A subdued December capped what RBC Economics called a “lackluster” 2025 for Canada’s housing markets, as early signs of recovery in major centres faded under the weight of affordability strains, a trade war and softer labour conditions.
“Adverse weather may have been a factor in some cases, but persistent affordability challenges, economic uncertainty and job market softness have, no doubt, kept many prospective homebuyers at a standstill,” said Robert Hogue, assistant chief economist at RBC.
Across Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Montreal and other large markets, “promising recoveries” that have followed significant interest rate cuts were “quickly dashed by the trade war, and ensuing loss of confidence,” Hogue said.
In earlier commentary, he warned that tariff risks could “spook” buyers and hand even more pricing power to those still active.
Subdued resales, sharper splits by region
In Toronto, an early winter “became the latest roadblock to the Greater Toronto Area’s recovery,” with resales falling for the fourth time in five months and remaining about 25% below pre‑pandemic levels.
“Resales remained stalled in December, sustaining significant downward price pressure amid abundant inventory and fierce seller competition,” Hogue said.
Prices also retreated in Vancouver and Calgary, where a “doubling in homes for sale since 2022” and a historic ramp‑up in homebuilding to a record 26,000 units under construction weighed on values.
Hogue said he expected “home values to continue easing in the short term as more supply comes to the market.”
Montreal, meanwhile, “went through a soft patch.” Resales slipped late in the year, but inventory remained historically tight and single‑family prices were still up 7.8% year over year, outpacing condos.
Rate cuts, but limited relief for borrowers
RBC’s latest housing forecast stressed that the Bank of Canada’s rate cuts since mid‑2024 have “yet to fully play out,” even as they helped set the stage for a gradual recovery.
Hogue previously said that “recent signs of an ongoing recovery have emerged,” but cautioned that high costs and weaker immigration would keep the rebound “gradual” at best.
CMP

