Canadian Existing Home Sales (February 2025)
Leslie Preston, Managing Director & Senior Economist | 416-983-7053
Date Published: March 17, 2025
- Category:
- Canada
- Data Commentary
- Real Estate
Canadian housing market hit by snowstorms & tariff uncertainty in February
- Canadian existing home sales plunged 9.8% month-on-month (m/m) in February, the largest monthly decline since May 2022 – near the beginning of the Bank of Canada's aggressive interest rate hiking campaign.
- New listings also pulled back, down 12.7% m/m in February, reversing most of January's surge. The sales-to-new listings ratio rose very slightly to 49.9% from 48.3% – very much on the looser side of what's considered balanced. Notably, Ontario's housing market tipped further in favour of buyers, with the sales-to-new listings ratio dropping a but further to 36.6% from 37.3% in January, the loosest market conditions in the country.
- Canadian average home prices declined 4.6% m/m in February, with prices falling in eight out of ten provinces. In contrast, prices rose in Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
- The MLS home price index, a more "like for like" measure, declined 0.8% m/m, and is down 1% on a year-on-year basis. Prices for detached units were down 0.9% m/m, while condo prices fell 0.1% m/m. CREA cited that the renewed softening in prices was most notable in Ontario's Golden Horseshoe region.
Key Implications
- February's plunge in housing market activity has taken sales down to the lowest level since November 2023, with the twin hits of reduced confidence due to U.S. tariff threats and a big winter storm in Central Canada. Canadian home sales and prices had gained some momentum since the Bank of Canada began cutting rates last May. However, CREA noted that since tariffs were announced on January 20th a gap opened up between this year and last year's sales trends, suggesting uncertainty caused by tariffs has caused Canadians to think twice about this major purchase.
- The Bank of Canada has since cut interest rates further to help cushion demand in the face of this threat, which should provide some support for housing at the margins. But as long as the U.S. keeps the threat of punitive tariffs alive, confidence in the housing market is likely to be under a cloud.
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