Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Has Record Decline In Housing Affordability In First Half Of 2016

Darpan News Desk, 30 Aug, 2016 01:05 PM
    TORONTO — Royal Bank says the first half of this year marked the biggest six-month drop in housing affordability in the Vancouver area since at least the early 1990s.
     
    The bank says its cost-of-ownership measure for Vancouver rose to 90.3 per cent of a typical family's pre-tax income after rising 6.1 percentage points in the second quarter and 6.6 percentage points in the first quarter.
     
    The lender says that's the biggest back-to-back deterioration in affordability for the Vancouver area in 26 years of record-keeping.
     
    RBC tracks how much of a typical family's pre-tax income would be required to cover monthly mortgage interest and principal payments, property taxes and utilities for two categories of housing in 14 urban markets across Canada.
     
    It says Vancouver's overall numbers were skewed by rising costs for single-family detached houses while the cost of condos increased modestly over the second quarter.
     
     
    Its latest report says the Toronto area had the country's second-biggest deterioration in housing affordability during the quarter, with its index of home ownership costs rising by 2.1 percentage points to 60.2 per cent of median pre-tax income.
     
    RBC says most other major cities saw only a modest decline in housing affordability during the second quarter while the cities of Calgary, Saint John, N.B., and St. John's, N.L., bucked the trend with a reduced cost of ownership.
     
    Overall, the Canadian cost of ownership was equal to 42.8 per cent of median family pre-tax income in the second quarter, up 1.2 percentage points since the prior quarter and 2.9 percentage points since the second quarter of 2015.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba
    The B.C. Lottery Corp. is taking online novelty bets on the American election, and spokesman Doug Cheng says there has been rapid growth in wagers since presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump's campaign began to gain momentum.

    Dynamic U.S. Presidential Election Fuelling Novelty Bets In B.C., Manitoba

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery
    VANCOUVER — A competitive skier from Utah is crediting a new technique at Vancouver General Hospital for a swift recovery from a brain injury she suffered in Whistler, B.C.

    American Skier Lauds New Technique At Vancouver Hospital For Brain Recovery

    Mix Of Bright Green And White Salad Dressing, Mayo Spills Over Toronto Highway

    Mix Of Bright Green And White Salad Dressing, Mayo Spills Over Toronto Highway
    The single-vehicle crash caused a flood of thick neon green and white sludge to spill over the road as the truck lay on its side.

    Mix Of Bright Green And White Salad Dressing, Mayo Spills Over Toronto Highway

    Iranian-Canadian Sculptor Home In Vancouver After Having Passport Confiscated

    Iranian-Canadian Sculptor Home In Vancouver After Having Passport Confiscated
    "They never told me, really," Parviz Tanavoli said minutes after emerging from the international arrivals section of the Vancouver airport on Monday afternoon.

    Iranian-Canadian Sculptor Home In Vancouver After Having Passport Confiscated

    Firefighters Battle Blaze At Port Moody Mill; Workers Douse Fire At Another Mill

    Firefighters Battle Blaze At Port Moody Mill; Workers Douse Fire At Another Mill
    City spokesman Paul Lockwood said the fire began in the Flavelle Sawmill Co. Ltd.'s conveyor system before spreading to a nearby pile of wood chips.

    Firefighters Battle Blaze At Port Moody Mill; Workers Douse Fire At Another Mill

    Made-in-Canada Approach To Opioid Addiction Gets Nod From Prominent Medical Journal

    Made-in-Canada Approach To Opioid Addiction Gets Nod From Prominent Medical Journal
    VANCOUVER — A made-in-Canada approach to treating opioid addiction is garnering positive international attention from one of the world's most widely circulated medical publications.

    Made-in-Canada Approach To Opioid Addiction Gets Nod From Prominent Medical Journal