The average resale home in January cost 11.2 per cent more than it did a year earlier, new figures show.

The average selling price in Canada's major markets last month was $299,318, according to MLS data from the Canadian Real Estate Association. That's up more than $30,000 from January 2006.

Price gains in Edmonton and Calgary led the country, figures show.Price gains in Edmonton and Calgary led the country, figures show.

Edmonton's prices were up an astonishing 52.6 per cent over the 12-month period — to $303,820. Average selling prices in Calgary rose 29.6 per cent to $375,646.

Those were record prices in both Calgary and Edmonton. Prices also reached all-time highs in Saskatoon, Hamilton-Burlington, London, St. Thomas and Quebec City.

The most expensive real estate in the country continued to be in Vancouver, where the average home sold for $530,695 in January — up 16 per cent over the last year.

Prices in Central and Eastern Canada rose by much more modest amounts. Toronto real estate increased by 6.3 per cent (to $353,724); Montreal by 2.4 per cent (to $209,651); and Halifax by 2.5 per cent to ($197,246).

"Low mortgage interest rates, high employment, rising incomes and upbeat consumer sentiment will keep the housing market on a strong footing for the foreseeable future," CREA economist Gregoy Klump said in a statement.

CREA said rising home prices have prompted it to ask Ottawa to boost the maximum loan available under the Home Buyers Plan.

Currently, first-time home buyers are allowed to take $20,000 out of their RRSPs to use as a down payment. The limit hasn't changed since the program began in 1992.

CREA wants the maximum allowed individual withdrawal boosted to $25,000.