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Market Snapshot·2026-03-20

Canada’s Population Fell for the First Time in 159 Years Who Will Absorb 大多地区’s 26-Month New Home Inventory?

Canada’s Population Fell for the First Time in 159 Years Who Will Absorb 大多地区’s 26-Month New Home Inventory?

StatsCan 2026.3.18 · Deep Dive

📊 Sources: Statistics Canada · TRREB · HousingAI Model
⚡ Published: March 19, 2026
BREAKING: First Population Drop in 159 Years

📌 StatsCan’s latest March 18, 2026 data reveals Canada’s first annual population decline since Confederation in 1867 — a loss of approximately 102,000 people in 2025. The core driver: a mass exodus of Non-Permanent Residents (NPRs). In Q4 2025 alone, NPRs plunged by 171,000. This isn’t just a number; it’s the end of the decade-long ‘population-driven growth’ logic for Canadian real estate.

-102K
2025 Population Δ
-171K
Q4 NPR Loss
159 yrs
First Decline

Canada Population Growth Rate (%)

1960 – 2026 Projection (StatsCan Data)

3%
2%
1%

2025: The Pivot Point ↓

1960
2026

Historical
Surge
2025-26 Drop

1. Macro Alarm: The ‘Black Line’ Turns Down
1867→2026
First annual drop since Confederation
StatsCan March 18: Canada lost 102,000 people in 2025, ending 159 years of continuous growth. Non-Permanent Resident (NPR) outflow is the dominant cause.

-171,000
Q4 2025 NPR Plunge
A single-quarter loss of 171K temporary residents (students, work permit holders), far outpacing natural increase and immigration.

“This is more than a statistical blip — it’s the end of the ‘population-driven growth’ narrative. When the engine of population growth—international students and temporary workers—stalls, the fundamental support for housing is pulled away.”

—— HousingAI Macro Desk

🧠 Deep Perspective: From ‘Demographic Arbitrage’ to ‘Quality Stock’

Over the past decade, Canadian real estate growth was essentially ‘population arbitrage’. The massive influx of NPRs created an illusion that even without productivity gains, simply adding more people would drive house prices and rents higher. The 2025 ‘black line pivot’ marks the end of this arbitrage era. Future property value will no longer be determined by ‘head count’, but by the affordability supported by local industries.

2. Demand-Side Collapse: From ‘Fighting for Homes’ to ‘Fighting for Tenants’
-2.8%
National rent YoY (Feb)
Rents down for 17 consecutive months. NPR exodus directly weakens rental demand.
-7.4%
Peak rent drop (major cities)
Toronto/Vancouver rents are 7.4% below their peak two years ago.
26 mo
Inventory months (parts of GTA)
Soft rental market spills into sales: condo inventory soars.

🧠 Logic breakdown: NPRs (students, workers) are the bedrock of the rental market. Their departure pushes rents down, crushing ‘rental cover’ investors. As investors stop buying (or start selling), the ‘more people = more demand’ consensus shatters.

🧠 Rental Market Psychology: From ‘Panic Renting’ to ‘Defensive Vacancy’

17 months of consecutive rent declines have triggered a classic ‘buy when rising, avoid when falling’ psychology. The current stalemate: landlords are waiting for rates to drop, while the market is waiting for landlords to crack under negative cash flow and be forced to sell.

3. Supply Crisis: GTA’s 26-Month ‘Indigestion’
20,557 units
GTA new home inventory

At current absorption rate, it would take 26 months to clear — a balanced market is 5-6 months. Above 9 months is a buyer’s market. 26 months is an extreme buyer’s market signal.

Region New Inventory (units) Months of Inventory Status
Downtown Toronto 6,420 28 months Severe glut
North York 3,850 24 months Buyer’s market
Mississauga 3,120 22 months High pressure
Vaughan 2,580 19 months Pressure building
Richmond Hill 1,980 17 months Buyer’s market
Oakville 1,207 12 months Buyer’s market

🧠 Structural Analysis: The 26-Month ‘Inventory Indigestion’ is Concentrated in Micro-Units

The 26-month absorption period is primarily piled up in micro-units (studios under 450 sq ft). These units were specifically designed as tailor-made products for NPR students and yield-hungry investors.

⚡ Crisis point: Studios under 450 sq ft.
✅ Safe haven: 2B/3B units suitable for families.

📉 The Broken Bet: Miscalculation by Developers & Investors

In 2023-2024, developers and early investors widely expected a demand rebound in 2026 as interest rates eased. Instead, population began to shrink. Demand didn’t recover; it vanished with the NPR exodus.

4. The Ultimate Question: Who Will Step In?
Developers’ Dilemma
Construction financing costs remain high, pre-sales are below breakeven. Some projects face cancellation or deep discounts.
Investors Exit
Negative cash flow on micro-units is driving a surge in listings; CoreLogic data shows investor selling activity rising to 37% of listings.

🔍 HousingAI Simulation: Without demographic support, GTA condo prices could fall another 10-15% over the next two years. Regions with continued net inflow (Alberta) may prove more resilient.

🧠 HousingAI Regional Hedge: Alberta vs. Ontario

Ontario/BC: In a ‘squeeze-out’ phase. Their high absolute prices mean the NPR exodus is lethal to the market.

Alberta (Calgary/Edmonton): Showing rare ‘inter-provincial migration hedge’. Despite fewer NPRs, local residents fleeing Toronto’s unaffordability are moving west.

💬 What’s Your Take?

In the absence of population tailwinds, which Canadian regions can withstand this ‘volume shock’?

Join the discussion 👇

#CanadaPopulationDecline
#StatsCan
#GTAInventory
#2026HousingMarket
#NPRexodus
#CanadianEconomy

HousingAI

Data-driven · Uncovering real estate’s underlying logic

Sources: Statistics Canada (2026.3.18), TRREB, Rentals.ca, HousingAI model integration. Reproduction with attribution only.