Canada Home Prices Decline for Four Consecutive Years: RBC April 2026 Market Deep Dive
📉 Canada Home Prices Decline for Four Consecutive Years: RBC April 2026 Market Deep Dive
📅 Report Date: April 16, 2026 | Source: RBC Economics | Analysis: HousingAI · Legal Bridge
📌 Core Summary
In March 2026, national residential resale volume hit a 17-year low (38,700 units). The MLS Home Price Index (HPI) fell 4.7% year-over-year, representing a cumulative decline of 20% from the early 2022 peak. Ontario and BC continue to face pressure due to high inventory (listings in Toronto and Vancouver are near decade highs), with the Greater Toronto Area (GTA) seeing a 7.4% YoY drop and Greater Vancouver dropping 6.8%. Alberta saw modest corrections (Calgary -3.0%, Edmonton -2.9%), while the Prairies (Regina +6.3%, Saskatoon +5.4%), Quebec (Quebec City +10.1%, Montreal +4.9%), and Atlantic provinces (Moncton +11%) recorded steady gains due to tighter supply-demand. RBC expects downward pressure to persist in ON and BC, while other regions may continue modest appreciation.
📊 Part 1: National Macro Trends—The Weakest Spring Start in 17 Years
Transaction Volume Analysis: In March 2026 (unadjusted), only 38,700 resale homes were sold nationwide, the weakest level since the 2009 financial crisis. Seasonally adjusted resales have fallen for five consecutive months, dropping slightly by 0.1% from February, with the annualized rate falling to 426,000 units—far below the peak of nearly 800,000 in early 2021. This signal is clear: buyers lack urgency due to economic uncertainty, falling prices, and ample inventory in key regions.
Price Trends: The national MLS Home Price Index (HPI) fell another 0.4% month-over-month and 4.7% year-over-year, representing a cumulative 20% drop from the cycle peak in early 2022. This marks the fourth consecutive year of YoY declines, the longest such streak since the index's inception in 2005.
Supply Side Changes: New listings have declined in six of the last seven months (down 0.2% in March), suggesting that a difficult sales environment is deterring potential sellers. While this helps stabilize total inventory, active listings remain 1% higher than last year, near a six-year high. The contrast between slightly lower new listings and deeply shrinking sales suggests a "double-weak" market where supply still outweighs demand, maintaining downward pressure on prices.
The current sales-to-new listings ratio is 0.48, at the lower end of the balanced market range and approaching a buyer's market. At the 2021 peak, this ratio reached 0.90.
📍 Part 2: Ontario and BC—High Inventory Suppressing Prices
Inventory Crisis: Active listings in Ontario and BC are hovering near decade highs. In the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), listings have reached extreme historical levels. This means competition among sellers is fierce—each listing faces far more potential competitors than normal. The RBC report notes that sellers are forced to make increasingly larger price concessions to close deals, while buyers remain cautious due to high carrying costs.
📉 Price Decline Ranking: Major Ontario Cities
| City/Region | MLS HPI YoY Change | MoM Change | Market Insight |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kitchener-Waterloo | -8.6% | -0.5% | Tech hub halo fading, inventory surge |
| Barrie | -8.4% | -0.4% | Reversing pandemic-era gains |
| Fraser Valley | -7.5% | -0.6% | Deepest decline in BC |
| Greater Toronto Area | -7.4% | -0.6% | Decade-high inventory, strong buyer leverage |
| Cambridge | -7.4% | -0.3% | Following GTA trends |
| Hamilton | -7.3% | -0.4% | Commuter premium disappearing |
| London | -7.1% | -0.3% | Weakening student market demand |
| Greater Vancouver Area | -6.8% | -0.7% | High-end market cooling significantly |
| Oshawa | -6.4% | -0.2% | University town demand receding |
1. Pandemic Over-expansion: Between 2020 and early 2022, the remote work trend pushed suburban and small-city prices up by 40%-60%. Current declines are a rational correction of this bubble.
2. High Carrying Costs: Although the Bank of Canada has started cutting rates, mortgage rates remain far higher than 2020-2021 levels. In the GTA, monthly payments are roughly 30%-40% higher than in 2021.
3. Investor Sell-off Pressure: ON and BC have the highest proportion of investors (approx. 25% in GTA, 30% in GVA). Properties with negative cash flow are being listed in bulk.
4. Immigration Policy Shifts: Federal cuts to temporary residents and international student quotas directly impact ON and BC, as these provinces absorb over 50% of newcomers.
🏔️ Part 3: Alberta—Modest Correction, Resilience Remains
Key Finding: Alberta's modest correction contrasts sharply with the deep declines in ON and BC. Strong housing construction over the past few years has added supply, helping rebuild inventory and ease previous tightness. However, resale volumes have dropped significantly (Calgary -10.7%, Edmonton -13.4%), indicating weakening demand. RBC expects Alberta to stabilize within 6-12 months if energy prices hold.
📈 Part 4: Other Provinces—Tight Supply Supports Price Growth
Despite national weakness, prices in most of Eastern and Central Canada are still rising, primarily due to relatively tight supply-demand dynamics. These markets share common traits: modest pandemic-era gains + healthy inventory levels + strong local economic support.
🏆 Top Price Gainers (MLS HPI YoY)
+11.0%
Atlantic Leader
+10.1%
Quebec's Top Gainer
+9.3%
Atlantic Province
+6.3%
Saskatchewan's Largest City
+5.4%
Saskatchewan's 2nd Largest City
+4.9%
Quebec's Economic Engine
+3.1%
Atlantic Hub
+2.9%
Manitoba Capital
Montreal is the only major city in Quebec to enter the growth list, up 4.9% YoY. Notably, resales grew by 3.1% MoM and 2.2% YoY, indicating recovering demand. The sales-to-new listings ratio is 0.60, sitting exactly on the border between a balanced and seller's market. Compared to Toronto and Vancouver, Montreal's inventory is healthier, meaning buyers still have options, but negotiating leverage is diminishing. RBC expects Montreal to maintain modest growth through late 2026.
📋 Part 5: March 2026 Major City Market Snapshot
Market Status Definition: Sales-to-New Listings Ratio <0.40 Buyer's Market, 0.40-0.60 Balanced Market, >0.60 Seller's Market
🔮 Part 6: Spring Market Outlook—Recovery Potential vs Downside Risks
- Cumulative price drop of 20% improves affordability
- Bank of Canada rate cut cycle begins, lowering carrying costs
- Ample inventory provides more choices for buyers
- Spring is typically the peak season, with demand expected to rise seasonally
- Geopolitical events may push energy prices higher
- Signs of weakness in the labor market
- Difficulty in further rate reductions
- Federal immigration cuts cooling housing demand
RBC Base Case: We expect the market trend to remain regionally fragmented over the coming months. In Ontario and BC, ample inventory will maintain—or potentially intensify—downward pressure on prices, with the condo market in Toronto and Vancouver facing greater sell-off pressure. Conversely, regions like Quebec City, Moncton, and Regina will likely continue modest appreciation due to tighter supply-demand.
"We expect ample inventory to maintain—or even intensify—downward price pressure in Ontario and BC over the short term, while tighter supply-demand will support modest further appreciation in most other regions."
— Robert Hogue, Assistant Chief Economist, RBC
💡 Part 7: Investment & Policy Implications
- Buyers in ON and BC are in a strong negotiating position; demand price concessions
- Montreal and Quebec City offer better appreciation potential
- Closely monitor BoC rate signals and lock in pre-approved rates
- Use ample inventory to compare thoroughly and avoid FOMO
- Sellers in ON and BC should be mentally prepared for price concessions
- Pricing 3-5% below market value can accelerate the sale process
- Consider listing before the end of the spring peak (May-June)
- Prepare professional home inspections and renovation reports to increase competitiveness
- Immigration cuts have already begun cooling demand; long-term impacts need assessment
- Supply-side reforms (faster approvals, encouraging construction) remain the optimal solution
- Monitor the "crowding out" effect of investor sell-offs on first-time buyers
- Consider regional policies to address highly fragmented markets
📌 Report Source
This report is based on the RBC Economics release dated April 16, 2026: "March marks four years of declining home prices in Canada." Original author: Robert Hogue, Assistant Chief Economist. Data sources: Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), RBC Economics.
Citation: RBC Economics. (2026, April 16). March marks four years of declining home prices in Canada. Focus on Canadian Housing. Retrieved from rbc.com/economics
This analysis is presented by HousingAI and Legal Bridge for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment or legal advice. Market risks exist; please exercise caution in decision-making. The full original report (PDF) is available on the RBC official website.
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