Almost every week someone asks me a version of the same question: should we be looking in Winnipeg, or just outside it? The pull is obvious — more space, newer houses, a quieter street. But "just outside the city" covers everything from a subdivision you can see from the Perimeter to a town forty minutes down the highway, and the trade-offs are real. Here's how I talk it through with clients.
The towns, roughly by direction
When people say "around Winnipeg," they usually mean one of these:
- North: East St. Paul and West St. Paul sit right on the edge — close enough that the commute barely changes — plus Stonewall and Selkirk further out.
- South: Oak Bluff and La Salle are a quick drive, with St. Adolphe, Île des Chênes, Niverville and Steinbach further down.
- East: Oakbank and Lorette.
- West: Headingley, just past the Perimeter.
You can see all of them on my neighbourhoods page — each town lists how many homes are for sale right now, which is the fastest way to see where there's actually inventory before you fall in love with an area that has three listings.
What you usually gain
The appeal is straightforward, and it's genuine:
- More house and land for the money, particularly on newer builds. Lot sizes that are rare in the city are normal in places like East St. Paul or Oak Bluff.
- Newer construction. A lot of these communities have grown fast over the last couple of decades, so the housing stock skews newer than Winnipeg's older neighbourhoods.
- Quiet, and a bit of room to breathe — which for a lot of families is the whole point.
What you give up (or at least have to check)
This is where I slow clients down, because the sticker price isn't the whole story.
- The commute is the big one. East St. Paul to downtown is nothing; Niverville or Steinbach at 8 a.m. is a real drive. Do it once at rush hour before you decide — not at noon on a Sunday.
- Water and sewer. Newer subdivisions usually have municipal services, but plenty of properties out here are on a well and septic field instead. That's not a dealbreaker, but you need to know the age and condition of those systems, because replacing a septic field is a five-figure surprise.
- Property taxes are set by the local municipality, not the City of Winnipeg, so the rate — and what you get for it — differs town to town. The land transfer tax is the same everywhere in Manitoba, but the annual bill isn't.
- Schools and amenities. Different school divisions, and "ten minutes to a grocery store" can quietly become twenty-five.
So which is right for you?
There's no universal answer, and I'm suspicious of anyone who gives you one. A young family that works from home and wants a big yard is a great fit for a town; someone commuting downtown daily who values walkability usually isn't. The math also moves around — once you add the commute, a second vehicle, and well/septic upkeep, a "cheaper" town home and a city home can land closer than they first looked.
What I tell people is this: pick two or three areas, drive the commute, walk them on a weekend, and then look at what's actually for sale in each. When you've got a shortlist — or if you just want help comparing a specific town property against a city one — get in touch. I grew up working on homes across this region, so I can usually tell you what you're really buying, not just what the listing says.
