Honest numbers
We promise honest numbers. This page is that promise kept: the data behind the manifesto, charted plainly, sourced under every figure. When a number has no source, we do not print it.
Population growth divided by housing starts. Both 2023 and 2024 sit above any level recorded in the previous five decades.
2024 eased to 3.9 as population growth slowed sharply after immigration cuts, still above every pre-2023 year in five decades of data. The homes were never built; the shortage remains.
Source: Fraser Institute, The Crisis in Housing Affordability: Population Growth and Housing Starts 1972–2024 (published 2025). Population slowdown: Statistics Canada quarterly demographic estimates, 2025.
Share who owned a single-detached home at age 25 to 39: boomers measured in 1991, millennials measured in 2021.
Nationally, among those who did own, the share owning a single-detached house fell from 45.7 percent (boomers, 1991) to 34.1 percent (millennials, 2021).
| Market | Boomers 1991 | Millennials 2021 |
|---|---|---|
| Vancouver | 36.3% | 12.2% |
| Toronto | 32.7% | 19.4% |
Source: Statistics Canada, Millennials in the Canadian housing market: an intergenerational comparison, May 2026.
RBC aggregate affordability measure, Q1 2026. Lower is better. The national level sits roughly 2.8 points below the worst ever recorded, the peak of the 1990s bubble.
| Market | Share of income, Q1 2026 |
|---|---|
| Vancouver | 84.1% |
| Canada (aggregate) | 53% |
| Calgary | 41.5% |
| Edmonton | 36.8% |
| Regina | 27.2% |
Source: RBC Economics, Housing Trends and Affordability, Q1 2026 report.
Young Canadians live with their parents at double the rate boomers did at the same age.
Source: Statistics Canada intergenerational study, May 2026. Charted when the microdata table publishes; until then it stays a sentence, because we do not draw bars we cannot source point by point.