Showings May 2026
Showing Activity & Buyer Demand
A factual read on where buyers spent their time across the Halifax–Dartmouth resale market in May, and what the numbers signal for sellers preparing to list.
Where May's Demand Landed
May was an active month across Halifax–Dartmouth. The metro logged 7,390 showings on homes priced under $1M, with another 541 in the upper bands ($900K and above).
Demand was heavily concentrated in the mid-market. The $400K–$699K corridor accounted for roughly 4,610 showings — about 62% of all under-$1M activity. The single busiest band was $500K–$599K, with 1,837 showings (about a quarter of the month's total), followed closely by $400K–$499K at 1,591.
The tails were quiet by comparison. Entry-level homes under $200K drew just 104 showings (about 1.4% of activity), and demand thinned steadily above $700K. This is a textbook demand curve: the largest pool of qualified buyers sits in the $400K–$599K window, with interest tapering on either side.
Halifax–Dartmouth is the engine of the provincial market. The metro accounted for roughly 58% of all Nova Scotia showings under $1M (7,390 of 12,838 province-wide) and about 87% of all million-plus showings (541 of 625). For luxury sellers, that concentration is the headline — the buyer pool for high-end homes is overwhelmingly metro-focused.
In the condo segment, the metro logged 912 showings under $1M, with roughly 74% falling between $300K and $599K. The busiest condo band was $400K–$499K (252 showings), and condo demand fell off sharply above $800K — just 12 showings each in the top two bands.
Where Competition Was Tightest
Without a published inventory pipeline figure for May, the cleanest way to gauge competition is showings per listing: how many buyer visits the average home in each price band attracted during the month. The math is simple — total showings in a band, divided by the number of listings competing in it.
A higher number means more buyer demand chasing each home — a seller's advantage. A lower number means buyers had more choices and could afford to be selective.
The pattern is clear: the $400K–$599K window was the tightest market for buyers, where the average listing drew roughly six showings over the month. From $700K up, the average home attracted closer to 3.5–4.3 showings — still healthy demand, but enough breathing room that buyers could take their time.
In the upper bands, showings per listing fell to about 3.3 in the $900K–$1.35M range and roughly 2.2–2.9 above that. Fewer showings per home at the top translates directly into longer marketing timelines — a normal feature of the luxury tier, not a warning sign.
What This Means for Sellers Right Now
- Selling between $400K and $599K? You're in May's hottest lane. The average home here drew about six showings. Price with precision and prepare for a busy first week on market.
- The mid-market is where the buyers are. Roughly 62% of under-$1M activity sat in the $400K–$699K corridor — which also means you're being compared directly against the most-shopped competition. Presentation and pricing discipline matter most here.
- Above $700K, plan for a longer runway. Fewer showings per listing means a slower, more deliberate sales process. Holding to a well-supported price beats chasing the market down.
- Luxury sellers: market to the metro. About 87% of all Nova Scotia million-plus showings happened right here in Halifax–Dartmouth. Concentrate your marketing where the qualified buyers actually are.
- Condo sellers: the $300K–$599K range is your traffic sweet spot. Demand thins considerably above $800K, so price and expectations should be set accordingly at the top end.
- Remember what a showing is — and isn't. Strong showing volume reflects buyer interest, not closed sales. The right price is still what converts traffic into an accepted offer.










