Archive for the ‘Real Estate Related’ Category

Canada added more than 431,000 new permanent residents in 2022

Wednesday, January 4th, 2023

How many new immigrants came into Canada last year?

Ephraim Vecina
CMP

Feds reveal the volume of new arrivals into Canada

Canada added more than 431,000 new permanent residents last year, marking its largest ever annual increase and exceeding the 2022 immigration target established by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada reported that the 2022 volume also significantly outstripped the prior year’s record level of approximately 401,000 newcomers.

“Prior to setting a new record for admissions in 2021, the last time Canada welcomed such a large numbers of newcomers was in 1913,” the agency said. “In 2022, IRCC processed approximately 5.2 million applications for permanent residence, temporary residence, and citizenship. That’s double the number of applications processed in 2021.”

IRCC has offered assurances that it will continue to incorporate new technology and processes to make new arrivals as smooth and efficient as possible.

“These changes are all important improvements to Canada’s immigration system, which will position us well for the future,” IRCC said. “As the Government of Canada focuses on addressing the acute labour market shortages we are facing today and building a strong economy into the future, one thing remains certain: immigration is a key part of the solution.”

How many new Canadians are expected over the next few years?

Immigration minister Sean Fraser said that the federal government’s revised targets are set for 465,000 new Canadians in 2023, and then 500,000 by 2025.

As immigrants will be evaluated based on work skills and experience, the influx of new arrivals is expected to bolster Canada’s economic capacity amid labour market volatility, Fraser said.

“Our plan has a focus on economic growth,” he said. “And by the third year of this plan, 60% of new immigrants will be admitted under economic immigration categories.”

The national statistics agency estimated that by 2036, immigrants will account for almost a third of the Canadian population, versus the 21% share in 2011.

 

Copyright © 1996-2023 KM Business Information Canada Ltd.

Despite the sharp drop in sales, benchmark prices remained stable in December | REBGV

Wednesday, January 4th, 2023

Vancouver homebuyers prove willing, but listings are weak

Frank O’Brien
Western Investor

Housing sales accounted for more than 100 per cent of new listings added in Greater Vancouver during December

Benchmark condo apartment prices ended 2022 up 1.7 per cent from the same time a year earlier, at $713,700. | Chung Chow

Greater Vancouver’s housing market added a surprise twist to a year of plot changes as sales in December surpassed the total number of new listings, in some communities running at a two-to-one ratio.

In all, reports the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV), 1,295 residential properties sold in the last month of 2022, from a total of 1,206 new listings. This resulted in a sales-to-new-listing ratio of 107 per cent, among the highest seen during the frenzied action of 2020-21.

“If anyone thinks sellers are panic selling, this suggests the exact opposite,” noted Kevin Skipworth, managing partner with Dexter Realty in Vancouver. “If there had been more listings, there would have been more sales – bottom line. We would have likely seen the highest number of homes sold in Greater Vancouver in December if that were the case.”

However, new listings in December had plunged 60 per cent from a month earlier and were nearly a third lower than the 10-year average for the month.

December sales, in comparison, were down 52 per cent compared to December 2021, nearly 20 per cent less than in November 2022 and 37.7 per cent below the 10-year average for the month. The main drag on transactions was a 50-basis point December 7 increase in the Bank of Canada lending rate, the seventh rate increase since February 2022.Despite the sharp drop in sales, benchmark prices remained stable in December, according to REBGV data, especially in the strata sector.

Benchmark townhouse prices ended 2022 at $1,012,700. This represents a mere 0.2 per cent decrease from December 2021, a 1.5 per cent decrease compared to November 2022, and a 9.2 per cent decrease over the past six months.

The benchmark price of a condominium apartment is $713,700. This is a 1.7 per cent increase from December 2021, a 0.9 per cent decrease compared to November 2022, and a 6.9 per cent decrease over the past six months.

The benchmark price for a detached house is now $1,823,300, which is down 5 per cent from December of last year and 1.8 per cent lower than in November 2022 and 11.4 per cent less than six months ago.

The composite benchmark price for all residential properties is currently $1,114,300. This represents a 3.3 per cent decrease over December 2021, a 1.5 per cent decrease compared to November 2022, and a 9.8 per cent decrease over the past six months.

The total number of homes currently listed for sale on the multiple listing service system in Greater Vancouver is 7,384, a 41 per cent increase compared to December 2021 and a 19.6 per cent decrease compared to November 2022.

The REBGV expects 2023 to face same challenges of higher mortgage rates that characterized the last half of 2022.

“The headline story in our market in 2022 was inflation and the Bank of Canada’s efforts to bring inflation back to target by rapidly raising [interest rates]. This is a story we expect to continue to make headlines into 2023, as inflationary pressures remain persistent across Canada,” said Andrew Lis, REBGV’s director, economics and data analytics.

 

© 2023 Western Investor

Housing sales in B.C. in 2022 down 50% compared to a year earlier | BCREA

Wednesday, January 4th, 2023

Cooling off period comes to coldest housing market in years

Frank O’Brien
Western Investor

Effective January 3 ,2023, a B.C. homebuyer has three business day to cancel a sales agreement

  Amid B.C.’s coldest housing market in years, where it now takes weeks for the average home to sell, the province has brought in a cooling-off period for home buyers.

The legislation, first in Canada’s resale housing market, came into effect January 3, 2023.

Housing sales in B.C. in 2022 were down 50 per cent compared to a year earlier, according to the BC Real Estate Association. As of December, it took an average of 31 days for a home to sell in Greater Vancouver, where December sales reached 1,303 transactions, down from 2,737 in the same month a year earlier, reports the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver.

December housing sales in the metro region posted the lowest level since 2018 and were 31 per cent below the 10-year average for the month.

Nevertheless, the new legislation is meant to protect buyers from being pressured into high-risk sales, according to the province.

“Too many people have been faced with giving up an inspection in order to buy a home,” said Selina Robinson, Minister of Finance. “This is a major step toward providing homebuyers with the peace of mind they deserve while protecting the interests of people selling their homes – for today’s market and in the future.”

The homebuyer protection period includes a rescission (cancellation) fee of 0.25 per cent of the purchase price, or $250 for every $100,000, for those who choose to back out of a deal. For example, if the purchaser exercises the right of rescission on a $1-million home, they would be required to pay $2,500 to the seller.

Buyers still may make offers conditional on home inspections or financing at any time. The protection period will offer homebuyers the opportunity for due diligence at times when such conditions are not in place.

The homebuyer protection period is informed by the results of consultations completed last year with a wide range of real estate industry stakeholders, including home inspectors, appraisers, realtors and academics, as well as representatives from the legal and financial services sectors, according to the province.

These consultations took place before and during the first six months of 2022 before a series of mortgage rate hikes flattened the market. In Greater Vancouver, for example, 18,879 sales were recorded in the first half of 2022 compared to just 10,348 in the second half of the year.

The cooling off period, which was first announced in July of 2022, covers three consecutive business days and it cannot be waived, even if both parties agree.

The legislation allows some exclusions, which include:

• Pre-sale contracts, such as on pre-completion condos, are not affected, as such transaction are already subject to a seven-day rescission period under  section 21 of the Real Estate Development Marketing Act;

• residential real estate located on leased land (such as First Nation leaseholds);

• residential real estate sold at  auction; and

  • residential real estate sold under a court order or supervision of a court.

 

© 2023 Western Investor

Demand and home prices hit new highs, before abruptly turning in the opposite direction in response to higher mortgage interest rates

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2023

Here Are the U.S. Cities Where Home Prices Rose and Fell the Most in 2022

Evan Wyloge
other

By any definition, 2022 was one wild, white-knuckle roller coaster of a year for real estate. Demand and home prices hit new highs, before abruptly turning in the opposite direction in response to higher mortgage interest rates.

With so much churn and fluctuation in markets across the U.S., it’s been a challenge all year to keep track of which places were up and which were down—the cities where prices remained near their peak and where they dipped the most. That’s why Realtor.com® crunched the numbers to come up with the definitive home pricing scorecard for 2022.

And there’s plenty at stake. For those who purchased a home earlier this year, the dip in prices in some areas could mean their home is worth less now than what they paid. For those who were priced out of homeownership, the same price declines could mean a renewed chance to finally snag a place.

And where prices remain high, those who have owned for more than a couple of years can revel in the mighty home equity they’ve gained. Those still looking for a home in the same areas will feel the pressure of high home costs.

What the numbers reveal is not a huge surprise, especially in the list of the metro areas that have fallen in price the most.

“It’s a who’s who of cities that became popular during the [COVID-19] pandemic,” says George Ratiu, Realtor.com® senior economist and manager of economic research. “These are destinations for people who were fleeing high-cost urban cities.”

Now, those areas are seeing prices that had risen the most coming back down to Earth.

“It’s the natural reaction to the sharp run-up in prices over the past couple of years now meeting the new, higher mortgage rates this year,” Ratiu says.

As for the markets that have held on to their price increases, Ratiu says they all have something in common: They’re all historically affordable locations, mostly in the middle of the country.

“They offer home buyers a lot of value,” says Ratiu.

They likely also benefited from another dynamic at play during the pandemic era: a spillover effect from markets that were hottest during the same period, but which now see prices plateauing or falling.

To determine our rankings, we looked at the year-over-year change in the median price per square foot for the 100 largest metro areas in the country on Realtor.com, from mid-December 2021 to mid-December 2022. Then we pulled out the five markets with the biggest year-over-year increase and the five markets with the biggest decrease. We limited our rankings to only the single largest increase and decrease per state, in order to ensure geographic diversity. (Metros include the main city and surrounding suburbs, towns, and smaller urban areas.) Biggest price increases of 2022

1. Omaha, NE Year-over-year change in price per square foot: +21.6% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $181 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $342,500 Omaha has the biggest year-over-year price gains of any place on the list, rising from the median of $149 per square foot to $181. However, even with the 20%-plus increase in prices in just one year, it’s still relatively affordable compared with the rest of the country. Prices are about 15% below the national average of $212 a square foot.

Nebraska’s largest city by far is home to several Fortune 500 companies, including Warren Buffett’s international holding company, Berkshire Hathaway. The area is also known for its low cost of living, vibrant music scene, and world-class zoo and aquarium.

Omaha is also halfway between Denver and Chicago and, Ratiu says, is a prime example of how midsized cities in the Midwest benefited from their proximity to larger places, especially those that had become frenzied markets during the pandemic.

“The markets where the most people were looking at home [listings] in Omaha were Chicago, Washington, DC, and Denver,” Ratiu says.

2. Jackson, MS Year-over-year change in price per square foot: +21.6% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $144 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $316,000 Jackson led the Deep South in year-over-year appreciation, rising more than 20%—but it’s still more than 30% below the national average. Prices rose in the capital of Mississippi throughout the year, with a small dip in the middle of the year. It ultimately ended the year almost tied with Omaha for the biggest year-over-year increase in price per square foot.

This iconic Southern city has several fundamental strengths that add to its draw. In addition to being the capital of Mississippi and the seat of state government, it’s also home to Jackson State University and the University of Mississippi Medical Center, as well as a strong manufacturing industry. It’s also a hub of Southern culture, and the area is filled with antebellum mansions and historical sites.

For $320,000, home hunters can get a midcentury four-bedroom home in the Belhaven neighborhood, north of downtown Jackson, or a sprawling, ranch-style home farther in the Jackson suburbs. 3. Wichita, KS Year-over-year change in price per square foot: +21.5% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $135 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $289,900 Wichita, known as “The Air Capital of the World,” is the least expensive location on the list—a boon for buyers on a budget. The median listing price per square foot was more than 35% below the national average. And that’s after median listing prices rose by $60,000 over the past year. Wichita is known for its aviation industry, with aerospace companies Learjet, Cessna, and Airbus located there.

The city offers a mix of the walkable urban center, with the Old Town entertainment district at the center, and lots of outdoor lifestyle activities, like hiking and biking, or getting out on the Arkansas River.

Buyers can find updated, three-bedroom, two-bathroom houses on almost a half-acre for just under $230,000. Or they can pick up a smaller, two-bedroom, one-bathroom house for about $135,o00.

4. Milwaukee, WI Year-over-year change in price per square foot: +20.9% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $204 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $374,900 An anchor of the Midwest, Milwaukee, located on the shores of Lake Michigan, has the highest median listing price per square foot of any city on the biggest-increases half of the list. But it’s still about 4% lower than the national figure. And with a median listing price of $374,900, Milwaukee is still cheaper than what buyers will find in much of the rest of the country.

The city is known for its breweries and as the birthplace of the Harley-Davidson Motor Co. Motorcycle enthusiasts can visit the Harley-Davidson Museum and check out Elvis Presley’s own rides.

For right around Milwaukee’s median home price, shoppers can get a Victorian four-bedroom home in the Bay View neighborhood, walking distance from the Lake Michigan shore.

5. Little Rock, AR Year-over-year change in price per square foot: +20.1% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $142 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $299,900 Arkansas’ capital, Little Rock, rounds out the biggest-increases list, still with more than 20% listing price per square foot gains over the past year.

Little Rock is home to the Clinton Presidential Center, the Arkansas Arts Center, and the Old State House Museum, the oldest state capitol building west of the Mississippi River. It’s also an educational hub of the South, with the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and Philander Smith College.

There was some homebuying spillover from nearby markets that became overheated during the pandemic, says Melanie Jackson, the broker and owner of Unlimited Properties Realty in Little Rock. “People who would not normally have considered buying in or investing in Little Rock were gobbling things up. They were buying everything they could,” she says. “It was nice, as a listing agent, but hecticand it was tough on the buyers.”

While the sustained higher prices mean equity gains for owners, Jackson says it’s been tough to watch as locals have been priced out, or priced out of what they wanted.

Biggest price decreases of 2022

1. Boise City, ID Year-over-year change in price per square foot: -5.8% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $263 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $509,900 Boise was one of the hottest markets during the pandemic as an influx of former Californians moved in and builders rushed to put up more homes. List prices rose more than 70% between the beginning of 2020 and the middle of 2022. The skyrocketing prices in Boise reflected the surge in demand for places that offered affordability, relative to big coastal metropolitan areas that many buyers were moving from. Realtor.com economist Ratiu says it’s no surprise to see Boise leading the country in price declines since hiked interest rates put the brakes on the market. “The run-up in prices in a place like Boise, where there was such an inflow of new buyers, was tremendous, [especially] when you look at the size of the market or the local incomes,” Ratiu says. “The prices were out of alignment.”

Many sellers have been forced to reduce their asking prices to attract buyers—a big departure from a year ago. The percentage of homes in the metro with price cuts were up 100.9%. The sellers of this updated, three-bedroom, two-bathroom house cut the price $56,000 to $449,000 since it went on the market in late November.

2. Denver, CO Year-over-year change in price per square foot: -5.7% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $280 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $599,990 The Mile High City’s mile-high prices have come down some, as this pandemic destination’s red-hot market cools off.

Like Boise, Denver attracted a lot of newcomers who were fleeing urban areas that made Denver’s already above-average home prices look affordable. A perk for buyers were that the city and state are known for some of the lowest property taxes in the nation. That helped to keep monthly mortgage payments more manageable. Home prices in Denver surged about 35% between the beginning of the pandemic and early in 2022. But like in other cities, home prices began to fall, and now are almost 6% below last year.

For around $600,000, home shoppers can find a two-bedroom bungalow built in 1905 in Denver’s coveted Highlands neighborhood. 3. Sacramento, CA Year-over-year change in price per square foot: -3.1% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $328 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $591,500 California’s capital of Sacramento is the most expensive metro on the list, with homes around 50% above the national average.

However, it’s long been known for a relatively low cost of living and more relaxed lifestyle, compared with San Francisco, about an hour and a half southwest, where the median home list price in the metro was over $1 million in November. Those lower prices in Sacramento helped the city to attract Californians fleeing higher prices in the Bay Area who could suddenly work remotely. That helped to give prices a hefty boost.

Prices rose more than 35% between the beginning of 2020 and mid-2022. But the real estate market has since cooled as higher mortgage rates have changed the affordability equation.

For just under $600,000, home shoppers can find a small, two-bedroom home in Sacramento’s Marshall School neighborhood, east of the Capitol Mall city center.

4. New Orleans, LA Year-over-year change in price per square foot: -2.7% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $179 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $325,000 The Crescent City is the only Southern metro on the list of price declines, with prices down around 3% year over year.

That’s after prices in New Orleans went up around 30%. Home insurance costs in and around the storm-prone Big Easy are expected to rise in 2023, and the pandemic real estate frenzy has died down, helping to bring down prices. Median listing prices in New Orleans are still about 15% below the national average. And for about the metro’s median price of $325,000, shoppers can find a three-bedroom home in the Central City neighborhood, southwest of the city’s famous Canal Street.

5. Chicago, IL Year-over-year change in price per square foot: -1.6% Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price per square foot: $188 Mid-Dec. 2022 median listing price: $320,000 Chicago is the most populous metro on the list, and the one with the decline closest to flat for the year. That more modest home pricing decrease is a function of the Second City’s size and diversity, according to Nancy Nugent, the global real estate adviser and senior vice president at Jameson Sotheby’s International Realty. “Chicago fares better because we have so many industries and multiple economies,” Nugent says. Despite the modest declines, Nugent says she is still seeing plenty of activity in Chicago’s real estate market. It’s still relatively affordable compared with many other large cities.

“We’re climbing out of the COVID era, and people are coming back to the city,” she says. “There’s a real resurgence right now.”

Chicago home shoppers can get a two-bedroom condominium for around $320,000 in the city’s famous Lincoln Park.

© 1995-2023 National Association of REALTORS® and Move, Inc.

HELOC load just one sign of the “extreme level” of indebtedness that currently characterizes the Canadian financial system | David Rosenberg

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2023

How large is Canada’s current HELOC load?

Ephraim Vecina
CMP

OSFI releases latest HELOC data

The value of loans secured by housing in Canada continued to go up with a 0.1% monthly uptick and a 9.6% increase to reach $308.9 billion in October, according to filings at the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions.

However, despite the surge, the monthly growth trend is showing some signs of a slowdown, Better Dwelling said in its analysis of the OSFI figures.

“October’s growth rate was the smallest in nearly two years, last matched in January 2021,” Better Dwelling stated. “It was also the worst October since 2019, when interest rates last hit a cycle peak. The slow month put an end to the highest annual growth reported in decades, possibly ever.”

The HELOC load is just one sign of the “extreme level” of indebtedness that currently characterizes the Canadian financial system, economist David Rosenberg warned recently.

“Consumers are shelling out more in total debt-service payments out of after-tax income today at a 4.25% BoC policy rate than they were three decades ago when the policy rate was 13%,” Rosenberg said in December.

What are the risks associated with a higher HELOC load?

The trend was revealed amid several warnings from the OSFI, which Better Dwelling said has uncovered growing evidence of risks associated with the increased use of home equity.

“This both hides their vulnerability, as well as ties economic consumption to home values,” Better Dwelling said. “It provides a greater risk when the surge is aligned with unsustainable home price growth… Any economic shock or a home price correction can compound fallout to the economy as this problem grows.”

 

Copyright © 1996-2023 KM Business Information Canada Ltd.

Blackwater construction team has made significant progress in Q4 2022

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2023

B.C.’s Blackwater Gold mine construction to start this spring

Nelson Bennett
Western Investor

Blackwater Gold mine near Vanderhoof will start in the first quarter, despite permit delay
Work camp to be expanded to accommodate 475 workers. | Artemis Gold
Construction of B.C.’s newest gold mine – the Blackwater mine 110 kilometres south of Vanderhoof — is expected to begin in earnest in the first quarter this year, despite a delay in permitting.
Artemis Gold had expected a Mines Act permit to be in hand in the fall of 2022, but now expects to get the permit in the first quarter of 2023.
“While we are disappointed that we did not receive the BC Mines Act permits as planned in fall 2022, they are well advanced and are expected to be finalized in the coming weeks,” Artemis CEO Steven Dean said in a project update.
“The Blackwater construction team has made significant progress in Q4 2022, with Blackwater on-site activities progressing on schedule. The construction camp and process plant area preparation and bulk earthworks are on track to be completed prior to the start of major works.”
Early works already underway include logging and site clearing, expansion of a work camp and installation of a waste water treatment plant. About 100 workers have been employed in early works activities since September.
The company expects major works construction to start early in 2023. The work includes expansion of a work camp to accommodate up to 475 workers and construction of a new 133-kilometre transmission line.
The Blackwater mine’s initial capital cost is estimated at $645 million. In October, the company closed on $175 million in equity financing through the sale of 38.9 million common shares at $4.50 per share.
According to a feasibility study, the mine would produce an average of 321,000 ounces of gold annually over the first five years with all-in sustaining costs of US$578 per ounce.
As of January 3, 2023, gold was trading at $1,827 per ounce.

© 2023 Western Investor

Calgary continues to report activity that is better than levels seen before the pandemic and higher than long-term trends for the city

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2023

Calgary’s December home sales down 31% from last year, real estate board says

The Canadian Press
CBC Radio

The Calgary Real Estate Board says it capped the year with 29,672 sales, including 1,204 in December. (Robson Fletcher/CBC)

The Calgary Real Estate Board says home sales in the region ended the year on a record high even though December sales fell 31 per cent from a year ago.

The board says it capped the year with 29,672 sales, including 1,204 last month.

The December decline in sales was not enough to offset gains made earlier in the year, when homes changed hands at a faster pace.

However, the month was marked with higher prices. The board found the median home price rose five per cent from last year to $451,250, while the average price was up four per cent to $495,231 and the benchmark price climbed eight per cent to $518,800.

Meanwhile, December’s new listings amounted to 1,031, a 16 per cent drop from last year.

The board’s chief economist Ann-Marie Lurie says the region’s inventory sat at 2,214 units available, making it the lowest level of inventory reported for December in more than a decade.

“Housing market conditions have changed significantly throughout the year, as sales activity slowed following steep rate gains throughout the later part of the year,” she said in a news release.

“However, Calgary continues to report activity that is better than levels seen before the pandemic and higher than long-term trends for the city. At the same time, we have faced persistently low inventory levels, which have prevented a more significant adjustment in home prices this year.”

 

©2023 CBC/Radio-Canada.

14.2 acres industrial land sells for $111 Million located at 19469 92 Avenue, Surrey

Thursday, December 29th, 2022

Surrey 14.2-acre industrial site sells for $111 million

Western Investor Staff
Western Investor

With frontage on 92 Avenue and an estimated two years to development, the land sold for $7.8 million per acre in the fourth quarter, 2022.

Colliers, Vancouver, for Western Investor

 

Property type: Industrial land

Location: 19469 92 Avenue, Surrey

Land size: 618,944.04 square feet

Land size in acres: 14.2 acres

Zoning: Light industrial

Date of sale: October 2, 2022

Buyer: Conwest Group, Vancouver.

Brokerage: Colliers, Vancouver

Brokers: Malcolm Earle, Josh Gaze and Randy Heed 

 

© 2023 Western Investor

2 acres industrial land in Surrey sells for $14 Million

Thursday, December 29th, 2022

Surrey two-acre industrial site sold for $14 million

Western Investor Staff
Western Investor

Two-lot assembly on 192 Street sold for $7 million per acre in the first quarter of 2022.

Colliers, Vancouver, for Western Investor

 

Property type: Industrial land

Location: 9714 and 9718, 192 Street, Surrey, B.C.

Land size: 87,120 square feet

Land size in acres: 2 acres

Date of sale: February 25, 2022

Price: $14 million

Seller: Private local investor

Buyer: Beedie Group, Burnaby

Brokerage: Colliers, Vancouver

Brokers: Darren Cannon and Josh Gaze 

 

© 2023 Western Investor

Canadas ban on foreign homebuyers comes into effect on Jan. 1

Thursday, December 22nd, 2022

Update: Details released on foreign-home buyer ban

Western Investor Staff
Western Investor

Federal government says buyer ban will exempt many students, refugees, temporary workers multi-family rental property and vacation properties,

Foreign-home buyer ban comes with long list of exemptions. | File photo

Ahmed Hussen, Minister of Housing and Diversity and Inclusion, has put some meat on the bones of new regulations under the new Prohibition on the Purchase of Residential Property by Non-Canadians Act, which comes into force within days.

The  act will ban foreign investors from buying non-recreational residential property in Canada. The act will come into effect on January 1, 2023, for a period of two years.

As recently reported here, there was growing concern that few details had been announced for the looming ban. According to the December 22 statement (today), most recreational property and many non-Canadians will be exempt.

The Act prohibits foreign commercial enterprises and people who are not Canadian citizens or permanent residents from acquiring non-recreational, residential property in Canada.

It establishes a $10,000 fine for non-Canadians who buy residential property in contravention of the prohibition. Exceptions are set out for some circumstances. Individuals with temporary work permits, refugee claimants, and international students may be exempt if they meet certain criteria.

International students, who meet other requirements, will be able to purchase a property valued at no more than $500,000.

Buildings containing more than three dwelling units, such as a fourplex or other multi-family rentals apartments, will also be exempt.

The regulations will be automatically repealed after two years.

“The prohibition is just one way that the government is working to make housing more accessible to Canadians. Through our National Housing Strategy, we’re investing in initiatives to increase the supply of rental housing, build more homes, and bring down the barriers that keep them from being built,” according to a government statement.

 

 

© 2023 Western Investor