BC has record year for home sales in 2016
Canadian province’s real estate association credits employment, consumer confidence and population growth
By Emma Crawford Hampel
Home sales across British Columbia slowed in the last half of 2016, in part because of new federal, provincial and municipal efforts to cool heated real estate markets, but the province still had a record sales year because of heated activity in the first six months of the year.
A total of 112,209 units changed hands last year, according to the British Columbia Real Estate Association, which is an increase of 9.5 per cent compared with 2015. The total dollar volume increased 18.8 per cent to C$77.6 billion (US$59.2 billion), and the average home price jumped 8.6 per cent to C$691,144 (US$527,163).
“Broad-based consumer demand driven by strong economic conditions, employment growth, consumer confidence and an expanding population base pushed home sales to record levels in many B.C. regions last year,” said BCREA chief economist Cameron Muir.
“However, home sales have fallen back from their lofty peaks early last year.
In December alone, 4,721 homes were sold in B.C., which was down 28.4 per cent compared with December 2015. Total dollar volume fell 33.1 per cent to C$3.1 billion (US$2.4 billion). The average sale price in the month was C$654,699 (US$499,276), representing a 6.6 per cent year-over-year decline.