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Benchmark numbers highlight housing-price chasm between West Coast and Eastern Canada

There is a $900,000 price difference between Vancouver and Moncton
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Three-bedroom house in Rogersville, New Brunswick, listed in March at $44,900 | Capital Realty/ Keller Williams

It’s more than 4,000 kilometres from Vancouver to New Brunswick, but as far as house prices ago it is light years in distance.

The benchmark price for a Canadian home was $609,700 in February, reports the Canadian Real Estate Association, but the data shows that there is a cavernous west-east price gap in the country.

Benchmark urban home prices now range from a low of $174,800 in Moncton, New Brunswick to $1.07 million in Metro Vancouver. The city closest to the Canadian-wide benchmark is Greater Victoria, with a typical home price of $642,800.

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Three-bedroom house in East Vancouver, B.C., listed in March at $1.88 million | Sutton West Coast

Three cities have homes priced below the national benchmark: Regina, at $278,700; Saskatoon, at $292,800 and, of course, Moncton.

Both Ottawa and Montreal are in the middle-range, with benchmark home prices in the $370,000 range.

Greater Toronto, at a benchmark of $751,700, and Oakville-Milton, at $719,600 are the only centres outside of B.C. that come close to the Metro Vancouver prices.