Monday, December 22, 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

    Vancouver-Born Madeleine Thien And David Szalay Get Man Booker Prize Nods

    Vancouver-Born Madeleine Thien And David Szalay Get Man Booker Prize Nods
    Vancouver-born, Montreal-based Madeleine Thien was recognized for "Do Not Say We Have Nothing" (Knopf Canada) and Montreal-born, Hungary-based David Szalay got the nod for "All That Man Is" (McClelland & Stewart).

    Vancouver-Born Madeleine Thien And David Szalay Get Man Booker Prize Nods

    Boater Believed Missing In St. Lawrence After Montreal Small Boat Crash

    Boater Believed Missing In St. Lawrence After Montreal Small Boat Crash
    Police say a pleasure boat, believed to be between five and seven meters long, smashed into a docked container ship at high speed just before 10 p.m.

    Boater Believed Missing In St. Lawrence After Montreal Small Boat Crash

    William And Kate Are Coming To Canada For Their Second Visit This Fall

    William And Kate Are Coming To Canada For Their Second Visit This Fall
    Prince William and his wife, Kate, will visit British Columbia and Yukon later this year, Gov. Gen. David Johnston announced Wednesday.

    William And Kate Are Coming To Canada For Their Second Visit This Fall

    'Moderate' Evidence Of Problems In Canada And Vancouver Housing Markets: CMHC

    'Moderate' Evidence Of Problems In Canada And Vancouver Housing Markets: CMHC
    Canada's national housing agency says evidence of problematic conditions in the country's real estate market as a whole has risen from weak to moderate, with Vancouver's risk rating boosted to high.

    'Moderate' Evidence Of Problems In Canada And Vancouver Housing Markets: CMHC

    T.M. Krishna And Bezwada Wilson Win Ramon Magsaysay Award 2016

    T.M. Krishna And Bezwada Wilson Win Ramon Magsaysay Award 2016
    Carnatic music exponent T.M. Krishna and social activist Bezwada Wilson are two Indians who have been conferred the prestigious Ramon Magsaysay Award for this year.

    T.M. Krishna And Bezwada Wilson Win Ramon Magsaysay Award 2016

    Social Media Scrutiny Of Jian Ghomeshi Trial Could Lead To Legal Reforms

    Social Media Scrutiny Of Jian Ghomeshi Trial Could Lead To Legal Reforms
    Mary Rolf, a law student at Dalhousie University, presented her findings in a panel at an international law conference in Halifax Tuesday.

    Social Media Scrutiny Of Jian Ghomeshi Trial Could Lead To Legal Reforms