(CANADA) — The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) forecast a move toward stability in its Canada Housing Outlook 2026 as Ottawa cuts immigration targets and resets a market strained by rapid population growth and high interest rates.
CMHC said the outlook reflects a shift after years in which demand outpaced construction starts, with policy changes expected to narrow the housing supply gap and cool pressures in both rental and ownership markets.

Policy and market context
The forecast lands as the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) roll out late-2025 and early-2026 measures aimed at tighter screening and slower processing for some applicants. Those measures add a North American security overlay to migration flows that also feed Canadian housing demand.
Canada’s immigration policies are central to the reset. The federal government’s 2025–2027 Immigration Levels Plan cut permanent resident targets and set temporary resident goals designed to slow population-driven housing demand.
Key immigration targets and effects
- Permanent resident targets:
- 2026: 380,000
- 2027: 365,000
-
Temporary resident target:
- Reduce the share of international students and foreign workers to 5% of the total population by the end of 2026 (down from ~7%).
CMHC said official estimates suggest these new targets will reduce the housing supply gap by approximately 534,000 units by 2030, linking a policy-driven slowdown in demand with efforts to expand supply.
Stay updated on North American border actions and U.S. screening changes, as they can influence migration flows and housing demand across Canada and the broader market.
Market expectations and timing
CMHC and economists outline a near-term cooling and a path to stability driven by a combination of factors:
- Lower interest rates in 2025–2026 that could improve project economics.
- Continued government support and policies encouraging greater urban density, making more projects viable.
- Immigration reductions that should ease incremental demand, particularly in rental markets.
“We anticipate by 2025-2026 lower interest rates, continued government support, and policies encouraging greater density in urban centres should make more projects viable,” — Bob Dugan, chief economist at CMHC.
Expected impacts by market segment
- Rental markets:
- Economists expect an easing in 2026, especially in Toronto and Vancouver.
- Caps on international student intakes are projected to reduce one of the strongest sources of incremental rental demand.
- The temporary resident cap targets groups that often rent first and cluster near schools and employment hubs, likely producing faster relief for rents than for purchase prices.
-
Ownership and resale markets:
- A “more balanced market” for first-time buyers, with more conditional offers and modest price growth of approximately 1%.
- Purchase prices are more sensitive to credit conditions and inventory than short-term changes in temporary resident numbers.
Distribution and selection of arrivals
The immigration plan also reshapes who competes for status:
- By 2026, 40% of all new permanent residents are expected to be drawn from temporary residents already in Canada, tightening pathways for applicants abroad.
- Even with lower overall numbers, Canada is prioritizing a selective system focused on:
- Skilled trades
- Healthcare
- French-speaking applicants
This approach aims to align arrivals with labour shortages while tempering broader population-driven housing demand.
Labour, technology, and targeted pathways
Housing and labour market priorities intersect with targeted immigration for high-skilled sectors:
- An accelerated pathway for U.S. H-1B visa holders is being relaunched to attract specialized talent, keeping a channel open for high-skilled workers even as aggregate immigration targets fall.
- For employers, the selective approach may intensify competition for permanent resident spots while still prioritizing specific sectors, complicating workforce planning in regions already constrained by housing availability.
U.S. security measures and North American effects
Actions by DHS and USCIS in late 2025 and early 2026 signal tighter security-driven screening that could affect migration patterns across North America.
- January 5, 2026 — USCIS announced the establishment of a specialized unit to enhance screening for “terrorists, criminal aliens, and other foreign nationals who pose potential threats to public safety.” USCIS tied the work to coordination with Canada’s Strong Borders Act (Bill C-2) to manage irregular migration and cross-border security.
- January 2, 2026 — A USCIS memo confirmed a pause in the review of all pending applications (visas, green cards, and asylum) for nationals from an additional 20 “high-risk” countries, bringing the total to 39.
- The memo stated: “USCIS remains dedicated to ensuring aliens from high-risk countries of concern who have entered the United States do not pose risks to national security or public safety. To faithfully uphold United States immigration law, the flow of aliens from countries with high overstay rates, significant fraud, or both must stop.”
- December 2, 2025 (PM-602-0192) — USCIS implemented a mandatory hold and review on all pending asylum applications as part of a comprehensive national security assessment.
Canada’s parallel measures — notably the Strong Borders Act — and the U.S. Restricting and Limiting Entry Proclamation (dated Jan 1, 2026) have been described as a unified North American effort to tighten border controls. These actions are expected to decrease the number of asylum seekers and irregular arrivals in 2026, which would be another factor reducing incremental housing demand.
Why this matters for housing supply and affordability
The CMHC outlook frames 2026 as a market reset where housing supply can catch up with demand. Contributing factors include:
- Immigration policy: The first time in modern Canadian history the government has proactively used immigration reductions to address housing affordability, directly linking population growth management to shelter costs.
- Interest-rate environment: Lower rates are expected to improve the viability of projects that were previously unprofitable due to higher borrowing costs.
- Urban density policies: Encouraging multi-unit developments and other higher-density supply forms could quicken the supply response.
Pressure has been most visible in large metropolitan areas where newcomers and existing residents compete for limited rental units and entry-level homes, and where approvals, land constraints, and construction capacity can delay supply responses.
Stakeholder implications
- Prospective immigrants:
- Face a tougher race for permanent resident status as annual targets fall to 380,000 in 2026 and 365,000 in 2027.
- An increasing share of spots will go to temporary residents already in Canada.
-
Renters and buyers:
- Immediate change likely to be felt most in the rental market.
-
A more balanced resale market may appear via negotiating conditions and modest price growth.
-
Employers:
- Competition for permanent resident spots may intensify.
- Certain sectors remain prioritized, but housing constraints may complicate hiring in affected regions.
Conclusion — the Outlook’s central thesis
The Canada Housing Outlook 2026 ties its stability narrative to two linked shifts:
- Immigration policies designed to slow population-driven demand growth.
- A financial and policy environment (lower interest rates, government support, and urban density policies) that could improve construction feasibility and expand supply.
Taken together, these shifts are intended to narrow the housing supply gap and cool pressures in both rental and ownership markets, producing a more balanced market environment through 2026 and beyond.
The Canada Housing Outlook 2026 outlines a strategic shift toward market stability. By reducing permanent resident targets to 380,000 and limiting temporary residents, the government seeks to curb demand. Coupled with anticipated interest rate cuts and urban density incentives, the CMHC expects a more balanced market. This proactive link between immigration policy and housing affordability marks a historical turning point for Canadian economic and social planning.
