If you're a first-time home buyer in Winnipeg, you probably have questions. A lot of them. That's normal. We've helped thousands of buyers through this process over the past 45 years and 4,500-plus transactions, and the questions haven't changed much. What has changed is the market itself.
So here's what we'd tell you if you were sitting across from us.
The Winnipeg market is competitive for first-time buyers
We'll be straight with you. The first-time buyer range is the most competitive segment of the Winnipeg market right now. Roughly 70% of buyers are in it, so you're going to have company.
The most common question we get from first-time buyers is simple: "What's this house going to sell for?" And honestly, the answer is often a shock. List prices in Winnipeg don't always reflect what a home actually sells for, especially for anything that's been updated or renovated. Multiple offer situations have become the norm over the past decade, which means homes in popular price ranges often sell above asking.
That doesn't mean you can't find something. It means you need to go in prepared.
Get your finances sorted before you start looking
Before you tour a single home, talk to a mortgage broker. Get pre-approved. Know your actual number.
Pre-approval does two things. It tells you what you can afford, and it tells sellers you're serious when you make an offer. In a market where multiple offers are common, showing up without pre-approval puts you at a disadvantage.
A few things to budget for beyond the purchase price:
Home inspection: $450 to $700 plus GST, depending on the size of the home (larger homes cost more)
Legal fees: $1,500 to $2,500 all in, covering the lawyer's fee plus disbursements like title registration and title insurance
Land transfer tax: Manitoba charges a provincial land transfer tax based on the property value, with no first-time buyer rebate (more on this below)
Property insurance: required by your lender before closing
Moving costs and immediate repairs: budget a cushion here, because something always comes up
We still get questions about interest rates even after buyers have talked to a broker. Rates matter, but they're one piece of a bigger picture. Your broker will walk you through the options.
Programs that help first-time buyers in Manitoba
There's money on the table that a lot of first-time buyers don't know about. Here are the main ones:
First Home Savings Account (FHSA)
Opened in 2023, this lets you save up to $8,000 per year (up to $40,000 lifetime) toward your first home. Contributions are tax-deductible, and withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase are tax-free. If you haven't opened one yet and you're planning to buy in the next few years, start now.
RRSP Home Buyers' Plan (HBP)
You can withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSPs to buy your first home (that limit increased from $35,000 in 2024). You have 15 years to repay it. You can combine this with the FHSA.
First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit (federal)
A non-refundable tax credit that gives you up to $1,500 back at tax time. You claim it the year you buy.
First-Time Home Buyers' GST Rebate
This one is new as of 2026, and it's a big deal for anyone considering a newly built home. The federal GST (5%) is eliminated entirely on new homes valued up to $1 million, which can save a first-time buyer up to $50,000. The rebate phases out between $1 million and $1.5 million. Your purchase agreement has to be signed on or after May 27, 2025 to qualify. If you're weighing a new build, talk to your broker about this before you sign anything.
A note on Manitoba land transfer tax
We want to be honest here, because a lot of online guides get this wrong. Unlike Ontario, BC, and PEI, Manitoba does not offer a first-time buyer rebate or exemption on land transfer tax. Everyone pays it. The rates are relatively modest, but you should budget for the full amount. On a $350,000 home, the provincial land transfer tax works out to about $4,650.
Talk to your mortgage broker and accountant about how these stack. Used together, they can meaningfully reduce what you need upfront.
Location over lipstick
This is advice we give constantly, and it's the thing most first-time buyers push back on.
When money is tight, it's tempting to go after the flipped home with the new kitchen and the staged living room. Those homes attract the fiercest competition. Everyone wants turnkey. Nobody wants to paint walls or replace flooring after spending everything they have on the down payment. We get that.
But here's what we've seen over and over: buyers sacrifice a great location for cosmetic upgrades that cost a fraction of what they think. We'll put it bluntly. Don't sacrifice location for something someone threw some lipstick on.
A home in a strong neighbourhood that needs some work will build more equity over time than a pretty flip in a weaker area. Neighbourhoods like River Heights, Charleswood, and Fort Garry hold their value because people want to live there. The kitchen backsplash won't matter in five years. The address will.
If you can sidestep some of the competition by looking at homes that need a little love in a good area, you'll come out ahead.
What house hunting actually looks like
Everyone's experience is different. Some buyers find something in weeks. Others take a year or longer. We've worked with people who saw six homes over three years, waiting for the right one. We've had others who wanted to see everything on the market and toured 50 houses before deciding.
Both approaches are fine. There's no formula.
One thing we tell every buyer: don't rely entirely on photos. You never really get a true sense of a home's feel and atmosphere until you're standing inside it, and photos can be deceiving. A listing photo can make a small room look spacious or hide the busy street outside the window. Virtual tours help, but they're not a replacement for walking through the front door.
The typical buyer search in Winnipeg follows a pattern. You start with a neighbourhood in mind and a budget. You look at everything available in that area. If you don't find the right fit, you expand outward. A River Heights search turns into Charleswood because the lots are bigger and the dollar goes further. An East Fort Garry search expands across the river into St. Vital. It's a natural process, and a good agent helps you see those connections instead of staying stuck on one postal code.
Making an offer in a multiple-offer market
Multiple offers on a set offer date became common in Winnipeg after the 2008 recession, and they haven't gone away. Before that, selling a home was more passive. Put up a sign, wait for the phone to ring. Now it's aggressive, especially in the first-time buyer range.
A few things to know going in:
Your offer isn't just about price. Conditions (inspection, financing), possession dates, and deposit size all matter to a seller.
Don't panic if you lose your first bid. It happens. It happens to almost everyone. Part of our job is keeping you from getting discouraged when the market doesn't cooperate.
Be ready to move fast. When a good property comes up and there's a short window, you need an agent who can react quickly and give you the information you need to make a decision.
Know your ceiling. Decide your maximum before you write the offer, not during the negotiation.
Getting outbid is frustrating. We've been through it hundreds of times with buyers, and it never feels good. But it's better to lose a bidding war than to win one by overpaying.
Pick the right agent
Your home is probably the biggest purchase you'll ever make. Who you work with matters.
Trust is the starting point. For most people, a principal residence is the largest financial asset they'll ever own, so trusting the person you hire to do the best job should matter more than anything else. Trust comes from reputation, experience, market knowledge, and communication. Not from a flashy Instagram page.
Ask yourself: Is this agent going to be available when I need them? Can they react quickly? Do they listen to what I want, or are they steering me toward what's convenient for them?
If something feels off, listen to that feeling. If you don't get a warm, fuzzy feeling with someone, you should usually walk away. That applies to realtors the same way it applies to any service you're hiring for.
Working with a team means there's always someone available, and you get different perspectives on the market. We've found that different buyers connect with different members of our team, and that's a feature, not a bug.
Frequently asked questions
What programs help first-time home buyers in Manitoba?
First-time buyers can use the First Home Savings Account (FHSA), the RRSP Home Buyers' Plan, the federal First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit, and the new First-Time Home Buyers' GST Rebate on newly built homes. Most can be combined. One thing to know: Manitoba, unlike some provinces, does not offer a first-time buyer rebate on land transfer tax, so budget for that cost. Ask your mortgage broker and accountant how these stack for your situation.
How competitive is the Winnipeg market for first-time buyers?
It's the most competitive segment in the city. Roughly 70% of buyers are shopping in the first-time buyer range, and multiple-offer situations are common, so homes there often sell above asking.
What should I budget for beyond the purchase price?
Plan for a home inspection ($450 to $700 plus GST), legal fees ($1,500 to $2,500 all in), Manitoba land transfer tax, lender-required property insurance, and a cushion for moving costs and immediate repairs.
Should I get pre-approved before house hunting?
Yes. Pre-approval tells you what you can actually afford and signals to sellers that you're serious, which matters in a market where multiple offers are common.
Ready to start looking?
If you're a first-time buyer in Winnipeg and you want honest advice from a team that's been doing this for over four decades, reach out. We're happy to answer questions before you're ready to buy. No pressure, no timeline.
Contact The Castelane Team
Cole & Brett Castelane, Kayla Hueging
Century 21 Bachman & Associates
360 McMillan Ave, Winnipeg, MB R3L 0N2