Canada’s Housing Market Is Improving, But Not Yet Investable Without Discipline
Canada’s housing market is sending a familiar message to investors: conditions are better than they were, but better does not mean cheap. The latest signals point to a market where affordability has improved, sales are stabilizing in key cities, and inventory is beginning to shift. Yet the underlying cost of ownership remains historically stretched.
Better Dwelling’s latest weekly market summary highlights RBC’s estimate that a median Canadian household needed 53% of its income to carry a home in Q1 2026. That is the best affordability reading in four years, but it also sits near the level seen in Q2 1990, when Canada’s last major housing bubble reached its peak.
For investors, this is the critical distinction. A market can improve from extreme stress and still remain expensive by long-term standards. Lower prices and modest income gains have helped affordability, but not enough to reset the market into obvious value territory. If home prices are already rising again and rate cuts are limited, the next leg of returns will depend less on broad appreciation and more on asset selection, financing structure, and rental fundamentals.
The macro backdrop also deserves caution. Canada’s GDP rose 0.5% in April after a March decline, but Better Dwelling notes that much of the growth came from oil and gas activity and public spending. Those are not necessarily durable demand drivers for residential property. If growth slows again, wage confidence and household formation could weaken, limiting buyer depth at today’s price levels.
The labour market offers another warning. Payrolls rose by 22,000 jobs in April, but much of the gain came from people taking second jobs. That is not the same as broad employment strength. For landlords, it may support rent payments in the short term. For buyers, it signals households are working harder to absorb the cost of living. That is not a foundation for aggressive leverage.
The opportunity is not in assuming the market has recovered. It is in recognizing where stress has created negotiable value.
Toronto and Vancouver reinforce the point. Toronto prices slipped 0.6% in June despite more sales and fewer listings. Inventory remains high, and one improved month does not restore normal market balance. Vancouver prices fell 0.2% in June and were down 6.0% year over year, while active listings remained elevated at 17,017. Sales improved from last year, but remained far below the 2016 peak.
This is where investors should separate headlines from tradable signals. Rising sales can indicate returning liquidity, which helps price discovery. Elevated inventory, however, gives buyers time and leverage. In markets like Toronto and Vancouver, that combination can favour disciplined acquisition strategies, particularly for properties with rental upside, motivated sellers, or renovation potential.
The key risk is mistaking stabilization for acceleration. If affordability is still near past bubble levels, investors should underwrite conservatively. Stress-test higher carrying costs. Avoid relying on near-term rate cuts. Treat rental income as the primary return engine, not speculative appreciation.
For KG Invest readers, the takeaway is simple: Canada’s housing market is no longer frozen, but it is not broadly cheap. The strongest opportunities will likely come from patient negotiation in high-inventory segments, not from chasing a national rebound that the fundamentals have not yet confirmed.
Source: Better Dwelling


