Property score
59.2
Fair
Overall 59.2 · Compared with neighbourhood average
1,200 sqft (top 37%) · Built in 1907 (13 yrs older than avg)
Located in a above-average income area with median household income of ~79k
Transit 80.0 · 2-min walk to transit with 3 nearby routes · Within 500m: 21 dining spots, 2 schools, 6 healthcare facilitys, and 5 shops nearby
Living Area
Near average
5% larger than neighborhood avg.
Year Built
Below average
13 yrs older than neighborhood avg.
Mother tongue
English · 45%Tagalog · 24%
Past 10 years Daniel Mcintyre sales snapshot (~80% of all data)
844
220k
$222/sqft
1920
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Property score
59.2 is composed by the two sections below.
Property Score
Community Score
Neighbourhood Sales
Daniel Mcintyre
How to read: Share of sales in each ~$50k price band for “daniel mcintyre” (Detached houses (non-condo), 2024). The tallest band is the mainstream budget range; multi-year view shows how that band shifts over time.
Sales-to-New-Listings
1,196
sold
1,852
new listings
Manitoba Real Estate Association March public data on New Listings and Properties Sold across Manitoba
Sold Above Asking
Majority sold above asking
68 of 104 sold above asking · Manually compiled from MLS Winnipeg sold listings, May 4 – May 10, 2026
With a Sales-to-New-Listings ratio of 64.6% and 65% of homes selling above asking price, demand is clearly outpacing supply. Buyers are competing, which is putting upward pressure on prices.
Area census snapshot
Dissemination area (DA) — Statistics Canada 2021 Census · Area: #46110088
Community deep dive
$79K
Median household income
$76K
Average household income
12%
Low income (LIM-AT)
0.2
Income inequality (Gini)
2.9
P90 / P10 ratio
24%
Single-person households
32%
Families with children
Population, labour & age
Households & income
Housing
Diversity, education & language
Figures are for the census dissemination area containing this listing location; sources and margins may apply per Statistics Canada.
Rankings
Tax-Assessed Value
above averageYear Built
around averageLot Size
around averageRank by land area, larger = better rank
Rank by year, newer = better rank
Rank by living area, larger = better rank
Rank by assessed value, higher = better rank
Bar: fill length ≈ share of peers you outperform. Fill color reflects tier (red / blue / amber / gray). “Avg” is a rough median benchmark for comparable homes in that scope.
To see this property on a map next to nearby houses—and compare year built, living area, assessed value, and lot size in detail—open the neighbourhood analysis page.
Transit & Walkability
Nearby stops, routes & transit score
Nearby Amenities
Dining, education, healthcare, shopping & more
583 Home Street — 48 amenities found within 500 m, across 7 categories, including 21 dining (nearest 115 m), 2 education (nearest 302 m), 6 healthcare (nearest 232 m).
Crime & Safety
Daniel Mcintyre · WPS public data · 2026
Annual incidents
118
2026
vs. city avg
+300%
relative to avg
Year-over-year
▼ -92%
vs. prior year
Primary type
Property
47%
Sales History
583 Home Street: We are not showing a transaction history based solely on public data; that does not mean no sale ever occurred. You can still request details by email in the “Data notes” section below—we will look it up manually and reply with the most accurate information available.
583 Home Street · Sold transaction data notes
Data Source
Data Coverage
Data Precision
Is Current Data Suitable for You
How to Get More Accurate Data
Privacy & Commitment
Request exact sold prices and history by email
Related homes
Nearby interested homes
Address · Year Built · Living Area
Nearby properties
Address · Distance
Similar assessed value
Address · Tax-Assessed Value
Highlights & common questions: 583 Home Street, Winnipeg
Property Summary
Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile
This is a character-driven home in Winnipeg’s Daniel McIntyre area, built around 1907 with roughly 1,200 square feet of living space on a 2,501-square-foot lot. The assessed value sits at $220,000, which is above average for the neighbourhood but still relatively low citywide. The house offers slightly more interior space than the average Daniel McIntyre home (which runs closer to 1,142 square feet), but the lot is on the smaller side compared to Winnipeg as a whole—only the bottom 5% citywide by land area.
The appeal here is less about raw square footage and more about location and value. Daniel McIntyre is an older, established central neighbourhood with mature trees, walkable streets, and a mix of pre-war housing stock. Properties in this area often attract buyers who want proximity to downtown, the Exchange District, or the health sciences centre without paying Wolseley or River Heights prices. The home’s assessed value ranks in the top 30% locally, which suggests it’s considered a relatively strong asset within the immediate market, even if it sits near the bottom citywide.
This property would suit a buyer who appreciates older homes and is willing to work with a smaller lot. It’s not necessarily a first-and-only-home for someone looking for maximum space or a large yard. Instead, it fits someone who values neighbourhood character and central access, or an investor looking for a turnkey rental in an area with consistent demand. The below-average rankings for lot size and year built aren’t flaws so much as trade-offs—you get vintage bones and a walkable address, but not a sprawling yard or a modern floor plan.
Five Frequently Asked Questions
1. How does the living space compare to similar homes in the area?
At roughly 1,200 square feet, this home is slightly above the Daniel McIntyre average of 1,142 square feet and places in the top 37% of the neighbourhood. Compared to the citywide median of about 1,342 square feet, it’s a bit smaller, but not unusually so for a pre-war house in a central district.
2. Is the assessed value of $220,000 realistic for this property?
The assessed value is above average for Home Street and runs in the top 30% of Daniel McIntyre, suggesting the home is seen as a solid asset within its immediate area. However, it ranks in the bottom 11% citywide, which reflects that Winnipeg’s overall housing stock includes many newer or larger homes in outlying suburbs with higher values. The number seems consistent with a well-maintained older home in a central neighbourhood.
3. Why is the lot size so small compared to citywide averages?
The land area of about 2,501 square feet places this property in the bottom 5% citywide and bottom 44% within Daniel McIntyre. This is typical for older infill neighbourhoods where lots were originally subdivided more tightly than in postwar suburban developments. It means less yard maintenance but also less outdoor space for gardening, parking, or expansion.
4. How old is the house, and does that affect its practicality?
Built around 1907, this home is older than 96% of properties citywide and falls in the bottom 12% of its own street. That said, “old” in central Winnipeg often means solid construction, thick walls, and established landscaping. The practical considerations are the same as with any century home: expect potential maintenance on systems like wiring, plumbing, and windows, and check for insulation quality. Age isn’t a dealbreaker, but it’s not a low-maintenance proposition.
5. What kind of neighbourhood is Home Street, and who typically buys here?
Home Street runs through a mix of residential and light commercial areas in Daniel McIntyre. It’s a diverse, older corridor with a mix of single-family homes, duplexes, and older apartment blocks. Buyers tend to be a mix of young families, tradespeople, and professionals who want central access without inflated pricing. It’s less polished than Wolseley but more affordable, and it’s within easy reach of downtown, the health sciences centre, and major bus routes.