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The Halifax Downsizer's Financial Reality Check: What You'll Net and What You'll Pay in 2026

What does downsizing actually look like on paper in Halifax in 2026?

Most Halifax seniors and empty nesters have a general sense that downsizing will free up equity. What they often don't have is the actual calculation — what their family home will sell for in today's market, what a realistic next property costs, what the transaction fees and moving costs add up to, and what they'll genuinely be left with after the dust settles. The numbers are usually better than people expect. But they're specific to your property, your next step, and your timeline — and the only way to know yours is to run them.

I'm Johnny Dulong, Family Real Estate Advisor with EXIT Realty Metro in Halifax, Nova Scotia, licensed REALTOR® (NS #NA5059). I've been helping seniors, empty nesters, and downsizers through this exact calculation across Halifax Regional Municipality for 24 years. The clients who move with the most confidence aren't the ones who waited for the perfect market — they're the ones who sat down, ran the numbers honestly, and made a decision based on what the math actually said. Find me at SellHalifaxRealEstate.com or call 902-209-4761.

THE CURRENT MARKET CONTEXT FOR HALIFAX DOWNSIZERS

Halifax's spring 2026 market has created an unusual combination of conditions that works in the downsizer's favour — on both sides of the transaction simultaneously.

On the selling side, average home prices across Halifax-Dartmouth reached $657,061 in April 2026, a new all-time record and an 8.6% year-over-year increase per WOWA.ca and NSAR data. The MLS HPI composite benchmark — the more stable measure that adjusts for sale mix — sits at $570,900 for April, up 1.6% year-over-year. If you've owned a detached family home in Bedford, Dartmouth, or Fall River for 10 or more years, the equity position you're selling from is likely stronger than you think.

On the buying side, HRM has 1,105 active residential listings as of April 2026 — up 48.5% compared to spring 2023. The average condo sale price in Halifax-Dartmouth in April 2026 was $505,037. Entry-level bungalows in communities like Sackville, Timberlea, Cole Harbour, and Eastern Passage are trading in the $380,000–$550,000 range. Conditions are back in offers. Sellers of smaller properties are negotiating. The era of paying $50,000 over asking on a Dartmouth bungalow is over in most price segments.

In simple terms: you're selling in a strong market and buying in a balanced one. That combination doesn't come around often.

WHAT YOUR FAMILY HOME IS LIKELY WORTH IN 2026

Every home is different, and a proper Comparative Market Analysis using the last 30 days of actual sales in your specific neighbourhood is the only accurate way to establish your list price. But here is a reasonable frame for three common downsizer profiles in HRM:

A detached three- to four-bedroom home in Bedford, Cole Harbour, or Dartmouth purchased in the 2000s or early 2010s: likely trading in the $650,000–$850,000 range in 2026, depending on condition, lot size, and renovations.

A detached home on the Halifax Peninsula or near the Northwest Arm: likely $800,000–$1,200,000+ depending on the neighbourhood and the property.

A larger bungalow in Sackville, Fall River, or Timberlea: likely $500,000–$700,000 depending on size, lot, and finishes.

These are directional ranges — not appraisals. The point is to give you a starting frame for the calculation below, not to replace a proper market analysis.

WHAT THE SALE WILL ACTUALLY COST YOU

This is the section most sellers skip, and it's the one that matters most for your net equity calculation.

Selling costs on a $750,000 HRM home typically include:

  • Real estate commission: negotiated with your agent. Industry standard has ranged from 4% to 5% of the sale price, though this is negotiating territory. On a $750,000 home at 4.5%, that's $33,750 plus HST at 14% = $38,475 total.

  • Legal fees for the sale: approximately $1,000–$1,500 for a standard residential closing in Nova Scotia.

  • Mortgage payout (if applicable): if you still carry a mortgage balance, it gets paid out from your sale proceeds on closing day. If you're mid-term, a prepayment penalty may apply — get the penalty figure from your lender before you list.

  • Staging, repairs, and preparation: varies widely. Minor repairs, paint touch-ups, and decluttering are realistic minimums. Factor in $2,000–$8,000 depending on your home's condition.

On a $750,000 sale with no mortgage remaining, total out-of-pocket selling costs can run $40,000–$50,000. That's the number to subtract from your sale price to get to your net proceeds.

For a complete breakdown of every selling cost in HRM, see the comprehensive Halifax seller cost guide. [LINK: The Cost of Selling Your Home in Halifax: A Comprehensive 2026 Guide → https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/blog.html/the-cost-of-selling-your-home-in-halifax-a-comprehensive-2026-guide-8967263 | opens in new tab]

WHAT THE NEXT PROPERTY WILL COST YOU

The buying side of a downsizer's transaction has its own cost layer — and this is where many people get surprised.

For a condo in Halifax-Dartmouth at the April 2026 average of $505,037:

  • Purchase price: $505,037

  • Municipal Deed Transfer Tax (MDTT): 1.5% of the purchase price = $7,575 (paid by the buyer at closing in cash)

  • Legal fees for the purchase: approximately $1,000–$1,500

  • Home inspection: $500–$700 for a condo, including document review

  • Moving costs: $3,000–$8,000 for a local HRM move depending on volume and services

  • Total buyer-side transaction costs: approximately $13,000–$19,000

For a bungalow in Sackville or Timberlea at $500,000:

  • Purchase price: $500,000

  • MDTT: $7,500

  • Legal fees: $1,000–$1,500

  • Home inspection + well/septic inspection if applicable: $1,000–$1,500

  • Moving costs: $3,000–$8,000

  • Total buyer-side transaction costs: approximately $12,500–$18,500

Note: If you are purchasing a newly built property, Nova Scotia's 14% HST (5% federal + 9% provincial, effective April 1, 2025) applies to the full purchase price. Resale properties are HST-exempt. On a $500,000 new build, HST adds $70,000 before any rebates. Confirm whether your next property is new or resale before running your numbers.

THE EQUITY RELEASE CALCULATION

Here is what the full picture looks like for a common Halifax downsizer scenario:

Selling a $750,000 Bedford detached home (mortgage-free):

  • Sale price: $750,000

  • Less selling costs: -$45,000 (commission, legal, preparation)

  • Net sale proceeds: $705,000

Purchasing a $505,000 Dartmouth condo:

  • Purchase price: $505,000

  • Plus buyer-side costs: +$16,000 (MDTT, legal, inspection, moving)

  • Total cost of purchase: $521,000

Equity released after both transactions: $705,000 - $521,000 = $184,000

On that same profile with a $200,000 mortgage remaining at payout:

  • Net sale proceeds after mortgage: $505,000

  • Less total purchase cost: -$521,000

  • Equity released: -$16,000 — meaning this downsizer would need to bring cash to close

That's a very different conversation than the one where the mortgage is paid off. The presence or absence of a remaining mortgage balance is the single most important variable in your downsizer calculation — and it's the first number I establish with every client before we look at a single listing.

WHAT THE NUMBERS DON'T CAPTURE

The financial calculation above is the floor of the downsizing conversation, not the ceiling. The numbers don't account for:

  • The ongoing cost reduction from eliminating property maintenance, lawn care, and seasonal repairs — typically $5,000–$15,000 per year for a detached home, depending on its age and size

  • Condo fees as a replacing line item: budgeting $400–$700 per month for a mid-range HRM condo is realistic

  • The shift in property taxes between a larger detached home and a smaller condo or bungalow

  • The income potential on released equity if it's invested or used to support retirement spending

These factors change the long-term picture significantly — and in most cases, they strengthen the case for making the move.

For guidance on what single-level housing options actually look like in Halifax — by community, price range, and accessibility features — see the Halifax senior's guide to single-level living. [LINK: Single-Level Living in Halifax: A Senior's Guide 2026 → https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/blog.html/single-level-living-in-halifax-a-seniors-guide-2026-8958446 | opens in new tab]

For the strategic timing argument — why the current market window works in the downsizer's favour before the late 2026 renewal wave adds inventory — see the earlier analysis. [LINK: Why Halifax Seniors Should Downsize Before the 2026 Renewal Wave → https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/blog.html/why-halifax-seniors-should-downsize-before-the-2026-renewal-wave-8957107 | opens in new tab]

YOUR ACTUAL NUMBER

The calculation above uses representative figures. Your actual number depends on:

  • What your specific home sells for in your specific neighbourhood — not the HRM average

  • Whether you carry a mortgage balance and what the payout costs

  • Which type of next property you choose and where

  • Whether you're buying new or resale

The only way to know your number is to run it with someone who knows this market at the community level and can pull current comparable sales for both sides of your transaction.

If you're a Halifax-area senior, empty nester, or retiree who has been turning the downsizing question over in your mind, I'm happy to sit down and run the actual numbers for your specific situation — no pressure, no commitment, just clarity on what the move looks like on paper.

Last reviewed: May 2026 — reviewed quarterly.

DISCLAIMER

This post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or mortgage advice. Market data, selling costs, and property values in Halifax Regional Municipality change frequently. All figures above are representative ranges based on current HRM market conditions and should not be relied upon as projections for any specific property. Always consult a qualified Nova Scotia real estate lawyer, accountant, and mortgage professional before making real estate decisions. Johnny Dulong is a licensed REALTOR® (NS #NA5059) with EXIT Realty Metro serving Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia.

ABOUT JOHNNY DULONG

Johnny Dulong is a Family Real Estate Advisor with EXIT Realty Metro in Halifax, Nova Scotia (NS #NA5059), with 24 years of experience helping seniors, empty nesters, downsizers, military families, and buyers navigate property transactions across Halifax Regional Municipality. A former member of the Canadian Armed Forces with a background in IT (MCSE, CCNA, CNE), Johnny brings disciplined process, verified local data, and first-hand experience with the full downsizing transaction — both the sale and the purchase — across HRM. Connect at SellHalifaxRealEstate.com or 902-209-4761.

Call or text Johnny Dulong, Family Real Estate Advisor, EXIT Realty Metro, at 902-209-4761. You can also explore current listings and downsizer resources at SellHalifaxRealEstate.com. Call today — EXIT tomorrow!

Johnny Dulong | Family Real Estate Advisor | EXIT Realty Metro | 902-209-4761 | SellHalifaxRealEstate.com | Call today — EXIT tomorrow!

#HalifaxRealEstate #DownsizingHalifax #HalifaxSeniors #EmptyNesters #HalifaxEquityRelease #HRM #SellHalifaxRealEstate #ExitRealtyMetro #JohnnyDulong #HalifaxMarket2026 #RetirementPlanning #HalifaxCondo #SeniorsDownsizing #NovaScotiaRealEstate


FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

How much equity can Halifax seniors expect to release when downsizing in 2026?

The equity released depends on three variables: what your current home sells for, whether you carry a remaining mortgage, and what your next property costs. A representative scenario — selling a mortgage-free Bedford detached home for $750,000 and purchasing a $505,000 Dartmouth condo — yields approximately $184,000 in released equity after transaction costs on both sides. A seller with a $200,000 mortgage balance on the same property would see most of that equity absorbed by the payout, changing the picture significantly. Running your actual numbers before you list is essential.

What does it cost to sell a home and buy a condo in Halifax in 2026?

Selling costs on a $750,000 Halifax home typically run $40,000–$50,000, including real estate commission (at approximately 4–5% plus 14% HST), legal fees, and preparation costs. Buyer-side costs on a $505,000 condo add another $13,000–$19,000, including the 1.5% Municipal Deed Transfer Tax ($7,575), legal fees, inspection, and moving. Combined transaction costs across both sides of a downsizing move in HRM typically run $55,000–$70,000 for this price bracket.

Is it a good time for Halifax seniors to downsize in spring 2026?

The current market is unusually favourable for downsizers on both sides simultaneously. Average detached home prices reached $657,061 in April 2026 — a new record. Condo inventory is building, with 237 active listings in Halifax-Dartmouth and an average sale price of $505,037. Sellers of family homes are in a strong position, and buyers of smaller properties have more negotiating room than at any point since 2021. That combination — strong selling conditions, balanced buying conditions — does not persist indefinitely.

What are the ongoing cost savings from downsizing in Halifax?

A detached HRM home typically costs $5,000–$15,000 per year in ongoing maintenance, seasonal care, and repairs, depending on the home's age and size. Moving to a condo or bungalow typically reduces or eliminates these costs. Condo fees in HRM range from approximately $300–$900 per month for a mid-range unit, which covers building insurance, exterior maintenance, and shared amenities — expenses that would otherwise fall on the individual homeowner. Property taxes on a $505,000 condo will also typically be lower than on a larger detached property, further reducing the monthly carrying cost.

Should I pay off my mortgage before downsizing in Halifax?

Not necessarily — but you need to know your mortgage payout figure before you run any downsizing scenario. If you are mid-term on a fixed-rate mortgage, a prepayment penalty applies and can run $5,000–$20,000 depending on your lender and the remaining term. That figure comes directly off your net sale proceeds. Get the exact payout amount from your lender before you make any decisions about timing or pricing. Your mortgage renewal date is also a strategic factor — selling before renewal in some cases avoids a penalty entirely.

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L'Arche Halifax: What This North End Community Is Building — and Why It Matters

What does L'Arche Halifax do for people with intellectual disabilities in Halifax?

L'Arche Halifax is a registered charity and residential community in Halifax's North End that brings together people with and without intellectual disabilities to share daily life in a home environment. It operates a duplex at 5512 Sullivan Street and hosts a monthly community gathering open to all. If you or someone you care about is looking for genuine social connection and community belonging in Halifax, L'Arche is one of the most distinctive organisations in the city.

I'm Johnny Dulong, Family Real Estate Advisor with EXIT Realty Metro in Halifax, Nova Scotia (NS #NA5059). I've spent 24 years working with Halifax families — seniors, newcomers, growing households, and people navigating major life transitions — and the connections that make Halifax a real home go far beyond the property itself. My website is SellHalifaxRealEstate.com, and you can reach me directly at 902-209-4761.

Part of what I believe makes Halifax Regional Municipality genuinely liveable is the depth of its community organisations. L'Arche Halifax is one that deserves to be better known.

WHAT L'ARCHE ACTUALLY IS

L'Arche (pronounced "larch") is an international movement founded in France in 1964 by Jean Vanier. The founding idea was straightforward and radical at the same time: that people with intellectual disabilities and the people who support them should live together as equals in genuine community — not in institutions, and not in a traditional care model where one group serves and another receives.

Today, there are L'Arche communities in 37 countries, with 29 communities across Canada from Cape Breton to Vancouver Island. L'Arche Halifax is among the newer Canadian communities, and it reflects the organisation's commitment to building inclusion in urban, multicultural settings.

The model is relational at its core. L'Arche communities are not group homes in the traditional sense, and they are not day programs with scheduled activities and drop-ins. They are households — places where people live, cook, eat, argue, celebrate, and grow together. That distinction matters, and it is what sets L'Arche apart from most disability support organisations you will encounter in Halifax.

HOW L'ARCHE HALIFAX IS STRUCTURED

L'Arche Halifax operates a duplex in Halifax's North End, close to public transportation, libraries, restaurants, and other community amenities. The community currently includes 8 core members — the term L'Arche uses for people with intellectual disabilities who are at the heart of the community — sharing life with 10 assistants and other support staff. About half of those assistants come from other countries, which reflects the multicultural character L'Arche Halifax has intentionally cultivated.

It is worth being clear about what L'Arche Halifax currently offers and what it does not. The organisation does not operate a Day Program at this time. Its focus is on its residential homes and on building community through its monthly gatherings and social events. This is a growing community that is working toward expanding its programs, including home-based programs and work and activity opportunities. Anyone seeking day program supports for a family member with an intellectual disability in Halifax Regional Municipality should connect directly with L'Arche Halifax to discuss current availability.

L'Arche Halifax website: [LINK: L'Arche Halifax → https://larchehalifax.org | opens in new tab]

To reach the L'Arche Halifax office directly: 902-407-5512 or [email protected]

THE MONTHLY GATHERING: AN OPEN INVITATION

One of the most accessible entry points into L'Arche Halifax's community life is their monthly gathering. It takes place on the second Sunday of each month, from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m., at St. Agnes Church hall at the corner of Mumford and Chebucto Roads in Halifax. The gathering is open to families, friends, and anyone interested in L'Arche community life — it includes prayer, music, conversation, and fellowship.

This is not a charity event or a fundraiser. It is a community gathering in the truest sense, designed to foster connection between people with and without intellectual disabilities and to build awareness of what L'Arche is doing in Halifax. If you are curious about the organisation, attending a monthly gathering is the most direct way to see it in action.

One practical note: before attending, it is worth confirming the current schedule directly with L'Arche Halifax, as dates and locations can change. Contact them at 902-407-5512 or [email protected] to verify the next gathering.

WHY THIS KIND OF COMMUNITY MATTERS IN HALIFAX

Halifax Regional Municipality has a strong network of seniors' services, disability supports, and community organisations — the April 2026 seniors downsizing post on this blog covers many of them in detail. What that network is primarily built around is services: transportation, meal programs, clinical support, and structured programming.

L'Arche Halifax offers something structurally different. Its model is built on the premise that the most important thing a person with an intellectual disability needs is not a program — it is a place where they belong, relationships that are mutual and lasting, and a community that sees their gifts rather than their limitations.

For a detailed look at the community support resources available to seniors and people with disabilities in Halifax: [LINK: Downsizing in Halifax: What Support Actually Exists for Seniors Making the Move in 2026 → https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/blog.html/downsizing-in-halifax-support-resources-for-seniors-in-hrm-8995582 | opens in new tab]

That distinction resonates with many of the families I work with in Halifax — particularly families navigating housing decisions for a parent or sibling with a disability, or seniors who are downsizing and thinking carefully about what their next chapter looks like in terms of community and connection, not just square footage.

THE BROADER L'ARCHE CONTEXT

L'Arche Canada has nearly 200 homes and workshops or day programs grouped into 29 communities. Halifax's community is newer and smaller than established L'Arche communities in cities like Edmonton, Vancouver, or Ottawa, but its location in Halifax's North End — one of the most diverse and community-oriented neighbourhoods in HRM — positions it well for growth.

L'Arche's national mission is straightforward: to demonstrate that when people with intellectual disabilities take their place in community life, they contribute to a more just, compassionate, and vibrant society. The Halifax chapter is actively working toward that through its residential homes, its social gatherings, and its long-term goal of expanding work and activity programs in the greater Halifax area.

For more on L'Arche Canada's mission and national network: [LINK: L'Arche Canada → https://larche.ca | opens in new tab]

HOW TO SUPPORT L'ARCHE HALIFAX

L'Arche Halifax is a registered Canadian charity. Financial support can be made directly through their website at larchehalifax.org. Donations can also be processed through Canada Helps.

Beyond financial support, L'Arche communities benefit from volunteer involvement, community partnerships, and from people simply showing up at their monthly gathering and getting to know the community. If you work with a business, faith community, or neighbourhood association in Halifax Regional Municipality and are looking for a meaningful local connection, L'Arche Halifax is worth a direct conversation.

A NOTE FROM JOHNNY

I shared a version of this post originally as a social media update, and more than one person asked me: why is a real estate advisor writing about a disability support community?

The honest answer is that after 24 years in Halifax real estate, I've come to understand that the question clients are really asking when they choose a neighbourhood or a community isn't just about square footage or school zones or commute times. It's about whether they will belong somewhere. Whether their family will be known and supported. Whether the people around them will look out for each other.

L'Arche Halifax is doing the most foundational version of that work — building genuine belonging for people who are often left out of the community connection conversation entirely. That's worth knowing about, regardless of whether you're buying or selling a home.

If you are navigating a housing decision in Halifax Regional Municipality — whether that involves an aging parent, a family member with a disability, or simply figuring out what community you want to be part of — I'm happy to be a resource. Call or text me at 902-209-4761 or visit SellHalifaxRealEstate.com.

For a broader look at the communities across HRM and what makes each one distinct: [LINK: Explore All Communities → https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/communities-hub.html | opens in new tab]


This post is for informational purposes only. Program details, schedules, and service availability at L'Arche Halifax are subject to change — confirm directly with the organisation before attending events or seeking supports. Johnny Dulong is a licensed REALTOR® with EXIT Realty Metro serving Halifax Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What is L'Arche Halifax and where is it located?

L'Arche Halifax is a registered charity and residential community for people with intellectual disabilities, located in Halifax's North End at 5512 Sullivan Street. It operates a duplex where 8 core members share life with 10 assistants and support staff. The organisation also hosts a monthly community gathering open to all at St. Agnes Church hall on the corner of Mumford and Chebucto Roads. You can reach them at 902-407-5512 or [email protected].

Does L'Arche Halifax offer a Day Program for people with intellectual disabilities?

As of 2026, L'Arche Halifax does not operate a Day Program. Its current focus is on its residential homes and monthly community gatherings. The organisation is working toward expanding its programs, including work and activity supports in Halifax. Contact L'Arche Halifax directly at larchehalifax.org to ask about current availability and future programming.

How can I get involved with or support L'Arche Halifax?

The most accessible starting point is attending the monthly community gathering, held on the second Sunday of each month from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. at St. Agnes Church hall, Mumford and Chebucto Roads, Halifax. Financial donations can be made at larchehalifax.org or through Canada Helps. Community partnerships, volunteering, and simply showing up are all meaningful ways to support what L'Arche Halifax is building.


Call or text Johnny Dulong, Family Real Estate Advisor, EXIT Realty Metro, at 902-209-4761. You can also explore community resources and current listings at SellHalifaxRealEstate.com.

Last reviewed: April 2026 — reviewed quarterly

#HalifaxRealEstate #HalifaxCommunity #LArcheHalifax #HalifaxNorthEnd #SellHalifaxRealEstate #HalifaxRealtor #NSRealEstate #InclusionHalifax #DisabilitySupport #JohnnyDulong

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