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Will Home Prices Drop in 2026?

As Calgary heads into 2026, one of the most common questions buyers and sellers ask is:
“Will home prices drop next year?”

The short answer: Some segments may soften, but Calgary is not heading toward a major price decline.
Here’s the full expert breakdown based on CREB data, historical trends, migration patterns, and local market behavior.


🏡 Where Prices Stand Today (Late 2025 Overview)

CREB’s latest numbers show Calgary’s benchmark price sitting around the mid-$550,000 range, down 4–5% year-over-year.
This reflects a normal market correction, not a crash  the type Calgary sees at the end of every rapid-growth cycle.

We’re currently in a balanced market, with:

  • ~6,000+ active listings

  • ~3.5 months of supply

  • Slower condo absorption

  • Stable detached-home activity

Balanced markets do not typically produce major price drops.


📉 The Expert Outlook

Based on the data and Calgary’s historical cycles, here’s the forecast:

1️⃣ Detached homes: Unlikely to drop significantly

Detached homes have:

  • Strong end-user demand

  • Limited supply in key districts

  • High desirability for families and relocations

Historically, Calgary’s detached segment has always recovered first and adjusted the least during balanced phases.

➡️ Forecast: Stable to mildly negative (0% to -2%)


2️⃣ Semi-detached and row homes: Mild softening possible

These markets follow detached trends but are more interest-rate sensitive.

➡️ Forecast: -1% to -3% depending on area


3️⃣ Condos: The segment most likely to adjust

Condo markets soften whenever:

  • New construction delivers

  • Investor demand slows

  • Rental vacancies rise

All three are happening heading into 2026.

➡️ Forecast: -3% to -6% potential decline before stabilizing

This is normal for Calgary  the condo market often lags the detached segment by about 12–18 months.


🧭 Why Calgary Won’t See a Major Price Drop

✔ Net migration remains extremely strong

Alberta continues attracting:

  • Ontario residents seeking affordability

  • International newcomers

  • Interprovincial job-seekers

Population growth supports long-term price stability.


✔ Calgary is still one of the most affordable major cities in Canada

A balanced market here does not behave like Vancouver or Toronto.
Even with corrections, Calgary remains:

  • Affordable

  • Upward-moving long term

  • Attractive for investors and families alike


✔ Oil & tech diversification is boosting employment

More jobs = more stability = more housing demand.
This keeps downward price pressure limited.


📊 2026: What Buyers Should Expect

  • More negotiating room in Q1/Q2

  • Better condo opportunities

  • Stable detached prices, especially in NW, SW, and inner-city areas

  • Fewer bidding wars, unless rates drop significantly

If you’re buying in 2026, this is a market where strategy beats speed.


📈 2026: What Sellers Should Expect

  • Homes must be priced properly to move

  • Presentation and marketing now matter more than ever

  • Detached sellers remain in a strong position

  • Condo sellers need realistic expectations

Sellers succeed in balanced markets when they follow the market, not fight it.

Final Thoughts

Some segments especially condos may soften.
Detached homes are expected to remain stable.
A citywide decline is unlikely.

Calgary is entering a healthy, sustainable cycle not a downturn.

 

Every neighborhood behaves differently.
Every property type has its own micro-trends.

If you want a tailored breakdown for your home or investment:

👉 Visit ItaniEstates.ca or send me a message

Book your consultation today.

Let’s plan your next move — together.
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