By Johnny Dulong | Family Real Estate Advisor | EXIT Realty Metro | Halifax, Nova Scotia SellHalifaxRealEstate.com | 902.209.4761 | Updated: March 2026
Not everyone in Halifax should buy a home right now. That might sound like an odd thing for a real estate advisor to say, but after 24 years of working with buyers and sellers across Halifax Regional Municipality, I've learned that the clients who make the best decisions are the ones who understand their actual situation — not the ones who were pushed into a purchase before they were ready.
I'm Johnny Dulong, a Family Real Estate Advisor with EXIT Realty Metro. This guide is for people who are genuinely asking themselves whether now is the right time to buy, or whether renting in Halifax a while longer is the smarter move. Both answers are valid. What matters is that you arrive at the right one for your circumstances.
The Halifax Rental and Buying Landscape in 2026: What You're Actually Choosing Between
Before you can make a clear rent-vs-buy decision, you need to understand what each option actually costs in Halifax right now.
Renting: The average two-bedroom apartment in Halifax Regional Municipality hit $1,840 per month in the third quarter of 2025. One-bedroom units average approximately $1,450–$1,550. The rental market has softened slightly from its tightest conditions — vacancy rates have risen to approximately 2.7–3.1% across HRM — but affordable units remain scarce and in high demand.
Buying: The average residential sale price across HRM was approximately $594,365 in late 2025, up 3.7% year-over-year. The market has moved from the frantic seller's conditions of 2021–2023 toward a more balanced environment in early 2026. Average days on market have extended to 44 days, inspection conditions are largely back, and the sold-to-ask ratio sits around 97%. This is a meaningfully better environment for buyers than it was two years ago.
The mortgage stress test, which requires qualifying at your contracted rate plus 2% or 5.25% (whichever is higher), still applies regardless of your down payment. At current rates, a household needs to comfortably qualify before committing to a purchase.
Six Situations Where Renting First Is the Smarter Choice
1. You're New to Halifax and Don't Know the Neighbourhoods Yet
Halifax is not a monolithic market. A detached home in Sackville, a condo on the Halifax peninsula, a semi-detached in Dartmouth, and a new build in Bedford West are four completely different lifestyle propositions — different commutes, different school zones, different community characters, and different price trajectories.
If you've just relocated to Halifax — whether for work, university, or a Canadian Armed Forces posting — renting for six to twelve months before buying gives you time to understand which communities actually suit your life. Buyers who skip this step frequently end up in the right home in the wrong neighbourhood, which is a costly mistake to reverse.
This is especially relevant for military members arriving at CFB Halifax, Stadacona, Shearwater, or Dockyard on a first posting to the city. The IRP process allows for temporary accommodation. Using that time to genuinely explore Dartmouth, Bedford, and other HRM communities before committing to a purchase is almost always worth it.
2. Your Employment Situation Is Uncertain or Recently Changed
Mortgage lenders in Canada require demonstrated income stability. Typically that means two years of employment history in the same field, or two years of self-employment tax returns. If you've recently changed jobs, started a new role, or are self-employed and still establishing your income record, you may not qualify for the best mortgage terms — or any mortgage at all under certain lenders.
Beyond qualification, homeownership carries fixed monthly obligations: mortgage payment, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance. If your income is variable or your job security is unclear, those fixed costs become a significant risk. Renting preserves your flexibility to respond to income changes without the financial consequences of a forced sale.
3. Your Down Payment and Closing Costs Aren't Fully Saved
Nova Scotia now offers two programs that lower the entry barrier for first-time buyers: the Down Payment Assistance Program (DPAP), which provides an interest-free loan of up to $25,000 in HRM, and the 2% Down Payment Pilot Program launched in February 2026. These programs help, but they don't eliminate the need for your own financial foundation.
You still need: your minimum down payment contribution, closing costs of 1.5–4% of the purchase price in cash (deed transfer tax, legal fees, title insurance, home inspection), and a financial buffer for the first year of homeownership maintenance costs. If you are still actively building toward these numbers, renting while you save is the right call. Stretching to buy before you're financially ready creates stress that often negates the equity-building benefit.
The First Home Savings Account (FHSA) is the most powerful savings tool available to you right now — up to $8,000 per year in tax-deductible contributions, with tax-free withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase. If you're renting and planning to buy within the next two to five years, opening an FHSA immediately and maximising contributions while you rent is one of the highest-return financial decisions you can make.
4. Your Credit Score Needs Work
Your credit score directly determines both whether you qualify for a mortgage and at what rate. The difference between a 650 credit score and a 720 credit score can be worth tens of thousands of dollars in interest over the life of a 25-year mortgage.
If your credit score is below 680, spending six to twelve months paying down revolving balances, making every payment on time, and avoiding new credit applications before applying is worth the wait. The mortgage you'll qualify for after that discipline will be materially better than the one you'd get today.
5. You're Planning a Short-Term Stay of Under Three Years
The transaction costs of buying and selling a home in Halifax — deed transfer tax, legal fees, real estate commissions, and closing costs on both ends — add up to roughly 5–8% of the purchase price across a complete buy-sell cycle. If you're not planning to stay in Halifax for at least three to five years, you may not build enough equity to offset those transaction costs, particularly in a moderate-appreciation environment.
For people in Halifax on a fixed contract, a short posting, or with known relocation plans on the horizon, renting is often the financially superior choice. Buying should be a medium to long-term commitment.
6. You're Relocating to Halifax for University or Graduate School
Halifax is home to Dalhousie University, Saint Mary's University, NSCC, and several other post-secondary institutions. Student housing needs change frequently — program length, roommate situations, neighbourhood preferences, and post-graduation plans are all unknowns. Unless you're purchasing a property as a deliberate investment strategy with a clear exit plan, renting near campus while completing a degree is almost always the more practical choice.
When Renting Is NOT the Right Answer
It's worth being direct about the other side. Renting as an indefinite default — "I'll buy when the time is right" without a specific plan or timeline — carries its own costs. Average HRM rents have increased sharply over the past three years. Every year of renting at $1,840/month instead of building equity is $22,080 that builds no ownership value. The Halifax market, while more balanced than it was, is not expected to fall meaningfully — modest appreciation of 3% annually is the current consensus projection for 2026.
If you are financially ready — credit score above 680, down payment and closing costs saved, stable employment, and planning to stay in Halifax for at least three years — there is no compelling reason to wait. The 2026 market offers more negotiating leverage, more inventory choice, and better buyer protections than buyers have had since before the pandemic.
A Practical Decision Framework
Ask yourself honestly:
If you answered yes to all five, you're likely ready to buy. If you answered no to one or more, renting while you address those gaps is the right strategy — not a failure, just good planning.
Frequently Asked Questions: Renting vs. Buying in Halifax in 2026
Q: Is it better to rent or buy in Halifax in 2026? A: It depends entirely on your financial readiness, employment stability, credit score, and how long you plan to stay. For buyers who are financially prepared and planning to stay three or more years, the 2026 Halifax market offers good conditions. For those still building savings or new to the city, renting first is the smarter move.
Q: How much do you need saved to buy a home in Halifax in 2026? A: At minimum, your down payment (as low as 2% under the new provincial pilot program, or 5% under standard federal rules) plus closing costs of 1.5–4% of the purchase price in cash. On a $550,000 home with 5% down, that's roughly $27,500 down plus up to $22,000 in closing costs — approximately $49,500 total before CMHC insurance.
Q: What is the average rent in Halifax in 2026? A: The average two-bedroom apartment in HRM hit $1,840 per month in Q3 2025. One-bedroom units typically range from $1,450 to $1,550 per month depending on location and unit quality.
Q: Should military members relocating to Halifax rent or buy? A: It depends on posting length and financial readiness. For members on a first Halifax posting who don't yet know the city, renting for six to twelve months to explore communities near CFB Halifax, Stadacona, Shearwater, or Dockyard is usually wise. For members with longer-term postings and financial readiness, buying is often more cost-effective than the rental alternative at current HRM rents.
Q: How long should you rent in Halifax before buying? A: There's no universal answer. The right timeline is however long it takes to reach financial readiness — saved down payment and closing costs, credit score above 680, stable employment, and a clear sense of which HRM community fits your life. For most people who arrive in Halifax underprepared, six to eighteen months of renting while building toward those benchmarks is a reasonable timeline.
Johnny Dulong | Licensed REALTOR® (NS #NA5059) | EXIT Realty Metro | Halifax, Nova Scotia SellHalifaxRealEstate.com | 902.209.4761 | johndulong@exitmetro.ca Head Office: 107-100 Venture Run, Dartmouth, NS B3B 0H9
Disclosure: I am a Halifax-based licensed REALTOR® (NS #NA5059) with EXIT Realty Metro. This article is for general informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, mortgage, or legal advice. Market conditions, rental rates, and program details are subject to change. Always confirm current information with qualified professionals before making housing decisions.
Related reading:
From Renter to Homeowner in Halifax: What You Actually Need to Know Before You Make the Move (2026): https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/blog.html/things-you-need-to-know-before-you-move-from-a-renter-to-a-homeowner-i-8854787
2 Ways to Buy Your First Halifax Home With Less Money Down (2026): https://sellhalifaxrealestate.com/blog.html/2-ways-to-buy-your-first-halifax-home-with-less-money-down-2026-guide-8945276
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