CANADA’S MILLENNIALS STILL BENT ON OWNING HOMES, EVEN IF IT MEANS RELOCATING

“A huge number of millennials are telling us, `Yes, if I move, I could own my home,’ and that is very surprising,” said Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper. “We haven’t seen this before, and I’m sure this is a direct result of what we saw during the pandemic, which was people slowly leaving (Toronto) for places like Saint John, New Brunswick, and Moncton (N.B.), and PEI, and Montreal, as well as Calgary and B.C. We saw people migrating when they found they could work from home.”
“What this survey confirms is that a large number of millennials — whether they live in a city or outside of an urban centre — appreciate the option to work remotely,” Geneviève Langevin, a Royal LePage broker in Montreal, said in the report. “To achieve this, some are choosing to leave the city, although this trend is less common today than it was at the height of the pandemic.”
Some 82 per cent of millennials who do not currently own a home believe they will one day, the highest rate among regions surveyed by Royal LePage; however, 55 per cent of that group said they would have to relocate in order to achieve that milestone.
The average cost of a single detached home in Montreal was $533,300 in July, compared with $1,357,500 in Toronto, $2,000,600 in Vancouver, $643,600 in Calgary, and $770,000 in Ottawa, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
Still, the survey found that just 35 per cent of millennials in the Greater Montreal Area are homeowners, lower than all the other big Canadian cities covered in the survey. The cause could be related to wages, as the average annual income in Montreal — $40,079 — is 15.6-per-cent lower than the national average of $47,487, according to CareerBeacon.com.
The relatively lower prices in Montreal appear to offer millennials hope of staying that doesn’t exist in other cities. In the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), 59 per cent of millennials who do not currently own a home believe they will one day, but 63 per cent of them said they would have to leave Canada’s biggest city to do so.
Soper said relocating simply to buy a home is an “oversimplified way to solve your life’s problems.” Regardless, the commitment of millennials to buying real estate suggests that the strong demand that has driven Canada’s housing boom over the past decade could persist, adding pressure on policymakers to address a chronically short supply of living spaces.
“If you follow their intent, millennials could be the highest homeownership generation in Canadian history,” Soper said. “Now, not all of them are going to pull that off, but even if half of them pull it off, we’d be looking at homeownership rates in this generation at a higher rate than the baby boomers who are the previous record holders.”
Story by: Financial Post