Housing Is 37% More Affordable in Vancouver - But the Real Story Is What Comes Next Podcast Por  arte de portada

Housing Is 37% More Affordable in Vancouver - But the Real Story Is What Comes Next

Housing Is 37% More Affordable in Vancouver - But the Real Story Is What Comes Next

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Affordability in Vancouver has improved by roughly 37% from its 2023 peak. Monthly mortgage payments on an average home have fallen by about $1,500, dropping from roughly $5,600 to $4,100. That’s a material shift, bringing affordability back to early-2022 levels. Historically, when affordability sat here, transaction volumes were meaningfully higher. While payments remain well above pre-pandemic norms, the direction of travel matters—and for buyers watching the market closely, this is the most constructive affordability backdrop in years.


But beneath that surface improvement, cracks are forming. Developers—arguably the most forward-looking participants in housing—are pulling back sharply. Land sales, an early indicator of future housing supply, have collapsed well below historical norms. When developers stop buying land, it’s rarely about today’s headlines; it’s a judgment call on whether prices, financing, and demand will justify risk years down the road. The implication is uncomfortable: fewer projects today guarantees tighter supply later, particularly as population growth and confidence eventually normalize.


Employment data adds another layer of complexity. Canada’s labor market is cooling, but not in the way past downturns looked. Job losses are emerging in traditional sectors, yet unemployment hasn’t spiked because the workforce itself is shrinking—driven by retirements and slower population growth. That structural shift matters. Slower labor growth caps wage growth, which in turn limits housing demand over the long run. At the same time, uneven job creation across provinces may quietly redirect housing and rental demand to where employment is strongest.


On the rental front, the story is finally turning for tenants. Asking rents have fallen for more than a year and recently hit multi-year lows, with Vancouver among the steepest declines. Yet even here, the rate of decline is slowing—hinting that rental markets may be approaching stabilization.


Governments, facing slowing activity, are stepping in with incentives. Programs like Nova Scotia’s ultra-low down payment initiative underscore a key theme of the episode: these policies are less a sign of strength than a response to economic fragility. They don’t solve affordability at its root; they increase leverage in an already indebted system.


Add rising home insurance costs—driven by aging housing stock and extreme weather—and the cost pressures on ownership and rental housing continue to build, even as headline prices soften.


The takeaway is clear: today’s market is defined by contradictions. Affordability is improving, but demand remains hesitant. Supply is being quietly choked off. Costs are shifting rather than disappearing. And interest rates, once the dominant force, may now be the least volatile variable.


This episode isn’t about calling a top or a bottom. It’s about understanding where the next pressure points are forming—and why the decisions being made today may shape Canada’s housing landscape for the next decade.


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Contact Us To Book Your Private Consultation:

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Dan Wurtele, PREC, REIA

604.809.0834

dan@thevancouverlife.com


Ryan Dash PREC

778.898.0089
ryan@thevancouverlife.com


www.thevancouverlife.com

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