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Updated 4 months ago on . Most recent reply
Where Would You Invest ? Calgary, Edmonton, other ?
Hello Newbie here with my first post.
My wife and I thinking of purchasing our first investment property with the plan to get a retirement income in 15 yrs from now. We currently live in BC and due to expensive market are thinking of purchasing in Alberta.
Where and what would you purchase if you had approximately 100k down. We may be able to get a attached rental with suite in Calgary or a detached rental in Edmonton. Trying to balance out appreciation and monthly cash flow.
Suggestions and advice is greatly appreciated
Ryan
Most Popular Reply
Quote from @Anthony Therrien-Bernard:
Thanks I appreciate all the feedback and info. I'm thinking the condos in Alberta would have the lowest appreciation and Calgary would have the most appreciation. Trying to balance out cash on cash and overall house value over time.
Thanks again
Calgary condos are not terribly great investments either. In fact we just did a presentation on this last night we'll have a video out in about a week. But here are some really interesting numbers...
Ok so this one doesn't look too bad but notice how much more the townhouses and condos dropped in prices over the last downturn.
![](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/uploaded_images/1728578185-Picture1.png?twic=v1/output=image/quality=55/contain=800x800)
2007 peak to now isn't so good...
Before the 2007 run up to now is better, but even then, apartment condos performed the worse (so best case scenario, you have the worse performing asset type, worse case scenario you had a terrible return), and that's assuming you had nothing go wrong with the condo (special assessment etc)
But benchmarks don't even tell the whole story, because if you had a specific condo investment, and you tracked it's value overtime, benchmark prices isn't the right approach as it evolves overtime (benchmark price is the price of a typical property generated at each point in time). So what I did is I looked at median prices of 2 bed condos between 800-1200sqft built between 1980-1990, I did this to eliminate new condos being added into the pricing pool, and look at this rollercoaster...
Detached faired a LOT better, less variability in downturns, and much better return (for this chart I did not look at semi-detached, but the trend is closer to detached)
Wow ! This is fabulous information, Thanks so much