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Renting vs. Buying in Calgary

Across Canada, signs indicate a buyer’s market exists in real estate. This includes the volume of home sales in April of this year reaching a seven-year low for the month and stagnating home prices in most markets - including Calgary, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.  However, purchasing a home hasn’t exactly become easy for prospective buyers, which brings the option of renting to the forefront. So, is it better to rent or to buy in Calgary?

When it comes to renting, a common criticism is the loss of money as renters aren’t building equity in their home and housing costs will never go down. On the other hand, a renter’s costs can be much cheaper than the costs of owning a comparable home because their wealth can be built by investing what they’re saving in property tax and home insurance. So how does one decide whether to rent or to buy? Ultimately, it depends on the market you live in and your personal situation.

While housing affordability in Canada’s most expensive market, Vancouver, currently sees 88 percent of the average household income required to buy a home, a market such as Calgary is less than half of that and below the national average of 48 percent. The downtrodden provincial economy has been a fixture in Calgary for a number of years, but with the province lurching its way out of this slump, the real estate market isn’t looking quite as bleak, especially when compared to other larger markets in Canada. In 2017, only a fifth of Calgary neighborhoods saw a one-year price decrease, a decrease from a quarter of communities in 2016. 

The Calgary housing market is currently settling into a sort of “new normal,” a term used by the Calgary Real Estate Board, as the market is stunted for certain groups, such as millennials, by as much as $40,000. But others see it as a situation adjusting to a new plateau where housing prices are stagnant and not falling, stable demand is met with consistent supply, and wages are recovering from the decline. Another key factor of Calgary’s flattening housing prices is the prolonged recovery from oil prices, which dipped below $40 a barrel in 2015, as well as a loss of over 6,000 residents the following year. The recovery continues, with downtown office vacancy still over 25 percent. 

BILD Calgary Region, the voice of the industry and an advocate of affordability, believes it’s an ideal time to buy a home in Calgary. When comparing these buyer-friendly numbers with renting, the Calgary market begins to have a clearer answer to the ‘rent vs. buy’ question. During this time of economic recovery, lease rates at dedicated rental properties have seen a major hike, with high-rise rentals, in particular, jumping to 96 percent, up from the 83 percent recorded in 2017. 

Another strong checkmark for the ‘buy’ column is delivered when considering the diverse options when it comes to neighborhoods in the city, with current average home prices set at $557,493. In the 2016 Canadian Home Buyer Preference National Study done by the Canadian Home Builders’ Association, the majority of new homeowners were identified as peak millennials looking for two-storey, single detached homes - and a treasure trove can be found in both inner and outer Calgarian suburbs. Whether it’s a family home in older Hunting Hills (located in the northwest, average price: $407,123) or emerging Auburn Bay (located in the southeast, average price $570,576), it appears to be a very friendly time to buy in the affordable Calgary market and be a part of the revitalized energy in real estate.

BILD Calgary Region is the respected voice of the building industry, encouraging effective policy and regulations for building great cities in our region - now, and in the future. For more information, visit bildcr.com or connect with Bild on Twitter and Instagram @BILDCR or on Facebook.

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