What happened this month
Calgary’s total residential benchmark price came in at $572,500 for June 2026, up about a third of a per cent from May’s $570,500 and extending the slow monthly climb off the winter floor. The benchmark sat at $554,400 in January, so prices have recovered modestly almost every month since. Year over year the number is down 2.1 per cent against $584,600 in June 2025, the same orderly unwind that has defined the past year. Total sales of 2,197 were down 3.8 per cent year over year, new listings of 3,899 were down 7.7 per cent, and inventory of 6,799 was down about 2 per cent. At 3.09 months of supply, up from 3.04 a year ago, the resale market is still sitting in what CREB calls balanced territory.
The defining feature this month is the same split that has been widening all year: detached strength against apartment weakness. Detached homes are trading at $750,500 citywide with just 2.49 months of supply and 31 average days on market, while apartment condominiums sit at $299,000 with 4.91 months of supply and 49 days on market. Apartment prices are down 8.9 per cent year over year and apartment sales are off about 20 per cent. CREB’s chief economist, Ann-Marie Lurie, ties the apartment softness to a wave of high-density supply built through several years of record housing starts, plus slower migration, conditions that now clearly favour buyers in that segment. Semi-detached homes at $694,600 (essentially flat year over year) and row homes at $424,100 (down 5.6 per cent) sit between the two extremes.
The detached district breakdown sharpens the point. The West district leads at $1,025,000 and is up 3.7 per cent year over year with the tightest supply in the city at 1.90 months, followed by the North West at $791,500 (2.07 months) and the South at $724,100 (2.15 months), all firmly in seller’s market territory. City Centre detached is also up, at $996,800. At the other end, the North East detached benchmark is down 6.8 per cent year over year with 4.13 months of supply, and the East is down 5.0 per cent at 3.63 months. Apartment declines were steepest in those same eastern and northern districts: down about 15 per cent in the East and North East and roughly 10 per cent in the North, versus milder single-digit declines in the West and North West. For families shopping detached in the SW and West, the picture is tighter than the citywide benchmark suggests.
Community spotlight
The table below summarizes trailing twelve-month activity for ten representative SW Calgary communities: median sold price, average days on market, and sale-to-list ratio. These are all-property-type medians, so they include detached, semi-detached, row, and apartment sales in whatever proportion each community’s housing stock dictates. The median price shows where a typical transaction landed over the past year, and days on market and sale-to-list describe how balanced conditions have been.
| Community | Median sold price | Avg days on market | Sale-to-list |
|---|---|---|---|
| North Glenmore Park | $1,172,000 | 39 | +0.5% |
| Altadore | $1,085,000 | 34 | -1.7% |
| Discovery Ridge | $931,000 | 35 | -1.5% |
| Lakeview | $920,500 | 32 | +0.3% |
| Aspen Woods | $890,000 | 37 | -1.9% |
| Wildwood | $883,250 | 37 | -1.9% |
| Killarney-Glengarry | $827,500 | 35 | -1.6% |
| West Springs | $764,000 | 34 | -1.4% |
| Signal Hill | $670,450 | 30 | -1.6% |
| Glamorgan | $443,500 | 39 | -2.6% |
Source: Pillar9 sold-comp data, City of Calgary residential, July 2025 through June 2026 (n = 1,336 sales across the ten communities). Sale-to-list compares sold price to list price.
Lakeview and North Glenmore Park were the only two communities in this set that closed above list on average over the past 12 months, at +0.3 and +0.5 per cent. That is a sign of how resilient established detached demand stayed even as the citywide benchmark slipped, and it tracks with the West and South districts holding near or under two months of supply. The rest of the set clusters between -1.4 and -2.6 per cent, roughly where SW detached and attached product traded over the year. These are directional snapshots, not precise benchmarks: each community carries a different mix of detached, semi, row, and apartment stock, which shapes how the median moves year to year.
12-month benchmark trend
The chart below traces Calgary’s total residential benchmark price from July 2025 through June 2026. The decline through summer and fall 2025 was steady rather than steep, a floor formed near $554K through December and January, and prices have ticked up modestly almost every month since to land at $572,500.
| Month | Benchmark price |
|---|---|
| 2025-07 | $581K |
| 2025-08 | $576K |
| 2025-09 | $571K |
| 2025-10 | $566K |
| 2025-11 | $559K |
| 2025-12 | $555K |
| 2026-01 | $554K |
| 2026-02 | $561K |
| 2026-03 | $566K |
| 2026-04 | $569K |
| 2026-05 | $571K |
| 2026-06 | $573K |
What this means for buyers
If you are shopping for a detached home in SW Calgary or anywhere in the West district, do not assume the balanced-market headlines translate into leverage. Detached supply in the West sits at 1.90 months, the North West at 2.07, and the South at 2.15, all seller’s market territory. Quality properties at a fair price still move quickly, and detached homes are averaging just 31 days on market citywide. The window for extended condition periods or below-list negotiation is narrower here than the 3.09 months citywide figure suggests. Being pre-approved and ready to act within 24 to 48 hours remains sound practice for detached buyers in established West and SW communities.
If your target is an apartment condo or a row home, or you are open to detached in the North East or East, the picture flips. Apartment supply citywide is at 4.91 months, and apartment days on market sit at 49, well over the 31 days a detached home takes. The North East detached market is at 4.13 months of supply with prices down 6.8 per cent year over year, and the East is at 3.63 months. You have genuine leverage: room to ask for a home inspection, request a reasonable possession date, and table an offer below list. The citywide average of 37 days masks how differently detached and apartment product is moving, so ask your agent for the days-on-market breakdown specific to the property type and district you are targeting.
What this means for sellers
Detached sellers in the West, North West, and South districts are well-positioned entering July. All three show 2.15 months of supply or less for detached product, which means realistic pricing produces timely sales. The risk is overconfidence about a number you saw last summer or a citywide figure pulled from the news. The West detached benchmark is up 3.7 per cent year over year, but the North East is down 6.8 per cent and the East 5.0 per cent, so the comp you cite has to be your district and your property type, not a city average.
For sellers of apartment condos and row homes, the pricing conversation is more direct: you are competing with heavy active inventory. Apartment supply is near five months, and buyers have choices. Condition and presentation matter more than usual because buyers can afford to be selective. If you need a specific closing date or cannot carry the home through a prolonged listing, pricing sharply at or slightly below comparable actives on day one is more effective than testing the market at a premium and adjusting later.
FAQ
Why are apartment prices falling while detached homes hold?
It comes down to supply and demand within each segment. Apartment condominiums are at 4.91 months of supply citywide, up sharply from a year ago, with prices down 8.9 per cent year over year. CREB attributes this to a wave of high-density supply built through several years of record housing starts, along with slower migration, which together have given apartment buyers more choices and less urgency. Detached homes, by contrast, are at just 2.49 months of supply with prices down only 1.4 per cent year over year, because new detached listings have not kept pace with demand in the established quadrants. Same city, two very different markets depending on the property type you are buying or selling.
Is June 2026 a good time to buy in SW Calgary?
It depends on what you are buying. For detached homes in the West, North West, and South districts, conditions are still firmly in seller’s market territory, with 2.15 months of supply or less across all three and detached homes averaging 31 days on market. Waiting for a meaningful buyer’s market in detached SW Calgary has historically not paid off, and the June data does not suggest one is coming. For apartment condos and row homes, supply is genuinely elevated at nearly five months, and the data signals real buyer leverage that is unlikely to evaporate quickly. A clear-eyed view of your own timeline and financial position matters more than trying to time the market.
What does 3.09 months of supply and a balanced market actually mean?
Months of supply estimates how long it would take to sell every active listing at the current pace of sales, with no new listings added. Under roughly two months favours sellers, over roughly four months favours buyers, and the range in between is considered balanced. At 3.09 months citywide, up from 3.04 a year ago, Calgary as a whole is sitting in that balanced zone. The important caveat is that the citywide figure averages two very different realities: detached sits at 2.49 months (seller-leaning), while apartments sit at 4.91 months (buyer territory). The relevant number is the months of supply for your specific property type and district, not the headline.
With a sale-to-list ratio of 98 per cent, is there room to negotiate?
That citywide 98.02 per cent figure is an average, and averages obscure a lot. A well-presented detached home in the West district priced correctly may sell at or very near list, sometimes above it, which is why Lakeview and North Glenmore Park closed slightly over asking on average this year. An apartment condo in a building with high inventory and a motivated seller may close meaningfully below list. The relevant number is the sale-to-list ratio for the specific property type, district, and price point you are working in, not the city average. Ask your agent to pull that data for your specific search.