Posted by: Karim Ali

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Ottawa Home Prices: Why the Average Price Misleads Buyers and Sellers

If you follow Ottawa real estate headlines, you have probably seen this line more than once: “Average home prices are up.”

Then you look around and think, that does not match what I am seeing.

 

That disconnect is real. The average home price is one of the weakest tools for understanding what is actually happening in the market. Here is why it misleads buyers and sellers, and what matters more instead.

The average price is not a real home

The average home price is not based on one property or even one type of property. It is a blended number made up of every sale in a given period.


Condos, townhomes, semis, detached homes, downtown units, suburban homes, luxury properties. They all get mixed together.


When the mix of what sells changes, the average changes too, even if individual home values do not move at all.


That is the first problem. The average reacts to what sold, not how strong the market is.



Composition changes quietly move the average


This is the part most headlines skip.


If more detached homes sell in a month and fewer condos sell, the average price will rise. That can happen even if detached home prices stay flat and condo prices soften.


Ottawa has seen this exact pattern recently.


Freehold homes have continued to transact while many condos sit longer. The result is fewer total sales, but a higher proportion of higher-priced homes in the data.


The average goes up. The market does not suddenly become stronger.


Nothing magical happened. The composition changed.

 


Why average prices rise while buyers feel weaker


This is where confusion really sets in.


Buyers read that prices are up, yet they are negotiating more than before. They are seeing price reductions. Listings are sitting longer.


All of that can be true at the same time.


The average price says nothing about leverage. It does not show concessions, conditions, failed offers, or buyer hesitation.


You can have rising averages in a market where buyers still have more negotiating power than they did a year ago, especially in certain segments.


That is why buyers often feel like the headlines do not match their experience. They are right.



Why sellers misread the headlines


Sellers are just as affected by this.


When sellers hear that prices are rising, many assume demand is improving across the board. They price based on optimism instead of evidence.


That often leads to listings sitting longer than expected, followed by price reductions that could have been avoided.


The average price does not tell a seller whether buyers will pay for their layout, their condition, their location, or their timing.


Ottawa buyers are very selective right now. The market rewards accuracy, not optimism.



What matters more than the average price


If you want to understand the Ottawa market properly, these signals matter far more than the headline average:

  • Months of inventory by property type
  • Days on market compared to asking price
  • The gap between list and sale price
  • How often listings are being reduced
  • Which properties are selling without concessions

These are the indicators that show real behaviour, not just outcomes.


They tell you where buyers are confident, where they are hesitant, and where pricing is out of sync.

 


A better way to read the Ottawa market


Instead of asking, “Are prices up or down?” ask better questions:


  • What types of homes are selling right now?
  • Which ones are sitting?
  • Where are buyers negotiating the hardest?
  • Which listings still attract quick, clean offers?

Ottawa does not have one market. It has several, and they are behaving very differently.


The average price smooths all of that out, which makes it easy to report but poor for decision-making.



Final thought


Average prices are not useless, but they are incomplete.


If you are buying, selling, or planning your next move, headline numbers will not give you clarity. Local patterns, segment-level data, and real buyer behaviour will.


That is where better decisions come from.

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