Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Realtors See Influx Of U.S. Buyers In Canada's Recreational Property Markets

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2015 01:04 PM
    TORONTO — Real estate agent Priscilla Sookarow rang in the new year in a novel way, brokering the sale of a $3-million vacation property in B.C.'s Okanagan Valley to a family from Texas.
     
    In addition to the region's natural beauty, the buyers were lured by the low value of the loonie relative to the U.S. dollar, said Sookarow who, along with realtors elsewhere, says an increasing number of vacation property buyers are coming from south of the border.
     
    "When you buy a $3-million property with U.S. dollars you're saving a fair bit," said Sookarow, an agent with ReMax Vernon.
     
    Sookarow isn't the only agent in the recreational property market to report an influx of U.S. clients. Realtors in B.C.'s Gulf Islands and Ontario's Muskoka and Niagara regions say they are also observing the trend.
     
    "In all of my offices we're seeing more U.S. inquiries," said John Jarvis, a ReMax agent in Ontario's Muskoka region. "Americans are definitely shopping more than they have been in the last three or four years."
     
    For U.S. buyers, recreational properties north of the border represent a good deal, said Jarvis.
     
    "They're getting a 20 per cent discount, roughly," he said, noting that the loonie has been hovering at around 80 cents U.S. in recent weeks.
     
    Americans also perceive Canadian lakes as being cleaner and "more pure" than those south of the border and believe that Canada's economy is stable and strong, said Jarvis.
     
     
    Meanwhile, many Canadian buyers who went south to pick up properties when the loonie was around par are now looking to return home, according to a number of agents.
     
    Janet Moore, an agent at Royal LePage Nanaimo Realty, says many Canadians  raced south between 2007 and 2011 to snap up vacation homes in places such as Palm Springs, Calif., Phoenix, Ariz., and Hawaii.
     
    Rising property values and the rally in the U.S. dollar have allowed them to make a profit, said Moore. Now, they're looking to use those profits to buy vacation properties north of the border.
     
    Realtors say these trends are likely to continue.
     
    "As long as the dollar stays this way, we anticipate more of the same," Sookarow said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Residents Get Earful As Officers In Police Chopper Broadcast Sex Chat

    Winnipeg Residents Get Earful As Officers In Police Chopper Broadcast Sex Chat
    Police say the officers were on routine patrol Monday night when they inadvertently turned on the chopper's public address system.

    Winnipeg Residents Get Earful As Officers In Police Chopper Broadcast Sex Chat

    Parents Angry After Girl, 8, Told To Cover Up At Wading Pool In Guelph, Ont.

    Parents Angry After Girl, 8, Told To Cover Up At Wading Pool In Guelph, Ont.
    A couple from Guelph, Ont., is livid with the city after a lifeguard told their eight-year-old daughter to cover up at a wading pool at a public park over the weekend.

    Parents Angry After Girl, 8, Told To Cover Up At Wading Pool In Guelph, Ont.

    Justin Trudeau Blames Harper For Fumbling Canada's Key Relationship With U.S.

    Justin Trudeau Blames Harper For Fumbling Canada's Key Relationship With U.S.
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau is accusing Stephen Harper of flubbing Canada's most important diplomatic relationship — with the United States.

    Justin Trudeau Blames Harper For Fumbling Canada's Key Relationship With U.S.

    Couple Charged With 1st-degree Murder In Death Of Toronto-Area Man

    Couple Charged With 1st-degree Murder In Death Of Toronto-Area Man
    Clyde Marshall, formerly of New Brunswick, and Sabrina Chouart of Gatineau, Que., are accused in the death of Sina Parsi, 32, of Vaughan, Ont., who disappeared after a soccer game on June 9th.

    Couple Charged With 1st-degree Murder In Death Of Toronto-Area Man

    Stephen Harper Invites Muslim Leaders To 24 Sussex To Break The Ramadan Fast On Monday

    Stephen Harper Invites Muslim Leaders To 24 Sussex To Break The Ramadan Fast On Monday
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper may have made Canadian history Monday night, inviting Muslim leaders to 24 Sussex to break the Ramadan fast.

    Stephen Harper Invites Muslim Leaders To 24 Sussex To Break The Ramadan Fast On Monday

    Banning Medical-marijuana Edibles Bad For Patients: B.C. Civil Rights Group

    Banning Medical-marijuana Edibles Bad For Patients: B.C. Civil Rights Group
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia civil rights group is asking the City of Vancouver to reconsider its plans to ban dispensaries from selling edible forms of medical marijuana.

    Banning Medical-marijuana Edibles Bad For Patients: B.C. Civil Rights Group