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Halifax Bucks the National Trend: New-Home Prices Climb While the Country Cools

Data from Statistics Canada — New Housing Market Report, 2025

Experimental estimates  |  Released June 17, 2026  |  Catalogue no. 62F0014M

Halifax Market Commentary

Halifax Bucks the National Trend: New-Home Prices Climb While the Country Cools

Statistics Canada’s latest figures show new single-detached prices in Halifax rising steadily through 2025, even as new-home starts fell and inventory built up across much of the country.

Executive Summary

  • The average new single-detached home in Halifax reached $792,500 in Q4 2025 — up roughly 6% across the year and second only to British Columbia’s metros among cities surveyed.
  • New semi-detached ($645,700) and condominium ($641,000) prices held essentially flat through 2025.
  • Atlantic Canada ran counter to the nation: regional new-home starts rose 10% year over year, while national starts fell 10%.
  • Completed-and-unabsorbed inventory in Halifax edged up to 106 units (+16%) — modest in absolute terms, but a signal of a slightly softer absorption pace into 2026.

Where New-Home Prices Landed

The fourth-quarter 2025 averages tell a clear story of a market led by detached product. The spread between a new single-detached home and a new condominium apartment now sits at roughly $151,500 — a meaningful premium for ground-oriented housing.

Average New-Home Price by Type — Halifax, Q4 2025

Single-detached house
$792,500
Semi-detached house
$645,700
Condominium apartment
$641,000

New row-house data was not available for Halifax in this period. Source: Statistics Canada, New Housing Market Report.

The Year in Motion

Single-detached pricing climbed in three of four quarters to finish the year at its high. Semi-detached and condominium pricing, by contrast, traced a flat line — ending 2025 within a percentage point of where they began.

New Single-Detached Average — Halifax, by Quarter 2025

Q1 2025
$746,600
Q2 2025
$784,600
Q3 2025
$780,900
Q4 2025
$792,500
Dwelling Type Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
Single-detached $746,600 $784,600 $780,900 $792,500
Semi-detached $640,800 $631,500 $631,000 $645,700
Condominium apartment $634,000 $638,500 $630,900 $641,000

Average list prices, Halifax CMA. Source: Statistics Canada, New Housing Market Report, 2025.

A Region Moving Against the Grain

The national picture in 2025 was one of cooling: for-sale housing starts fell 10% year over year, and the inventory of completed, unsold units rose 35%. Atlantic Canada told a different story. Regional new-home starts climbed 10%, with every census metropolitan area posting gains except Moncton (down 8%). Single-detached homes accounted for two-thirds of all new for-sale starts in the region.

For Halifax buyers, the entry point into new single-detached construction spans a wide band — from $383,000 to $655,000 — the broadest entry-level range in Atlantic Canada, reflecting a more varied pipeline of new product than neighbouring markets.

Completed & Unabsorbed Inventory — Halifax, Dec 2025

106 units

Up 16% year over year — modest in scale, but worth watching into 2026

A Note on the Numbers

These figures are average list prices, not a constant-quality price index. Quarter-to-quarter changes reflect whatever mix of homes happened to be on the market — size, composition, and quality are not held constant — so Statistics Canada advises caution when comparing periods directly. Halifax’s survey coverage was strong, with a 91% collection rate on the confirmed builder and developer frame.

What It Means for Halifax

The divergence is the headline. While much of the country saw new-home demand soften, Halifax’s detached market continued to firm. That resilience speaks to the structural demand story that has defined this market for several years now — steady in-migration, a constrained supply of ground-oriented housing, and a buyer base that continues to value detached living.

The flat trajectory in new condominium and semi-detached pricing is equally telling: it points to a market where attached and multi-unit product is keeping closer pace with supply, even as detached homes command a widening premium. For sellers of existing detached homes, that new-construction premium is a useful reference point. For buyers, the rising inventory of unsold new units is the first signal in some time that a little more choice may be returning to the market.

Considering a move in today’s Halifax market?

Let’s talk about what these numbers mean for your property specifically — backed by data, not guesswork.

Contact Sandra Pike

Authored by Sandra Pike, REALTOR®  |  The Pike Group, Royal LePage Atlantic

One of Halifax’s Top Resale Listing Agents Since 2016  |  Data-Driven Market Insights and Real Estate Commentary

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