Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Millennials Risk Debt While Pursuing Home Ownership Dreams: Report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2016 12:16 PM
    VANCOUVER — A new report says soaring property prices and lower incomes in Vancouver are leaving many young homeowners in debt compared to millennials in 10 other Canadian cities.
     
    Vancity Credit Union finds that a typical couple aged 25 to 34, with a combined annual income of about $72,000, faces a monthly debt of $2,745 after property costs and other essentials such as taxes, food, utilities and transportation.
     
    The report says the lack of purchasing power is greatest in Vancouver, but that so-called millennials in Toronto are close behind with just over $3,300 remaining after housing and other basic costs are paid.
     
    That compares with home-owning millennials in Edmonton, who hang onto more than $47,000 in discretionary funds, the highest in Canada.
     
    The report says that when childcare is added, a Vancouver family with one youngster in full-time care faces a debt of more than $17,000 per year.
     
    Income and household spending costs in the report are based on Statistics Canada data while housing figures based on prices for March 2016 are from real estate boards across the country.
     
    Vancity warns that millennials in Vancouver may need to reconsider home ownership as the first and best way to create wealth and adds that lack of rental housing in the region is also a problem.
     
    "The status quo isn't good enough if we want this generation to be able to put down roots, possibly have a family and still enjoy a basic quality of life in Vancouver," says William Azaroff, Vancity's vice-president of community investment.
     
     
    Yearly costs for an average home purchased in Metro Vancouver in 2016 are $44,354, and the report says that millennials would have to give up the dream of a single-family home in order to ease the budget crunch.
     
    Buying a townhouse at an average cost leaves about $9,549 annually in discretionary income, and that climbs to $16,422 if a condominium is purchased, the report says.
     
    However, Vancouver lacks an adequate supply of townhouses as an option for families who can't afford homes.
     
    "Toronto and Vancouver are particularly difficult cities in which to raise a family and have money left over to nurture and improve well-being," the report concludes.
     
    "In these cities, basic expenses eat up the majority of income. And in Vancouver, this can be directly correlated to skyrocketing prices for stable, appropriate and affordable housing."
     
    The study makes a number of recommendations, from tax credits for new housing development to repurposing of public and community-owned land and creation of thousands more units of rental housing by 2021.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari fails to win seat

    Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari fails to win seat
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari has failed to win a seat in the provincial legislature.

    Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari fails to win seat

    Pot Culture Crash? Marijuana Legalization In Canada May Extinguish Drug Cachet

    VANCOUVER — Experts say stoner subculture will likely take a hit with the incoming legalization of marijuana in Canada because as the cause vanishes, so will celebration of the drug.

    Pot Culture Crash? Marijuana Legalization In Canada May Extinguish Drug Cachet

    Winnipeg Woman Accused In Infant Remains Case Had At Least 10 Legal Abortions

    Winnipeg Woman Accused In Infant Remains Case Had At Least 10 Legal Abortions
    WINNIPEG — The lawyer for a Winnipeg woman accused of hiding the remains of six dead infants in a storage locker says she had least ten legal abortions.

    Winnipeg Woman Accused In Infant Remains Case Had At Least 10 Legal Abortions

    Edmonton W-18 Drug Seizure: Police, Health Officials Warn Of Toxic Drug

    Staff Sgt. Dave Knibbs says police in Edmonton seized about four kilograms of a white powder drug in December and tests by Health Canada confirm it is W-18.

    Edmonton W-18 Drug Seizure: Police, Health Officials Warn Of Toxic Drug

    WestJet Responds To Proposed Class-action Lawsuit From Former Flight Attendant

    WestJet Responds To Proposed Class-action Lawsuit From Former Flight Attendant
    In its reply to a civil claim launched by Mandalena Lewis, the airline refutes allegations that it discourages victims from coming forward and silences them when they do.

    WestJet Responds To Proposed Class-action Lawsuit From Former Flight Attendant

    Surrey Homeowner Recovers From Stab Wounds After Surprising Two Thieves

    Surrey Homeowner Recovers From Stab Wounds After Surprising Two Thieves
    Man suffered a non-life threatening stab wound while fighting with the suspects inside the victim's Cloverdale-area home (in the 19100 block of 62A Avenue)

    Surrey Homeowner Recovers From Stab Wounds After Surprising Two Thieves