Here's how much the average home in Ontario is expected to cost in 2025
Amid what has been an astoundingly sluggish few months for real estate in parts of Ontario, experts are now trying to reassure panicky sellers and developers that the heat is set to return to the market — and with it, even higher prices for buyers, if they're correct.
Following the release of Royal LePage's forecast earlier this week foretelling a 10 per cent hike in average home prices in the Toronto area specifically by the end of rhis year, the Canadian Real Estate Association has just dropped its own forecast for each province and the country at large looking further ahead to 2025.
Based on this year's trends so far, impending interest rate cuts and other factors, the trade group is calling for the cost of the typical home to increase in every single province next year, by as little as 2 per cent in P.E.I. to 7.9 per cent in Alberta.
While that prairie province will see the largest proportionate and dollar amount surge in housing costs, Ontario and B.C. were not far off (naturally, being the most expensive provinces to buy within in the country).
The CREA predicts that the average price of a house or condo in Ontario will rise by 0.7 per cent by the end of 2024 to hit $876,965 — still an escalation in a lifeless market that should be driving prices downward — before climbing 3.9 per cent in 2025, reaching $911,150.
The association also says activity will return with a vengeance, with 7.3 per cent more homes finding new owners in the province in 2025 (an expected total of 178,461) after a 2.2 per cent spike in this figure by the end of 2024 (an expected total of 166,303).
This puts Ontario ahead of all other provinces when it comes to the volume of home sales by far, though Nova Scotia and B.C. are set to see larger upticks in sales numbers (11 and 10.3 per cent, respectively).
"Since CREA's last forecast in April, expectations around interest rate cuts this year have been dialed back. Supply has also built up by more than expected as large numbers of sellers came to the market with properties for sale in the spring; however, buyers remained on the sidelines," the report states.
It adds that "lower interest rates are still expected to gradually bring buyers back into the market going forward," though not as strongly as the association had previously thought given this spring.
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