 Data Point 4: Condos -5% YOY, GTHA Rental Collapse as a Warning Sign

National condo prices are down approximately 5% year-over-year, driven by weakening investor demand and high carrying costs. More concerning is GTHA (Greater Toronto-Hamilton Area) rental data: vacancy rate surged to 5.4%, net rents fell 3.8%, unsold completed condos reached 4,295 units (all-time high), requiring 92 months to clear at current sales pace.
📖 Toronto Condo Market 2026 Deep Analysis: Historic Sales Lows, The Supply Cliff, and Buyer Strategies | Ontario ‘Underwater Homes’ Investigation Report 2026

Condo YOY Price
-5%
GTHA Vacancy Rate
5.4%
Net Rent Change
-3.8%
Unsold Condo Inventory
4,295 all-time high

GTHA’s rental collapse serves as direct evidence of condo market stress, consistent with the logic that Vancouver’s newly completed high-end condos temporarily lift average prices while masking underlying weakness. Common factors across both regions: supply surge + immigration slowdown + high-rate environment.


🌍 Data Point 5: Immigration Slowdown — The Biggest Headwind for BC & Ontario

Between Q4 2025 and Q1 2026, Canada’s total population decreased by approximately 103,500, primarily due to a reduction of ~170,000 non-permanent residents. While 2026 PR targets remain at 380,000, new temporary resident intake has been sharply cut to 385,000: study permits 155,000 (down 49% YOY), work permits 230,000 (down 37% YOY).
📖 IRCCGUIDE: Canada Immigration Policy Shift 2026 — Who Is Leaving Toronto?

BC and Ontario — traditional top destinations for international students and new immigrants — benefited most previously but are now facing the “biggest headwind.” IRCC data shows study permit approvals have been cut by nearly 50% from 2024 peaks. Demand contraction combined with high supply-side inventory makes BC and Ontario the weakest housing markets in Canada for 2026 — data that aligns perfectly.

Quebec, as a Francophone province, is less affected by federal temporary resident restrictions — this is one of the underlying reasons for Montreal’s countertrend housing strength.
📖 Why the Poor Are Finding It Harder to Buy a Home? Statistics Canada Data Reveals How the Wealth Gap Is Tearing Apart the Housing Market


📰 Data Point 6: Reuters (April 28) — Housing Bubble Contraction Erodes Stock Market Wealth Effect

A Reuters special report, “Canada’s Housing Bubble Contraction Stalls Stock Market Wealth Effect,” cut to a core contradiction: Housing accounts for over 70% of Canadian household net wealth. Falling home prices trigger a “reverse wealth effect” — households feel poorer and reduce consumption. Economists estimate that every 10% drop in home prices reduces household spending by 0.5-1%.

Key contrast: Stock market gains are concentrated among high-income households (top 20%), with little benefit to average families. This means TSX index strength cannot compensate for housing losses. Unlike historical patterns — where housing booms once drove broad consumption growth — the current correction is amplifying macroeconomic pressure.
📖 Canada Real Estate 2026: Decoding the ‘Structural Trap’

The Bank of Canada’s policy rate remains at 2.25%. While TD believes the next move is more likely a rate cut, energy inflation and geopolitical risks continue to influence the path. The reverse wealth effect is an important variable the Bank must weigh — falling home prices are themselves generating significant tightening effects.
📖 Canada Home Prices Decline for Four Consecutive Years: RBC April 2026 Market Deep Dive


🧾 Data Point 7: Ontario HST Rebate — Up to $130,000 Policy Variable

From April 1, 2026, to March 31, 2027, Ontario is eliminating the 13% HST on newly built homes valued at or below $1 million (maximum rebate $130,000), with phase-out for homes over $1.5 million. The key distinction: applies to all buyers (not just first-time buyers) — making it one of Ontario’s most aggressive housing stimulus measures in history.
📖 Ontario’s $130,000 HST Rebate for New Homes Under $1M: Will It Revive the Housing Market?

Eligibility
All buyers (local/immigrants/investors)
Max Rebate
$130,000
Policy Period
April 1, 2026 – March 31, 2027
Covered Price Range
≤$1M full exemption

Effect Assessment: Short-term boost to new home presales and construction starts — clearly supported by the Ontario Home Builders’ Association. However, indirect impact on resale/used homes. In a high-rate environment, monthly payment affordability remains the core constraint — the HST rebate cannot fully offset interest costs. Focus on Q3 2026 new home sales data to verify policy effectiveness.


📋 Actionable Guide: Data-Driven Decision Framework by Buyer Profile
🏠 Buyers (First-Time/Move-Up)

Signal: National buyer’s market confirmed — GTA/GVA inventory 30%+ above 10-year averages, negotiation room 5-15%. Ontario buyers should prioritize new homes ≤$1M to utilize HST rebate. Stress test at 5.5%-6% interest rates.
📖 March 2026 Canadian Housing Market Deep Dive: Why First-Time Buyers Are Still Hesitating

🏷️ Sellers

Signal: Longer days on market — GTA detached homes up 35% YOY. Pricing strategy: target low-to-mid range of comparable sales from last 3 months, pre-negotiate 5-15% flexibility.

📈 Investors/Landlords

Signal: GTHA condo 5.4% vacancy is a warning. Cash flow stress test: net rent – mortgage payment – property tax – vacancy cost (assume 8% vacancy rate).
📖 Deep Dive into Negative Cash Flow for Canadian Investment Properties (2026): What to Do When You’re Losing Money? | Canada Real Estate ‘Danger Zone’ Map 2026

🎓 International Students / Future Immigrants

Signal: Only 155,000 new study permits in 2026 (down 49% YOY) — secure status before property. Prioritize public DLI master’s programs (PAL-exempt). Rent until PR approval.
📖 Canada Pre-construction Closing Crisis 2026: A Survival Guide to Assignment Sales

🔗 Data Cross-Validation: 6 Sources Point to the Same Conclusion

Synthesizing data from CREA (national sales +1%), BCREA (BC sales -2.1%), Reuters (wealth effect reversal), CMHC (starts -6%), IRCC (study permits -49%), and Ontario HST policy (up to $130K rebate), a coherent picture emerges:

Demand contraction: Immigration cut in half + high rates → buyer hesitation → sales below forecast (CREA downgrade of 4.1 ppts)
Supply accumulation: BC active listings highest since 2015 + GTHA unsold condos at 4,295 → buyer’s market confirmed
K-shaped divergence: Montreal +5.1% vs Toronto -10% → affordability dictates regional performance
Policy offset: Ontario HST rebate up to $130K → short-term support for new homes, but cannot reverse interest rate cycle
Macro drag: Housing = 70%+ of household wealth → wealth effect reversal already dragging consumption

👉 Q2-Q3 2026 is the key window to validate policy effectiveness and market bottom. Data transparency matters — rational, data-driven decisions are essential.
📖 Royal LePage Q1 2026 Report: Extreme Divergence in Canadian Housing

📊 Official Data Trackers (Sources for This Report)
CREA
National sales/price stats
BCREA
BC quarterly forecast + monthly data
CMHC
Housing starts/vacancy reports
OSFI
Risk outlook & stress tests
📖 OSFI Annual Risk Outlook 2026-2027 Deep Dive

📚 HousingAI Related Reports (Cross-Validation Reading)

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Sources: CREA (April 16, 2026 forecast) · BCREA (April 27, 2026 Q2 forecast) · Reuters (April 28) · Ontario Bill 27/26 · CMHC (March starts) · IRCC (2026-2028 targets) · Statistics Canada population estimates · OSFI Annual Risk Outlook
✅ All percentage changes are year-over-year unless otherwise noted. Data cross-validated across multiple sources.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This is data analysis and information synthesis, not investment advice. Consult qualified professionals for specific decisions.
© HousingAI · Data-Driven · Deep Insights · April 30, 2026

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