Detached home prices have dropped the most in these two Calgary areas

Detached home benchmark prices are dropping all over Calgary, and two spots even saw declines of more than five per cent.
The Calgary Real Estate Board (CREB) released its June 2026 housing report, and it revealed which parts of the city have recorded the biggest drop in benchmark prices over the past year.
As a whole, Calgary saw a 1.42 per cent drop in year-over-year detached home benchmark prices to $750,500. The northeast saw the largest decline, dropping by 6.8 per cent to $560,700.
East Calgary saw the second-largest decline, falling by five per cent to $489,400, which also made it the least expensive area of the city.

Calgary Real Estate Board
North Calgary followed, seeing a decline of 4.25 per cent, with the benchmark price falling to $651,600.
Only two quadrants of the city recorded year-over-year increases in benchmark prices, including the city centre, which saw a one per cent increase to $996,800, and west Calgary, which saw an increase of 3.7 per cent to $1,025,000, making it the most expensive spot in Calgary.
On a month-over-month basis, detached home prices are up by 0.36 per cent across Calgary as a whole.
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Other home types, such as apartments and row-style homes, also saw year-over-year declines in the month of June. Apartments saw the largest decline at just under nine per cent to a benchmark price of $299,000.
Semi-detached homes, on the other hand, saw an increase in benchmark prices, rising by 0.17 per cent to $694,600.
You can find the CREB’s full June 2026 report online.