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Average house price hit record $748,450 in January — up 21% in past year

Cold weather did little to chill out Canada's red-hot housing market in January, with the Canadian Real Estate Association reporting that average house prices have increased by 21 per cent in the past year to $748,450 — the highest on record.

Average selling price has never been higher, says Canadian Real Estate Association

A for sale sign outside a home in Toronto.
After a brief lull in the early stages of 2020, Canada's housing market has been on fire during the pandemic, as low interest rate have spurred on a wave of borrowing. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Cold weather did little to chill out Canada's red-hot housing market in January, with new data Tuesday showing average house prices have increased by 21 per cent in the past year to $748,450 — the highest on record.

The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), which represents more than 100,000 Realtors across the country, said Tuesday that the volume of homes being sold has plateaued, largely because of a lack of inventory. But prices continue their record-setting ascent.

After a brief lull early in the pandemic, Canada's housing market has been on fire for the better part of two years now, as buyers have taken advantage of record-low interest rates to buy larger and more expensive homes.

January is typically a slow month for the housing market, as buyers and sellers tend to stay on the sidelines until the spring. But COVID-19 has done away with those seasonal trends: January 2021 was the busiest January for home sales on record, CREA says, and 2022 was the second busiest ever.

CREA notes that the average selling price can be misleading, because it can be skewed by sales in large, expensive markets like Toronto and Vancouver. So the Realtor group touts a second figure, known as the Multiple Listings Service House Price Index (HPI), as a better gauge of the market, because it is adjusted based on the type of housing sold in every market.

But the HPI, too, has never been higher. It increased by 2.9 per cent in January alone — another record. And on an annual basis, it's up by 28 per cent — also the highest it's ever been.

While house prices are up sharply just about everywhere, they aren't rising at the same pace across the country. Ontario and British Columbia are the biggest factors in the increase, with some markets in both provinces clocking 30 per cent gains in the past year.

That contrasts with the Prairies, where prices have increased by about 10 per cent in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba since last January. 

Some buyers are trying to leverage that imbalance by moving from pricey markets to comparatively cheap ones. Calgary Realtor Ezra Malo says he's seeing an influx of buyers from outside Alberta right now.

WATCH | Calgary realtor explains the city's housing market right now: 

Calgary realtor describes hot market

3 years ago
Duration 0:35
Ezra Malo says sales are booming in Calgary, partly driven by an influx of buyers from elsewhere in the country.

"We've got … a surge of buyers that seem to be coming in from outside of the province, as well as a lot of first-time home buyers that are trying to get in," he said.

Mike Moffatt, senior director of the Smart Prosperity Institute, says the housing market seems firmly in the middle of what he calls an "affordability crisis."

"Even existing homeowners are looking at the current situation and going 'This just doesn't make any sense, this can't be healthy,'" he told CBC News in an interview. "Things are a little less zero sum than they were three or four years ago and I think there is more of a broad based consensus to do something."

While many have blamed record low interest rates for inflating a bubble, CREA says the biggest problem is that there simply aren't enough homes for sale right now to keep up with demand.

The total inventory of homes for sale on CREA's online database, the Multiple Listings Service, was at just 1.6 months in January, meaning that's how long it would take to sell the homes currently listed. That ties the lowest level on record.

"The ideal situation between now and the summer would be that a huge surge of sellers come forward looking to sell," CREA's chief economist Shaun Cathcart said.

"If that were to occur, similar to 2021, we'd likely see a massive number of sales take place which would get a lot of frustrated buyers into home ownership, and we'd likely see some cooling off on the price growth side."

Torrid pace

Nationally, January's increase was the fastest pace seen since 1989, TD Bank economist Rishi Sondhi noted — which is why the pace likely can't last.

"Affordability is clearly worsening quickly, which should make it tougher for first-time homebuyers to jump into the market," he said. "Moving forward, we expect higher interest rates and the tough affordability backdrop to cause home price growth to slow significantly, particularly in the second half of 2022."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Pete Evans

Senior Business Writer

Pete Evans is the senior business writer for CBCNews.ca. Prior to coming to the CBC, his work has appeared in the Globe & Mail, the Financial Post, the Toronto Star, and Canadian Business Magazine. Twitter: @p_evans Email: pete.evans@cbc.ca