Real estate ranking pegs Ottawa middle-of-the-pack

By Jason White

Ottawa's stable economy and real estate value-for-money have helped maintain its ranking as a steady, middle-of-the-road real estate market, according to the latest annual MoneySense ranking Where to Buy Now.

Brantford, Ontario was ranked the best city in Canada to buy real estate. Often known as “Telephone City” after its famous resident and inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell, Brantford came out on top when MoneySense factored in a number of variables including price momentum, value relative to nearby areas and the cost of renting.

Every year, MoneySense tracks real estate prices across Canada and uses a data-driven test to capture the hottest real estate markets in the country with the strongest regional value and the most potential to continue to rise.

Brantford, the southwestern Ontario city of about 100,000, is also the birthplace of hockey legend Wayne Gretzky and Group of Seven painter Lawren Harris. Its attractive housing marketing is benefiting from an adaptive local economy, low unemployment and strength in the Golden Horseshoe region, which extends from Niagara to Peterborough.
 
“While other Southwestern Ontario municipalities continue to struggle with the collapse of the manufacturing industry, Brantford has diversified its economy and thrived,” MoneySense editors observed.
 
“And the average new detached home in Brantford sold for just over half a million dollars in 2017, making it attractive to Greater Toronto Area homeowners interested in moving to a smaller town and cashing in some of their gains.”
 
Long-time Brantford mayor Chris Friel said the city has undergone a dramatic transformation since he was first elected to the position in 1994. “It's been fascinating to watch,” he said.
 
The annual “Where to Buy Now” ranking covers Canada's 35 major cities and also goes deep to judge more than 2,000 real estate markets at the local neighbourhood level in eight of the country's largest urban centres, including Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal.

Ottawa placed behind Toronto and Montreal, but ahead of Edmonton and Winnipeg.

The magazine's top picks for real estate near the capital are a bit of a trek outside the city; North Glengarry placed first, where real estate prices are down one per cent in three years to an average price of $267,250. Neighbourhoods in the city, around Woodroffe Ave. and in Elmvale Acres, placed 16th and 20th, respectively.

Associate Editor, Reports and Rankings at MacLean's Magazine, Claire Brownell speaks about this on The Rick Gibbons Show:

The MoneySense Where to Buy Now ranking is based on the following: 
o    momentum in recent real estate transactions;
o    real estate value relative to nearby cities or districts;
o    health of the local economy;
o    price level of local rental markets;
o    and a survey of real estate agent experts on markets.
 
Read the stories and find the full rankings and stories online at MoneySense.ca.

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