Average home price & mortgage in Windsor

The average home price in Windsor, Ontario is roughly $580,000 in 2026. With 20% down and a ~4.5% mortgage rate over 25 years, that's about $2,579 a month — a payment that moves every time the Bank of Canada changes its rate. Try other rates on the what-if simulator.

Quick answer

The average home price in Windsor, Ontario is about $580,000 in 2026. With 20% down at a ~4.5% mortgage rate over 25 years, that is roughly $2,579 a month — a payment that shifts every time the Bank of Canada changes its 2.25% policy rate.

Average home price · Windsor
$580,000
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The Windsor housing market

A border city with cross-frontier ties and prices that climbed sharply from a low base.

Monthly mortgage on an average Windsor home

Here is the illustrative math at a ~4.5% mortgage rate, 25-year amortization and 20% down:

Average home price$580,000
Down payment (20%)$116,000
Mortgage amount$464,000
Assumed rate~4.5% (5-yr, illustrative)
Estimated monthly payment$2,579

These are illustrative estimates, not quotes — your actual rate, price and payment will differ. Verify Windsor prices with local real estate boards and rates with your lender.

How the Bank of Canada rate hits Windsor

Buyers in Windsor feel the same national policy rate as everyone else, but the impact scales with price: on a larger mortgage a 0.25% Bank of Canada move changes the monthly payment more in absolute dollars. Watch the current rate and the next move on the rate tracker and decision schedule, and compare the prime rate that variable Windsor mortgages price off.

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Frequently asked questions

What is the average home price in Windsor?

Approximately $580,000 in 2026 (illustrative estimate — verify with local real estate boards).

What is the monthly mortgage on an average Windsor home?

On a $580,000 home with 20% down at ~4.5% over 25 years, roughly $2,579 per month (illustrative).

How does the Bank of Canada rate affect Windsor buyers?

Variable mortgages move with the policy rate directly and fixed renewals track it, so a cut lowers carrying costs and a hike raises them.

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Independent & not affiliated. bankratecanada.ca (Overnight) is not affiliated with the Bank of Canada or any government. Home-price and mortgage figures are approximate, illustrative estimates — not quotes, not official statistics, and not financial advice. Verify with local real estate boards and a licensed mortgage professional. See our Terms and Privacy.
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