A surge in new apartment construction drove housing start increases in some major Canadian cities last year, but demand continues to outweigh supply, according to a report released Wednesday by the federal housing agency.
The report from Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation focuses on six major cities: Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa. Their combined housing starts dipped 0.5 per cent compared with 2022, totalling 137,915 units, as apartment starts grew seven per cent, to reach a record 98,774 units.
That number was offset by declines in the number of new single-detached homes, which fell 20 per cent year over year, due to weaker demand for higher-priced homes in an elevated mortgage rate environment.
“We ended up being positively surprised by 2023. We were really quite concerned that higher interest rates were going to really have an impact,” said CMHC deputy chief economist Aled ab Iorweth.
“They did have an impact, but it seems to have been on smaller structures, single-detached [homes] and so forth.”
Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary break records
Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary all saw an increase in total housing starts boosted by record-high levels of apartment construction.
Montreal, meanwhile, saw a 35 per cent decline in apartment starts due to higher financing and construction costs — its lowest level in eight years, according to CMHC. It was the only market with a significant decrease in new homes being built across all housing types.
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Purpose-built rental construction accounted for 42 per cent of all apartment construction in 2023 — reaching a record 41,460 units — which contributed heavily to the total starts.
But low vacancy rates and a rapid increase in the cost of rent have indicated that demand is outpacing supply for these types of properties.
The agency continued to warn about the need to ramp up housing construction to address affordability gaps and significant population growth in Canada.
‘We’re still not building enough’
It said housing starts are projected to decrease in 2024, despite the CMHC’s forecast that Canada will require an additional 3.5 million units by 2030, on top of what is currently projected to be built, to restore affordability to levels seen around 2004.
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“We’re still not building enough, particularly on the rental side,” said ab Iorwerth.
“The demand is enormous. I don’t think we’re keeping up with demand. So we need a lot more investment.”