100.1 GO FM - We're Your Feel Good Pop Station

Yellowknife has second highest rent rates in the country among CMAs

Yellowknife has some of the highest rental rates in the country, according to the latest numbers from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation.

The average rental price for a two bedroom apartment in Yellowknife is $1,744 a month, as of October 2019, the CMHC’s most recently available numbers.

That makes it the third most expensive rental market in the country, increasing 2.9 per cent compared to the previous year.  Vancouver is slightly more expensive for two bedroom apartments at $1,748 a month. Iqaluit is the most expensive in Canada, with average monthly rent costing $2,736 a month.

But this is in part due to the extremely small size of Iqaluit’s rental housing stock. Only 13 per cent of the houses surveyed are private rental units, with most being government run staff housing or social housing.

Iqaluit’s small population also means among census metropolitan area’s — communities with more than 10,000 people — Yellowknife has the second highest rents in the country.

This comes as the demand for rental units surged in Yellowknife, according to the CMHC’s latest Northern Housing Report.

The vacancy rate in Yellowknife dropped from 5.2 per cent in 2018 to 4.2 per cent in 2019, showing a surge in demand for rental units.

“Having a vacancy rate of 4.2 per cent shows there are still units available to rent,” Christian Arkilley, an analyst with CMHC, said in a previous interview with MyYellowknifeNow.com. 

“But the only problem with people occupying those units is their ability to afford them.”

CMHC’s Northern Housing report cited the 2019 NWT Community Survey released by the NWT Bureau of Statistics, found that more than a fifth 3,182 of the 14,760 dwellings in the N.W.T. were considered not affordable — CMHC defines affordable as being able to cover housing costs with 30 per cent of a person’s income.

Over a 10-year period from 2009 to 2019, the proportion of houses with affordability issues more than doubled in Yellowknife, from 14% in 2009 to 29% in 2019.

Adrian Bell, president of the NWT Realtors Association, said this affordability problem means Yellowknife likely won’t see a flood of renters.

“If you were faced with a skyrocketing housing market, yes, renting might seem more appealing, except we’ve got incredibly high rents,” said Bell. “So that might work if you’re in a suburb of Calgary, but doesn’t necessarily work here.”

The vacancy rates for rental units as a whole went down. Bachelor apartments continue to see a zero per cent vacancy rate, suggesting a surge in demand or a lack of supply. 

Housing starts for apartments in Yellowknife are lower than any other housing type so far in 2020.

Bailey Moreton
Bailey Moreton
Bailey is new to the north, arriving from Ottawa where he studied journalism at Carleton University. He has worked for newspapers in Halifax, Windsor, and Ottawa. He came to the north hoping to see polar bears. He will settle for a bison. If you have a tip, send it to 905 252-9781, or [email protected].

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Ice Age to Information Age opens ageless mysteries in night at the museum

‘It just took our learning to a whole new level having a real public audience,” said Teacher Ashley Deavu who noted that all the students invested countless hours of work into the show. “I thought it was really amazing, my daughter, her grade, one- two class, made all the animals. And I thought it was so cool to see all the hard work that they did. We'll definitely have to come back in the next week to see it during the day," said Aurora Kotokak.

YK, Ndilo, Dettah experiencing extended power outage

Yellowknife, Ndilǫ and Dettah are currently experiencing an extended power outage that began at approximately 5:30 pm ET this evening. The communities are amid temperatures dipping into the minus 30 zone with the windchill

Come meet a mammoth face to face at debut of Ice Age to Information Age

“We have these giant cardboard animals, that are five different megafauna from the Pleistocene,” says Mildred Hall Teacher Ashley Deavu. “The kids know all about them and their adaptations…”The multimedia works of students from grades 1 to 2 and grades 7 to 8, engages with histories and stories from the territory going back to time immemorial on Turtle Island’s north and then branches out across the globe.

Spending on medical travel in the territory increases

NWT Medical Travel Services have released their report on the statistics of and spending on medical travel in the territory.  

Inuit president calling for “allyship” as Arctic security talks continue to circle

Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami President Natan Obed has called for Indigenous leaders to be included in ongoing decision-making and discussions on sovereignty and economic development in the Arctic. The call came after Indigenous leadership was reportedly left out of decision-making meetings in Ottawa last week between the premiers and the prime minister.