Why Baby Boomers May Hold the Key to Vancouver’s Housing Future

Baby boomers may shape Vancouver’s housing future because many are choosing to age in place instead of selling their detached homes. That choice affects how many family sized homes become available in neighbourhoods like Point Grey, Kerrisdale, Dunbar, Kitsilano, and the broader Lower Mainland.

Many older Vancouver homeowners are not rushing to downsize.
That means fewer detached homes may come to market for younger families.
Demand is shifting toward duplexes, townhomes, laneway homes, and other missing middle housing.
The key question is not just how many homes Vancouver builds. It is also who decides to move, when, and why.

Why do baby boomers matter so much to Vancouver housing?

Baby boomers, born between 1946 and 1964, own a significant share of established family homes. In Vancouver’s west side neighbourhoods, many of these homes sit on quiet streets close to schools, parks, community centres, and long standing social networks.

For younger families, these homes are often exactly what they want. The challenge is that many are not available.

Statistics Canada recently reported that millennial homeownership rates in Vancouver were 13.3 percent lower than baby boomers at a comparable life stage. That gap helps explain why younger buyers feel pressure even when market activity appears slower.

Why are many older homeowners staying put?

The easy assumption is that retirees will sell the family home and move into a condo. In reality, the decision is more personal and more complicated.

Many older homeowners stay because:

  • Their mortgage is paid off
  • Their neighbourhood feels familiar and safe
  • Friends, doctors, shops, and family are nearby
  • Condo prices are still high
  • Strata fees reduce the financial appeal of downsizing
  • A smaller home may not feel like a better home

CMHC notes that housing preferences do change as households age, but aging in place remains an important trend to watch as Canada’s population gets older.

What does this mean for younger Vancouver families?

For buyers in Point Grey, Kerrisdale, and nearby west side communities, the issue is not always demand. It is suitable supply.

A family may be able to find a one bedroom or two bedroom condo, but the search becomes harder when they need three bedrooms, outdoor space, storage, and access to schools.

That is why more buyers are looking at:

  • Duplexes
  • Townhomes
  • Laneway homes
  • Larger condos
  • Multiplex style housing
  • Renovated character homes with suites

This is the real pattern interrupt in Vancouver housing. The next family home may not be a traditional detached house.

Is downsizing really the right word?

Not always.

Many older homeowners are not looking to “downsize.” They are looking to rightsize. That might mean a spacious condo, a single level townhome, or a low maintenance home with room for grandchildren, hobbies, guests, and daily comfort.

Developers, planners, and homeowners should pay attention to this. If the next generation of seniors does not want tiny condos, then Vancouver needs more age friendly homes that are practical, attractive, and well located.

What could happen next?

If more baby boomers decide to sell, Vancouver could see more family homes return to the market. That would help younger buyers who have been waiting for detached or larger ground oriented homes.

If most continue aging in place, competition for family oriented homes may stay strong, especially in established neighbourhoods with limited land and strong school catchments.

CMHC has also noted that delayed projects, high costs, and weaker confidence can affect new housing supply, particularly in higher priced markets like British Columbia. BCREA continues to track housing conditions across B.C. through its market data and housing monitor tools.

What should homeowners and buyers take from this?

For older homeowners, the question is not simply “Should I sell?”
It is “What housing setup gives me the best next 10 years?”

For younger families, the question is not simply “Can we buy detached?”
It is “Which type of home gives us the space, location, and lifestyle we actually need?”

That conversation matters more than ever in Vancouver.

FAQ

Are baby boomers causing Vancouver’s housing shortage?

Not directly. Housing supply is shaped by zoning, construction costs, interest rates, development timelines, immigration, household formation, and policy. But baby boomer housing decisions affect how often established family homes become available.

Why are older homeowners not downsizing faster?

Many have strong financial and emotional reasons to stay. A paid off detached home in a familiar neighbourhood can feel more secure than buying a condo with strata fees and less space.

What is missing middle housing?

Missing middle housing includes duplexes, triplexes, townhomes, multiplexes, and similar homes that sit between condos and detached houses.

Is aging in place bad for the market?

No. Aging in place can be the right personal decision. The challenge is that Vancouver also needs enough housing options for seniors who would move if the right alternative existed.

What should I do before selling a long held family home?

Speak with a local Realtor before making assumptions about value, timing, tax considerations, preparation, and buyer demand. In areas like Point Grey and Kerrisdale, small details can make a significant difference.

Thinking about whether to stay, sell, rightsize, or help family enter the market? Contact Mark Hammer for a practical, local conversation about your options in Vancouver’s west side and the Lower Mainland.

Also watch this youtube video here: https://youtu.be/vbKfFi1pf5c?si=cG8pbXXLqPrxRwS5