The aggregate price of a home in Ottawa will increase two per cent in the fourth quarter of 2026 compared with the same quarter last year, according to a forecast from Royal LePage released this week. This beats the projected national increase of one per cent, and is also ahead of regions such as the […]
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The aggregate price of a home in Ottawa will increase two per cent in the fourth quarter of 2026 compared with the same quarter last year, according to a forecast from Royal LePage released this week.
This beats the projected national increase of one per cent, and is also ahead of regions such as the Greater Toronto Area, where aggregate home prices are expected to fall by 4.5 per cent over the course of the year.
Royal LePage expects the average aggregate home price in Ottawa to reach $786,624 in the fourth quarter, up from $771,200 a year earlier.
“Ottawa’s housing market saw a slower-than-usual start to the year, with sales below long-term averages, though activity has begun to pick up as we head into the spring market,” said Jason Ralph, broker and owner, Royal LePage Team Realty.
“Buyers remain active, particularly at more affordable price points, but they are taking more time and approaching decisions more cautiously. Pricing has remained relatively stable overall, with modest recent gains since the start of the year suggesting early signs of strengthening as we move into the spring season.”
In the first quarter of 2026, the aggregate price of a home in Ottawa dropped 0.5 per cent year-over-year to $775,800. Broken out by housing type, the median price of a single-family detached home decreased 0.5 per cent to $882,200, while the median price of a condominium fell 2.6 per cent to $400,500 during the same period.
Ralph said market conditions continue to vary across housing segments, with townhomes seeing the strongest activity and condo sales starting to stabilize after a period of elevated supply. Demand for single-family homes has remained steady, he added, especially at entry-level price points.
“Looking ahead, I anticipate a busier spring market that will help to offset the slower start to the year,” said Ralph. “Inventory levels remain higher than in recent years, giving buyers more choice and keeping the market in balanced territory, while prices are expected to remain relatively stable in the months ahead.”
Royal LePage’s forecast came a week after the Ottawa Real Estate Board said the local resale market “showed clear signs of early spring momentum” in March even though home sales continued to lag behind last year’s levels.
A total of 1,075 residential properties changed hands in Ottawa last month, down 4.7 per cent year-over-year but an improvement on February’s 6.8 per cent decline from the previous year.
The average residential sale price was $692,584 in March, up 0.9 per cent from the same month in 2025, while the median price was $642,000, down 0.5 per cent year-over-year.
The city’s stock of resale housing also continued to grow, with new listings up 7.5 per cent from March 2025 to 2,452. Active listings rose 10.3 per cent year-over-year to 3,578.
In a news release last week, OREB said sales are “keeping pace with new supply,” leading to a “gradual tightening” of market conditions as prices rose across most property types.
“March’s activity is a clear sign that Ottawa’s market doesn’t move in dramatic shifts,” OREB president Tami Eades said in a release.
“What we’re seeing is a measured, steady return to activity. Inventory is up, sales are improving, and pricing is firming without overheating. We expect a more active and stable market in the months ahead.”
OREB also said recent announcements from the federal and provincial governments – such as a plan to eliminate the 13 per cent harmonized sales tax on new homes in Ontario worth up to $1 million and a pledge to give billions of dollars to help municipalities cut development charges – “represent one of the most significant aligned housing policy efforts in recent years,” adding the moves “will likely spur activity in Ottawa’s housing market.”
New housing starts in Ottawa-Gatineau jumped more than 50 per cent in March compared with a year earlier, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said Friday.
Builders began work on a total of 1,094 new housing units last month, up from 726 in March 2025.
Multi-unit projects – which were built at a record pace in 2025 – continued to be the hottest housing type. There were 969 new apartment, condo and other multi-unit starts in March, a 56 per cent increase from 620 a year earlier.
