Average MLS house prices, July 2007
 Price

Year-to-year % change

 Calgary  436,739  22.1 
 Durham Region  267,497  3.1
 Edmonton  353,919  38.0
 Halifax-Dartmouth   219,032  9.9
 Hamilton-Burlington & District    268,561  10.4
 Kitchener-Waterloo  251,075  5.1
 London & St. Thomas   201,049  2.3
 Mauricie (Trois-Rivières)  113,699  1.3
 Montreal    233,424  4.2
 Ottawa  269,793  6.0
 Outaouais (Hull)  173,538    10.7
 Quebec City  171,824  17.3
 Regina  176,537  28.7
 Saguenay-Lac Saint-Jean  122,764  6.6
 Saint John  136,995  8.1
 Saskatoon   245,152  53.7
 St. Catharines & District  219,522  6.6
 Newfoundland & Labrador   152,718  1.3
 Sudbury  179,844  18.6
 Thunder Bay  124,643  -0.2
 Toronto  366,012  7.0
 Greater Vancouver  581,108  12.2
 Windsor-Essex  167,206  -0.2
 Winnipeg   174,942  14.4
 Source: Canadian Real Estate Association

Led downward by a $15,951 drop in Toronto, the average price of a house sold through multiple listing services in 24 Canadian markets fell 0.8 per cent in July from June's record level.

But that average price — $332,442 — was still up 13.1 per cent from the July 2006 level, the biggest year-over-year rise since April 2004, the Canadian Real Estate Association said.

The figures were released Wednesday by CREA.

Among markets showing gains, Vancouver was one of the standouts.


Its average July price of $581,108 was up $16,406 or 2.9 per cent from June and was 12.2 per cent higher than in July 2006.
Toronto's July average, $366,012, was down $15,951 or 4.1 per cent from June but up seven per cent from July 2006.

Toronto Real Estate Board president Donald Bentley said the month-to-month drop was no shock because high-end properties don't tend to sell well in July and August.

"People are at the cottage and so on," he told CBC News Online.

Brian Naphtali, president of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, said high-end sales were one of the forces behind his city's surge.

There have been 45 sales above $5 million in the Vancouver area so far this year, compared with 23 in all of 2006, he told CBC News Online.

On a year-to-year basis, the biggest percentage price jumps were in Saskatoon (where the July average price was $245,152, up 53.7 per cent), Edmonton ($353,919, up 38 per cent) and Regina ($176,537, up 28.7 per cent).

Prices were down in St. Catharines, Ont., and nearly unchanged in Thunder Bay and Windsor-Essex.

In a commentary on CREA's figures on Wednesday, BMO Capital Markets economist Douglas Porter focused on the fact that 32,420 homes changed hands in July.

"Sales rose 0.8 per cent from already lofty June levels, and were up a towering 19.5 per cent from year-ago levels," he said.

He called this "another clear sign that the underlying Canadian economy had plenty of momentum before the credit squalls broke."

Corrections and Clarifications

  • The president of the Toronto Real Estate Board is Donald Bentley, not John Bentley as originally reported. Aug. 16, 2007|1 p.m.