High-end home sales booming across Canada - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:22 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

High-end home sales booming across Canada

Sales of houses that cost at least $1 million are booming in Canada's four biggest cities, high-end real estate firm Sotheby's says.

Canada's market for $1M homes soars

10 years ago
Duration 1:59
New study suggests high-end home sales on the rise

Sales of housesthat cost at least $1 million are booming in Canada's four biggest cities, high-end real estate firm Sotheby's International Realty Canadasays.

Sales of homes priced higher than $1 million increased in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto and Montreal, the firm said in a report published Tuesday. But as with other segments of Canada's housing market, demand for luxury homes isn't increasing evenly.

Inthe first half of 2014, overall sales in the million-dollar-plus category were up by more than a third compared to last year's level in Toronto and Vancouver. But Toronto was the only place in Canada where sales increased in all categories of housing that Sotheby's tracks condos, attached homes and detached homes.

"Given strong economic fundamentals, increased consumer confidence and mortgage lending rates that remain at historical lows, all markets are expected to gain momentum in the latter part of 2014," the realtorfirmsaid.

Three people look at a home for sale.
Sales of million-dollar homes are booming across the country, according to a real estate firm that specializes in that segment of the market. (Daniel Acker/Bloomberg)
It is single-family homes, however, that generally can command a premium on the price side. In all four cities tracked, there was an increase in the number of single-family homes that sold for above the listed price. In Toronto and Vancouver, more than 30 per cent of luxury single-family homes sold for more than the asking price. In Calgary and Montreal, the number dropped to a little under 10 per cent.

Although it was the smallest growth of the four cities tracked, Montreal's 11-per-cent sales uptick of all types of luxury homes stands outbecauseQuebec's largest cityposted an overall decline in sales in 2013.

In all, there were about 6,400 homes that sold above $1 million in the four cities in the first half of 2014, including about 275 that sold for more than $4 million.

The most expensive home cited in the Sotheby's report was located in Vancouver and was listed at $15 million.

Other things of note in the regional findings include:

  • Calgary's condo market saw fewer sales of condominiums priced over $1 million in the first half of 2014 compared to the year prior, a trend that the companychalked up to there being fewer homes listed in that price point.
  • Between January and June, a total of 3,956 homes were sold for more than $1 million across the Greater Toronto Area. That's a 34 per cent jump compared to the figure from the same periodin2013.
  • Despite a soft start to the year, sales of million-dollar homes in Montreal startedrebounding quickly after the Quebec election in April, when the separatist Parti Qubcois was soundly defeated.

According to the latest data from the Canadian Real Estate Association, the average home in Canada sold for$416,584 last month, a seven per cent increase compared to the same time last year.

At the end of this month, Canada's taxpayer-backed housing agency, the CMHC, will stop insuring homes that cost more than $1 million, even if thebuyer can come up with the minimum downpayment of 20 per cent. That means that starting in August, a would-be buyer of a million-dollar would have to get somebody else to insure the purchase.

The housing agency says loans like that only represent about three per cent of all the loans it backed last year.