Vacation home market slows after pandemic boom, but prices still rising: Royal LePage
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While fewer Canadians may be looking to buy a vacation home in some regions compared with years past, a new report says prices are expected to increase in 2025 as demand still outpaces supply across most markets.
The report released March 26 by Royal LePage forecasts the median price of a single-family home in Canada’s so-called recreational regions to rise four per cent year-over-year to $652,808.
The national increase reflects expected price boosts in each provincial market, led by an eight per cent appreciation in Atlantic Canada to a median price of $498,852, and a 7.5 per cent increase in Quebec to $457,198.
Alberta remains the priciest province to own a recreational home, with Royal LePage forecasting a two per cent bump in the median price of a single-family property to nearly $1.3 million, followed by British Columbia at $951,762 — also a two per cent increase.
Ontario comes in third at an expected median price of $647,107, which would be one per cent above 2024. In the least expensive region, which combines Manitoba and Saskatchewan, the report forecasts the median price to go up 4.5 per cent to $310,052.
Royal LePage president and CEO Phil Soper said demand for recreational properties remains strong but balanced after three years of double-digit price growth during and after the pandemic.
He said many families still have a deep-rooted desire to own a vacation home and that is unlikely to change, even amid economic uncertainty and geopolitical tensions.
“The pandemic-era scramble for recreational properties, once reminiscent of a modern-day gold rush, has thankfully eased — along with the chaos of bidding wars and thin inventories. While the mainstream market is more sensitive to economic shifts, demand in the recreational segment remains steadfast, even during periods of market hesitation,” Soper said in a statement.