Canada's national aggregate home price fell 1.4% year over year to $814,900 in the second quarter of 2026, according to the Royal LePage House Price Survey and Market Forecast released Tuesday.
A modest 0.2% quarterly gain and improving activity levels, however, suggest the market may be quietly gathering strength heading into autumn.
"After a sluggish first quarter, the spring housing market finally got rolling in May," said Phil Soper, president and CEO of Royal LePage.
"Several regions are now seeing that uptick in momentum carry into summer, as buyers who held back earlier in the year re-enter the market. In many cases, what has kept consumers on the sidelines is not a lack of interest, but a lack of urgency."
Greater Toronto and Greater Vancouver bore the steepest annual declines in Q2, falling 4.6% and 4.5% year over year to $1,101,700 and $1,164,100 respectively. However, both markets showed signs of stabilisation on a quarterly basis, with Toronto prices edging up 0.9% from Q1 2026.
The Greater Montreal Area moved in the opposite direction, posting a 4.9% annual gain to $650,500.
Quebec City led smaller markets with a 6.1% year-over-year increase, but recorded its first quarter-over-quarter price decline in more than three years — a sign that even the country's hottest regional markets are not immune to the broader drag on consumer confidence.
Soper noted that the narrowing price gap between Canada's most expensive and most affordable cities is beginning to shift the calculus for first-time buyers and newcomers.
Softening values in Toronto and Vancouver are creating openings for buyers previously priced out, potentially moderating the interprovincial migration that has defined the decade so far.
| Region | Aggregate price | Single-family detached | Condominium | Q4 2026 forecast vs Q4 2025 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q2 2026 | YoY | QoQ | Median price | YoY | Median price | YoY | ||
| Greater Toronto Area | $1,101,700 | −4.6% | +0.9% | $1,396,500 | −3.6% | $660,000 | −5.7% | −2.0% |
| Greater Vancouver | $1,164,100 | −4.5% | −0.9% | $1,649,200 | −5.2% | $721,000 | −5.1% | −3.5% |
| Ottawa | $789,800 | +1.0% | +1.8% | $904,300 | +1.2% | $402,900 | −1.1% | +3.0% |
| Greater Montreal Area | $650,500 | +4.9% | +0.7% | $760,800 | +5.7% | $495,800 | +3.2% | +5.0% |
| Calgary | $695,300 | −0.2% | +0.9% | $814,600 | +1.0% | $258,600 | −4.0% | +2.5% |
| Edmonton | $482,400 | −0.4% | +2.1% | $531,700 | +0.1% | $209,600 | −3.7% | +4.0% |
| Halifax | $528,600 | −0.5% | +0.6% | $605,600 | −0.2% | $399,100 | −2.2% | +4.0% |
| Winnipeg | $429,400 | +3.2% | +1.2% | $470,400 | +2.6% | $277,700 | +2.1% | +5.0% |
| Quebec City | $465,800 | +6.1% | −2.0%First QoQ decline in 3+ yrs | $497,800 | +6.3% | $343,400 | +4.6% | +8.0% |
| Regina | $405,300 | +1.8% | +1.9% | $447,300 | +1.5% | $233,500 | +5.6% | +4.0% |
Source: Royal LePage House Price Survey and Market Forecast, Q2 2026. Price data includes resale and new build, provided by RPS Real Property Solutions. All figures in Canadian dollars.
Renewals and rate uncertainty
The Bank of Canada's fifth consecutive rate hold keeps its policy rate at 2.25%, unchanged since October 2025. That stability has brought a degree of predictability to borrowing costs, even as Canada's Consumer Price Index climbed to 3.2% in May 2026, its highest reading since January 2024, driven largely by energy prices tied to hostilities in the Middle East, according to Statistics Canada.
Against that backdrop, the final wave of pandemic-era mortgage renewals is nearing its conclusion. The Bank of Canada estimates roughly 12% of all outstanding mortgages — predominantly five-year fixed-rate terms originated at pandemic-era lows — will come up for renewal by end of 2027, with borrowers facing average payment increases of approximately 15%. As of Q4 2025, Canada's national mortgage delinquency rate stands at 0.24%.
"The over-blown pandemic mortgage renewal scare is all but over and most Canadians have weathered the storm," said Soper.
"Rising incomes and a resilient labour market continue to work in homeowners' favour."
The Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) uncertainty adds a further layer of caution. On July 1, the US declined to extend the agreement for a new 16-year term, initiating a period of annual reviews.
Economists and mortgage professionals monitoring the Bank of Canada's rate path say the trade ambiguity compounds existing hesitation among potential buyers.
"For Canadian consumers, ambiguity surrounding CUSMA is another reason to pause and reassess before making major financial commitments, including the decision to buy or sell a home," Soper said.
Royal LePage is forecasting that the aggregate price of a home in Canada will increase 2.0% in Q4 2026 compared to the same quarter last year, a modest but meaningful signal that a delayed spring may yet set the stage for a more active second half of the year.
CMP

