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New property listed in Sage Hill, Calgary

I have listed a new property at 137 Sage Meadows GARDENS NW in Calgary. See details here

**OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY JAN 31: 12-3PM / SUNDAY FEB 1: 2-5PM** Welcome to Sage Hill. Boasting almost 1,700 sqft of thoughtfully designed living space, this 3 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom townhome offers a bright open layout with contemporary finishes throughout. The main floor features wide plank vinyl flooring, full height kitchen cabinetry with soft close drawers, and a central island with quartz countertops throughout that works beautifully for everyday living and entertaining. From the kitchen, step directly into your private fenced yard, perfect for kids, pets, or relaxing outdoors. Upstairs, the rare dual primary bedroom layout stands out, each with its own walk-in closet and private ensuite. Vaulted ceilings and the convenience of upper-floor laundry complete this well-planned level. The fully developed basement adds even more functionality with a spacious third bedroom, a full 3 piece bathroom, and a cozy family or recreation room. It’s a great option for guests, a home office, or extra living space. Additional highlights include an assigned parking stall and a prime location close to future schools, shopping, medical services, and easy access to Stoney Trail. Outdoor enthusiasts will love the nearby pathways, green spaces, and quick proximity to Nose Creek Park. This beautifully maintained home is a turn-key opportunity for first time buyers, downsizers, or investors. A must-see.

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Open House. Open House on Saturday, January 31, 2026 12:00PM - 3:00PM

Please visit our Open House at 137 Sage Meadows GARDENS NW in Calgary. See details here

Open House on Saturday, January 31, 2026 12:00PM - 3:00PM

**OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY JAN 31: 12-3PM / SUNDAY FEB 1: 2-5PM** Welcome to Sage Hill. Boasting almost 1,700 sqft of thoughtfully designed living space, this 3 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom townhome offers a bright open layout with contemporary finishes throughout. The main floor features wide plank vinyl flooring, full height kitchen cabinetry with soft close drawers, and a central island with quartz countertops throughout that works beautifully for everyday living and entertaining. From the kitchen, step directly into your private fenced yard, perfect for kids, pets, or relaxing outdoors. Upstairs, the rare dual primary bedroom layout stands out, each with its own walk-in closet and private ensuite. Vaulted ceilings and the convenience of upper-floor laundry complete this well-planned level. The fully developed basement adds even more functionality with a spacious third bedroom, a full 3 piece bathroom, and a cozy family or recreation room. It’s a great option for guests, a home office, or extra living space. Additional highlights include an assigned parking stall and a prime location close to future schools, shopping, medical services, and easy access to Stoney Trail. Outdoor enthusiasts will love the nearby pathways, green spaces, and quick proximity to Nose Creek Park. This beautifully maintained home is a turn-key opportunity for first time buyers, downsizers, or investors. A must-see.

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Open House. Open House on Sunday, February 1, 2026 2:00PM - 5:00PM

Please visit our Open House at 137 Sage Meadows GARDENS NW in Calgary. See details here

Open House on Sunday, February 1, 2026 2:00PM - 5:00PM

**OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY JAN 31: 12-3PM / SUNDAY FEB 1: 2-5PM** Welcome to Sage Hill. Boasting almost 1,700 sqft of thoughtfully designed living space, this 3 bedroom, 3.5 bathroom townhome offers a bright open layout with contemporary finishes throughout. The main floor features wide plank vinyl flooring, full height kitchen cabinetry with soft close drawers, and a central island with quartz countertops throughout that works beautifully for everyday living and entertaining. From the kitchen, step directly into your private fenced yard, perfect for kids, pets, or relaxing outdoors. Upstairs, the rare dual primary bedroom layout stands out, each with its own walk-in closet and private ensuite. Vaulted ceilings and the convenience of upper-floor laundry complete this well-planned level. The fully developed basement adds even more functionality with a spacious third bedroom, a full 3 piece bathroom, and a cozy family or recreation room. It’s a great option for guests, a home office, or extra living space. Additional highlights include an assigned parking stall and a prime location close to future schools, shopping, medical services, and easy access to Stoney Trail. Outdoor enthusiasts will love the nearby pathways, green spaces, and quick proximity to Nose Creek Park. This beautifully maintained home is a turn-key opportunity for first time buyers, downsizers, or investors. A must-see.

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Property Taxes: What Homeowners Should Know

Property taxes might not be the most exciting part of homeownership, but understanding how they work can help you budget better and catch mistakes before they cost you money.

Property taxes fund the services that keep the city running every day. Think snow clearing, transit, police and fire, parks, recreation, and other things we all rely on. Every homeowner pays into the system, but most people are not totally sure how their bill is calculated or what to do when the numbers don’t look right.

Here is a simple breakdown of how property taxes work, what changed for 2026, key deadlines you need to remember, and when it makes sense to appeal your assessment.

Calgary Property Tax Rates for 2025

Residential properties

  • Provincial: 0.0023097

  • City: 0.0038706

  • Combined: 0.0061803 (roughly 0.62%)

Non residential properties

  • Provincial: 0.0038555

  • City: 0.0179731

  • Combined: 0.02182860 (roughly 2.18%)

Farmland

  • Provincial: 0.0023097

  • City: 0.0372838

  • Combined: 0.0395935 (roughly 3.96%)

What Changed for 2026

Assessment notices land in mailboxes every January and reflect market values as of the previous July. For 2026, a few trends stood out:

  1. Average residential assessment rose 1%
    Last year it increased 15 percent

  2. Combined residential tax rate is 0.61803%
    Last year was 0.64861%

  3. Median single family home is assessed at $706,000
    Last year it was $697,000

  4. Median condo assessment is $347,000
    Last year it was $359,000

Keep in mind, a 1% change in assessment does not mean your bill changes 1%. Taxes shift based on the city’s budget and how assessments move across the entire pool of homes. If your property rose in line with the average, your share stays about the same. If you rose more or less, your slice of the pie shifts.

For 2026, the City approved a 1.6% tax rate increase, which works out to roughly $4.50 per month for the typical home. Final numbers get settled after the provincial budget drops in March, so online calculators may be slightly off. Actual tax bills are mailed at the end of May.

Key Dates to Remember

  • January: Assessment notices mailed

  • March: Deadline to file assessment appeals

  • May: Tax bills mailed

  • June 30: Payment deadline

  • July 1: First 7% late penalty

  • October 1: Second 7% late penalty

  • January 1 the following year: 1% monthly penalty on outstanding balances

How Your Tax Bill Gets Calculated

Three things drive your property tax bill:

  1. Your assessed value: The City estimates market value based on what your home would likely sell for on July 1 of the previous year. Assessments consider living area, lot size, age, condition, renovations, garage, location influences, and comparable sales.

  2. The tax rate: The City sets the municipal portion each spring. The Province sets the education portion separately. For 2025 the combined residential rate was 0.61803%.

  3. The math: (Assessed value x City rate) + (Assessed value x Provincial rate)

  • Example for a $697,000 home in 2025:

  • City portion: $2,698

  • Provincial portion: $1,610

  • Total: $4,308

Understanding Your Assessment Notice

When your assessment shows up in January, check it. You have until March to appeal. Verify things like square footage, lot size, year built, condition, and any upgrades. Mistakes here can cost you real money.

The City’s online platform lets you compare your home to similar properties and spot odd valuations. You just need the roll number from your notice.

Why Assessments Change

Values shift when:

  • Markets move

  • Nearby sales change

  • New development happens

  • You renovate

  • Your home deteriorates

  • Neighbourhood demand changes

Paying Property Taxes

Bills arrive in May and cover the full year. You can pay:

  1. Annually: Pay the full amount in person, by mail or online.

  2. Monthly: Through TIPP, the City’s monthly payment plan which spreads your taxes across the year with no penalties and automatic renewal. If taxes are already included in your mortgage payment, you cannot join TIPP because the lender is already doing the same thing.

Some mortgage lenders will collect property taxes for you by adding 1/12 of your estimated tax bill to your monthly mortgage payment. If their estimate is off, you’ll either receive a refund or be billed for the difference when taxes are due. Some lenders require this setup, while others let you opt out and pay the City directly. If your taxes are already included in your mortgage, you can’t join TIPP because both options do the same thing: spread your annual bill into monthly payments.

What Happens If You Pay Late

Penalties add up quickly:

  • July 1: 7%o n unpaid balance

  • October 1: Another 7%

  • After December 31: 1% per month

The City treats tax as due whether you received the bill or not. If you do not see it by early June, call 311. If your lender forgets to pay, penalties still land on you, although lenders usually cover them.

If You Cannot Pay

Call the City rather than ignoring it. Unpaid taxes can lead to liens, collections, or even a tax sale. The Property Tax Assistance Program offers relief for qualified homeowners facing hardship.

Appealing Your Assessment

You can appeal if:

  • Comparable homes are assessed lower

  • Data in your assessment is wrong

  • Damage or defects are not reflected in the value

  • Market evidence indicates overvaluation

  • You cannot appeal because taxes feel too high or because you do not like how the City spends money.

To appeal, you will need evidence like comparable sales from last July, similar assessments from the City’s online tool, property condition photos, or contractor estimates for major issues. The Assessment Review Board can lower, maintain, or occasionally raise your assessment. Decisions apply only for the current year.

What Property Taxes Pay For

Property tax dollars fund services you use every day. When you pay your annual bill, your money goes toward:

  • Roughly 63% covers City services including police, fire, transit, roads, parks, recreation and waste

  • Roughly 37% covers provincial education costs

  • Water and waste utilities are billed separately.

Common Questions

  1. Why did my taxes increase if the City approved only a small increase?
    Your bill depends on both the tax rate and your assessment. If your home climbed faster than the average, your bill rises more than the headline number.

  2. Can I pay through my mortgage?
    Yes. Many lenders do this. If they do, you cannot join TIPP.

  3. Can I appeal the tax rate?
    No. You can only appeal the assessed value.

  4. Will my taxes always go up?
    It depends on market values and budgets. In strong markets assessments climb. In weaker ones they decline. Rates change based on City and provincial budget decisions.

Conclusion

Property taxes might not be the most exciting part of owning a home, but understanding how they work makes life easier. It helps you budget, catch mistakes, and know when it’s worth filing an appeal. If something looks off in January, don’t wait until summer to figure it out. Once the deadline passes, you’re stuck with that number for the year.

If you want to dive deeper into how property taxes work or what your assessment means, reach out any time. I’m always happy to discuss what this means for you!

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From Vision to Move-In: How Long a Custom Home Really Takes in Calgary

It’s a question a lot of people ask, especially if they’ve never gone through the process before. Whether it’s a single-family or a multi-unit project, turning a dream into a finished home takes time, coordination, and patience. There are multiple phases that affect the total build time including design, permits, and construction.

Below is a breakdown of how long each phase generally takes in Calgary, plus what can slow things down along the way.

Custom Home Project Timeline: Start to Finish

Every home and every site is different, so timelines can vary quite a bit. The following gives a realistic sense of what to expect in today’s market.

Discovery Phase

Timeline: 1 month

This is where you map out the big picture. Conversations typically cover lifestyle, must-haves, design preferences, and overall vision. If you don’t already have a builder in mind, this is also where you may get connected with one.

What can delay things:
Decision-making. It takes time to sort out what you really want, and clarity early on prevents costly revisions later.

Design and Development Phases

Timeline: 3 months

Concepts and sketches turn into 3D models and detailed design drawings. Through this phase, there’s usually ongoing communication with designers and sometimes the municipality to ensure ideas align with zoning and land use requirements.

What can delay things:
Complexity. More customization equals more detail and requires more feedback and approvals. Slow response time during reviews can stretch timelines as well.

Permit Approval Phase

Single-Family and Semi-Detached
Development Permit: 3 to 4 months
Building Permit: 1 month

Multi-Unit
Development Permit: 4 to 5 months
Building Permit: 1 to 2 months

Development permits deal with land use while building permits deal with construction and safety codes. Both are necessary before a shovel hits the ground.

What can delay things:
Public consultation and neighbour feedback can extend timelines. Relaxation requests and bylaw considerations can also add steps.

Construction Phase

Single-Family: 10 to 14 months
Multi-Unit: 12 to 18 months

Once permits are issued, construction begins. This includes:
• Site prep and excavation
• Foundation and waterproofing
• Framing and roofing
• Plumbing, HVAC, and electrical rough-ins
• Insulation and drywall
• Exterior finishes and windows
• Interior finishes, millwork, and appliances
• Landscaping and exterior detailing

Afterward, you get final inspections, walkthroughs, and a punch-list review to make sure everything is dialed in before move-in.

What can delay things:
Weather, trade availability, material shortages, and the complexity of the build all matter. Calgary winters especially can slow exterior work.

So What’s the Total Time From Start to Finish?

For most Calgary projects, a realistic timeline from early conversations to move-in is roughly 18 to 30 months, depending on scope, design choices, and property type.

Turning a Dream Into a Home

Designing and building a custom home doesn’t have to feel overwhelming. When there’s alignment between designer, builder, and client, the process is surprisingly exciting and rewarding.

If you’re considering a custom home or multi-unit project and want to get a clearer sense of timelines, budget, builder options, or feasibility, I’m always happy to chat.

Ready to explore a custom home project in Calgary? Reach out and let’s talk next steps.

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Thinking of Building a Home in Calgary? What Are the Costs?

Building a home is an exciting goal, but it requires some financial homework. Costs can swing depending on where you’re building, the style of home you want, and the current state of the construction market. Whether you’re planning a new place in the city or somewhere quiet and rural, it helps to know what you’re getting into from day one.

Below is a breakdown of what it typically costs and what drives those numbers so you can plan with confidence and avoid those “surprise” expenses that hit during the build.

Typical Building Costs in Alberta

What price range can you expect for home-building costs:

  • Basic Builds: $150 to $200 per sqft

  • Mid-Range Builds: $200 to $250 per sqft

  • Luxury Builds: $250 to $300+ per sqft

Land also plays a role in your total budget:

  • Calgary Lots: $175K to $255K for a standard residential lot

  • Rural Land: Can range from $1 to $20+ per square foot depending on location

Timeline for custom builds usually runs 10 to 16 months from breaking ground to move-in.

What Drives Home-Building Costs in Alberta

There’s real math behind home-building costs. Location is a major factor. Building within a city tends to cost more than in rural areas due to higher labour and demand. Calgary builds often average between $250 to $300+ per sqft, while rural areas can be more attainable at $150 to $200 per sqft.

Materials have also been a moving target. Supply issues and inflation pushed prices up sharply over the last few years, although materials have started to stabilize. Labour is another big one, especially for highly skilled trades. Paying qualified professionals upfront often avoids expensive fixes later.

The complexity of your design plays a part too. The more angles, curves, specialty features, or cathedral ceilings you add, the higher the cost.

What You Get for Each Price Category

Basic Construction ($150 to $200/sqft):
Functional and practical, typically with standard finishes and minimal customization. Think 8 to 9-foot ceilings, vinyl flooring, standard cabinets, basic fixtures, and simple layouts. A 2,000 sqft home at this level usually lands around $300K to $400K (not counting land).

Mid-Range Construction ($200 to $250/sqft):
This is the sweet spot for many Alberta buyers. Higher ceilings, better flooring options, semi-custom cabinets, quartz counters, upgraded fixtures, and more room to personalize. A similar 2,000 sqft build here lands around $400K to $500K.

Luxury Construction ($250 to $300+/sqft):
More customization and upgraded everything. Taller ceilings, premium flooring, custom cabinetry, designer finishes, upgraded windows and doors, and smart tech. A 2,000 sqft build would sit around $500K to $600K+.

Land Costs

Land can be a major part of your budget and there’s more than meets the eye. Lots can start in the low $200K range and climb significantly in established neighbourhoods while rural properties stretch your square footage, but they can come with extra work.

Beyond the sticker price, buyers should factor in:

  • Surveys and soil tests

  • Land clearing

  • Utility hookups

  • Driveway access

  • Environmental assessments

A rural lot might look cheaper upfront but can easily cost more once utilities and ground prep come into play.

Pre-Construction Costs Nobody Talks About

Before construction begins, there are behind-the-scenes expenses that take a bite out of your budget. These include:

  • Permits

  • Architectural design

  • Engineering

  • Surveys

  • Permit documentation

  • Foundation and excavation

Planning and design alone can consume 5 to 10% of your budget, but cutting corners here usually creates issues later.

How Long Does It Take to Build a House in Alberta?

Most custom homes take 10 to 16 months, weather depending. Winters can slow progress, especially outdoor work, so builders often schedule foundations and framing in warm months, then finish interiors in winter.

Your money is released in stages rather than all at once, especially if you’re using a construction mortgage.

Smart Places to Spend vs. Smart Places to Save

Strategic spending pays off. Upgrades that tend to offer strong long-term value include:

  • Kitchens

  • Insulation and windows

  • Roofing and foundation

  • High-efficiency systems

Places you can delay or scale back:

  • Fixtures and lighting

  • Landscaping

  • Basement finishing

  • Closet organizers

  • Energy-efficient upgrades cost more up front, but Alberta buyers often save hundreds per year on utilities.

Financing a Build in Alberta

Most lenders structure construction mortgages differently from standard mortgages. Progress draws are common where money is released at each stage of construction. Expect higher down payments for land and construction and slightly higher interest rates. Working with a broker who understands construction financing makes a big difference.

Choosing a Builder Without Overpaying

The right builder affects both cost and quality. Cheapest is rarely best. Look for clear contracts, detailed allowances, transparent communication, and relevant experience. Visit job sites, ask for references, and compare quotes line by line.

Real Costs of Popular Home Features

Kitchens:

  • Basic: $13K to $40K

  • Mid-range: $30K to $60K

  • Luxury: $60K to $100K+

Bathrooms:

  • Basic: $10K to $15K

  • Mid-range: $15K to $30K

  • Luxury: $30K to $50K+

Basements:

  • Unfinished: Around $40/sqft

  • Basic: $50 to $70/sqft

  • Legal suite: $90 to $130/sqft

Outdoor Living:

  • Basic deck: $30 to $50/sq ft

  • Covered deck: $80 to $120/sq ft

  • Landscaping: $5K to $20K+

Hidden Expenses That Blow Budgets

Most Alberta builds go over budget by 10 to 15%. The biggest budget busters are:

  • Mid-build design changes

  • Material price increases

  • Underground surprises (water table, rocky soil, etc.)

  • Weather delays

  • Building code adjustments

A 10% contingency fund is the minimum smart builders recommend.

Final Thoughts

Building a home can be incredibly rewarding, but success comes from planning realistically, budgeting for surprises, and hiring the right professionals. Whether you’re planning a mid-range build or a custom home on rural land, research and preparation go a long way

If you’re thinking about building, talk to local builders who understand your specific area. Alberta’s climate and terrain are unique and local knowledge avoids expensive mistakes.

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Data is supplied by Pillar 9™ MLS® System. Pillar 9™ is the owner of the copyright in its MLS®System. Data is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed accurate by Pillar 9™.
The trademarks MLS®, Multiple Listing Service® and the associated logos are owned by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) and identify the quality of services provided by real estate professionals who are members of CREA. Used under license.