
Harpinder Virk
BLOG / NEWS Updates
CMHC: 2026 Mid-Year Rental Market Update
Increased supply and slower demand have eased asking rents, bringing Canada’s major rental markets toward more balanced conditions. However, trends vary by segment, including building age and rent level. Conditions are expected to continue easing as new units take longer to be absorbed and competition from rental condominium apartments increases. This is creating short-term imbalances in newer, higher-priced segments.
Highlights
- Asking rents declined due to increased supply and slower population growth, while average rents for occupied units continued to rise.
- Vacancy increases are mostly concentrated in new supply, where landlord-provided incentives support absorption.
- Rental markets are easing as new completions take longer to absorb, while competition from rental condominium apartments in certain markets is creating a short-term imbalance between supply and demand in new, higher-priced segments.
- Conditions remain very tight in the lowest rent quartiles in most markets, implying little improvement in affordability.
- Tenant mobility is highest in more expensive units and more limited in lower-rent segments, despite recent gains in turnover.
- Rental demand is expected to grow, even with much lower population growth.
https://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/observer/2026/2026-mid-year-rental-market-update
Statistics Canada: The homeownership trajectories of recent immigrants
This article examines homeownership among recent immigrants to Canada and their pathways leading up to homeownership. It combines information from the Canadian Housing Statistics Program on homeowners in seven provinces—Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia—with immigration data for individuals who were admitted as permanent residents from 2017 to 2021. This is the second in a series of articles published in Housing Statistics in Canada that investigate homeownership among newcomers to Canada.
Key findings
- From 2018 to 2021, the homeownership rate increased for recent immigrants and decreased for Canadian-born individuals. In Ontario, the homeownership rate for recent immigrants in the fifth year after admission rose from 35.7% in 2018 to 40.2% in 2021, while it fell from 50.7% to 47.8% for Canadian-born individuals.
- By their fifth year after admission to Canada, economic-class immigrants had homeownership rates comparable to those of Canadian-born individuals. In British Columbia, economic-class immigrants in their fifth year after admission had a homeownership rate of 40.1%, compared with 43.3% for Canadian-born individuals.
- By their fifth year after admission to Canada, recent immigrants in the Maritime provinces and Manitoba had homeownership rates similar to those of Canadian-born individuals. The homeownership gap between recent immigrants and Canadian-born individuals was larger in Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia.
- Immigrant homeownership rates varied significantly by province and by region of the world in which immigrants were born.
- Recent immigrant homebuyers had lower incomes but purchased more expensive homes than Canadian-born buyers. This difference may be associated with higher mortgage debt and lower retirement savings among recent immigrant homebuyers.
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/46-28-0001/2026001/article/00002-eng.htm
TD Provincial Economic Forecast: Uneven Pitch: Provinces Play at Different Speeds
- The soft start to the year for the Canadian economy appears broad-based, underpinning 2026 real GDP growth downgrades across provinces, particularly in Ontario, B.C. and parts of the Atlantic. The picture is better in per capita terms, with positive growth expected across all provinces this year, led by Newfoundland and Labrador.
- A rebound in employment in May offered a modest lift to labour markets after a soft first quarter, but data volatility continues to cloud the underlying trends. Population growth is slowing sharply, with outright declines in Ontario, Quebec, and B.C. leading to smaller labour forces. This should help cap increases in unemployment, even as hiring slows to a near-standstill.
- The U.S.-Iran conflict has lifted global energy prices, providing a meaningful revenue and income boost to oil- producing provinces—particularly Alberta and Newfoundland and Labrador. Prices are expected to moderate through the back half of the year as Middle East tensions ease, though the outlook is highly uncertain. Higher fuel costs are weighing on households and businesses, especially in Central Canada.
- Provincial budget season has wrapped up, with deficits and net debt (both as a share of GDP) set to rise in aggregate this year. While FY 2026/27 program spending is set to gear down across provinces, weighing on GDP, committed public capital spending plans remain an important source of support. New initiatives were targeted rather than transformative, including measures such as the removal of the PST on groceries in Manitoba and tax cuts for businesses and new home purchases in Ontario.
- Canadian home sales in the second quarter are tracking broadly in line with our prior projection, led by Ontario, while price growth is somewhat stronger. We continue to expect a gradual recovery through next year, with modest improvements in Ontario and B.C. (supported by pent-up demand), partly offset by cooling activity in other regions amid scant population growth.
- The July 1 CUSMA review deadline is nearing, but timely renewal looks unlikely as talks have yet to pick up. Trade uncertainty remains elevated as the U.S. stays committed to tariffs. Ontario, Quebec, and B.C. are most exposed given their reliance on manufacturing and trade. Still, exemptions for CUSMA-compliant goods have left Canada facing relatively low effective tariff rates, helping support export recoveries in most provinces.
MY LENDERS







