Data table for Chart 2.3
CMA | Average value per dwelling ($), 2011 |
---|---|
Newer CMAs | |
Guelph | 348,718 |
Abbotsford–Mission | 413,248 |
Trois-Rivières | 164,604 |
Brantford | 268,622 |
Barrie | 304,575 |
Peterborough | 277,524 |
Moncton | 172,546 |
Kelowna | 481,793 |
Sherbrooke | 222,563 |
Kingston | 304,510 |
Mid-size and small CMAs | |
St. John's | 285,415 |
Saguenay | 181,559 |
Thunder Bay | 184,779 |
Regina | 328,149 |
Victoria | 586,108 |
Oshawa | 307,338 |
Saint John | 193,331 |
Windsor | 199,090 |
Greater Sudbury | 250,513 |
Kitchener–Cambridge–Waterloo | 317,549 |
Saskatoon | 345,583 |
Ottawa–Gatineau (Que.) | 245,332 |
St. Catharines–Niagara | 250,815 |
London | 256,882 |
Hamilton | 343,367 |
Halifax | 268,612 |
Québec | 251,928 |
Winnipeg | 266,127 |
Large CMAs | |
Ottawa–Gatineau (Ont.) | 383,284 |
Calgary | 466,438 |
Vancouver | 691,550 |
Edmonton | 394,904 |
Montréal | 320,696 |
Toronto | 495,394 |
Notes: Value of dwelling refers to the dollar amount expected by the owner if the dwelling were to be sold. Data apply to owner-occupied dwellings only. CMAs were categorized as large, mid-size or small based on the 2011 built-up area using geometric intervals. Newer CMAs—those not populated enough to quality as CMAs in 1971—were then grouped separately. Sources: Statistics Canada, Environment, Energy, and Transportation Statistics Division, 2016, special tabulation of data from Statistics Canada, 2013, 2011 National Household Survey, Catalogue no. 99-014-X2011030. |
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