306-110 Princess Street

Built 1907Living Area 911 sqft
Sale History
SOLDin Sep 2024
240K±5,0007yr +0%
Tax Assessment
272k(prev. 274k)
-2k(-0.7%)
DateSold PriceNeighbourhood
2024-09Sold240K±5,00025/36
2017-08Sold240K±5,00035/71
2010-09Sold210K±5,00032/41

Rankings reflect the property's sold price position within its street, neighbourhood, and all of Winnipeg in the year of sale.

Map
Near average911 sqft · top 60% in area · built 1907 · 18 yrs older than avg
$
High-income areaMedian household income ~$56K · top tier income demographics
1-min walk to transit5 nearby routes · score 100/100
Score

Property score

Overall score
43.5Low
How is the score calculated? ▼
Scores are weighted aggregates of property attributes (size, age, lot, sales activity) and community signals from the 2021 Statistics Canada census (income, education, housing stress, employment). 100 = top of metric within Winnipeg.
Property Score
30.3
Low
Community Score
63.2
Fair
Income
60
Education
82
Housing
42
Core need
50
Employment
76
Rankings

How it stacks up

Each metric compared against 71 homes on Princess Street, 439 in Exchange District, and 26,841 citywide. Polygon points further from the centre = better rank.
Living Area
911 sqft
BELOW AVERAGE
StreetTop 31%AreaBottom 40%CityBottom 41%
Same street
Top 31%
#22 / 71
Bottom 40%
#265 / 439
Citywide
Winnipeg
Bottom 41%
#15,924 / 26,841
Tax-Assessed Value
272 k
BELOW AVERAGE
StreetBottom 37%AreaBottom 34%CityTop 42%
Same street
Bottom 37%
#45 / 71
Bottom 34%
#289 / 439
Citywide
Winnipeg
Top 42%
#11,212 / 26,841
Year Built
1907
BELOW AVERAGE
StreetTop 17%AreaBottom 45%CityBottom 1%
Same street
Top 17%
#12 / 71
Bottom 45%
#241 / 439
Citywide
Winnipeg
Bottom 1%
#26,605 / 26,841
How rankings work — each polygon vertex is the property's percentile rank within that scope. Further from the centre = better.
Detailed ranking analysis ▼
306-110 Princess Street: Living Area Analysis

Street Level (Princess Street): Around Average. Ranked #22 out of 71 (Top 31%). The street average for comparable homes is 1,018 sqft.

Neighborhood Level (Exchange District): Below Average. Ranked #265 out of 439 (Bottom 40%). The neighborhood average for comparable homes is 1,125 sqft.

Citywide Level (Winnipeg): Below Average. Ranked #15,924 out of 26,841 (Bottom 41%). The citywide average for comparable homes is 1,042 sqft.

306-110 Princess Street: Tax-Assessed Value Analysis

Street Level (Princess Street): Below Average. Ranked #45 out of 71 (Bottom 37%). The street average for comparable homes is 302.6k.

Neighborhood Level (Exchange District): Below Average. Ranked #289 out of 439 (Bottom 34%). The neighborhood average for comparable homes is 344.4k.

Citywide Level (Winnipeg): Around Average. Ranked #11,212 out of 26,841 (Top 42%). The citywide average for comparable homes is 276.9k.

306-110 Princess Street: Year Built Analysis

Street Level (Princess Street): Above Average. Ranked #12 out of 71 (Top 17%). The street average for comparable homes is 1909.

Neighborhood Level (Exchange District): Below Average. Ranked #241 out of 439 (Bottom 45%). The neighborhood average for comparable homes is 1925.

Citywide Level (Winnipeg): Below Average. Ranked #26,605 out of 26,841 (Bottom 1%). The citywide average for comparable homes is 1990.

Market

Exchange District market pulse

Past 14 years sales snapshot (~80% of all data)
Sold count
317
last 14 years
Median price
240k
14-year area median
Price per sqft
$287/sqft
area average
Avg build year
1925
area average
Market conditions · Winnipeg
Sales-to-New-Listings?
Seller's market
63.5%
Buyer'sBalancedSeller's
Sold
1,465
New listings
2,307
Sold above asking?
Last 7 days
Majority over ask
62%
Below ask62% above
70 of 113 sold above asking
What this means
Upward pressure
Demand is clearly outpacing supply. Buyers are competing, which is putting upward pressure on prices.
2026-04

How to read: Share of sales in each ~$50k price band for “exchange district” (Condos, 2024). The tallest band is the mainstream budget range; multi-year view shows how that band shifts over time.

Community deep dive

Who lives in this neighbourhood

Dissemination area #46110667 · Statistics Canada 2021 Census · Population 850
850
Population (2021)
31.2
Median age
2.0
Avg household size
2,931 / km²
Population density
Distribution by household income band
0-5k
4%
5k-10k
1%
10k-15k
3%
15k-20k
4%
20k-25k
5%
25k-30k
8%
30k-35k
4%
35k-40k
4%
40k-45k
5%
45k-50k
5%
50k-60k
12%
60k-70k
8%
70k-80k
5%
80k-90k
9%
90k-100k
4%
100k-125k
8%
125k-150k
4%
150k-200k
4%
200k plus
4%
$56K
Median household income
$72K
Average household income
38%
Low income (LIM-AT)
0.4
Income inequality (Gini)
6.5
P90 / P10 ratio
53%
Single-person households
13%
Families with children
75%
Labour participation
11%
Unemployment
Local · Day-to-day

Transit, amenities & safety

Everything within walking distance, plus crime and waste collection.

Nearby Amenities

Dining, education, healthcare, shopping & more

306-110 Princess Street — 71 amenities found within 500 m, across 8 categories, including 48 dining (nearest 40 m), 3 education (nearest 220 m), 6 shopping (nearest 337 m).

Search radius
🍽️Dining48
🏫Education3
🛒Shopping6
🌳Parks7
💪Sports2
🏦Finance1
Worship3
🏛️Government1

Crime & safety

Exchange District · WPS public data
Full crime data →
Annual incidents
48
2026
vs. city average
+63%
▲ relative to avg
Year-over-year
▼ -95%
vs. prior year
Primary type
Property
77% of incidents

We are licensed Manitoba real estate agents. Contact us to obtain all MLS whole sold records for 306-110 Princess Street. No advertising. Data source details →

Related homes

Highlights & common questions

Is this home right for you?

Property highlights

Property Overview & Key Characteristics

This 911 sqft condo at 306-110 Princess Street is a character unit in Winnipeg’s historic Exchange District. Built in 1907, its age is a defining feature, placing it among the older and more authentic buildings on its street. The space is practical, sitting close to the average size for similar downtown condos. With a recently sold price and assessed value both in the mid-$200,000s, it represents a competitively priced entry into a sought-after neighbourhood.

Its primary appeal is location and heritage. You’re purchasing a slice of Winnipeg’s architectural history right in the heart of the vibrant Exchange, with all its amenities, culture, and street life at your doorstep. The value proposition is straightforward: you trade modern building amenities and square footage for authentic character and an unbeatable urban lifestyle.

This property would best suit a specific buyer: someone seeking an authentic downtown experience over a suburban one, who values walkability, history, and culture. It’s ideal for a professional, empty-nester, or investor looking for a lower-priced foothold in a prestigious heritage area. It likely requires a buyer comfortable with the quirks and potential maintenance considerations of a 119-year-old building.


Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does the building’s age (1907) mean for me as an owner?
While full of character, it’s essential to inquire about the condo corporation’s reserve fund and recent major repairs. Heritage buildings can have unique maintenance needs for foundations, brickwork, or original windows, which are managed collectively.

2. How does the condo fee compare, and what does it cover?
The listing does not specify the condo fee. This is a critical question, as fees in older buildings can be higher to fund ongoing maintenance and a healthy reserve fund. You should request a detailed breakdown of what the fee includes (e.g., heat, water, building insurance).

3. Is the unit’s interior updated, or is it a renovation project?
The details provided are quantitative. Viewing the unit or requesting photos is necessary to see if the interior has been modernized or if it retains original historic features that you may wish to preserve or update.

4. What is the parking situation?
Parking is often a premium in dense heritage districts like the Exchange. Confirm if a dedicated spot comes with the unit (likely in a nearby lot or secured garage), or if you’ll be relying on street parking permits.

5. What’s the mix of owners versus renters in the building?
The building has several units. A higher proportion of owner-occupiers can often indicate a more stable and invested community, which can be important for decision-making and the care of a historic property.