138 Borebank Street

Wellington Crescent, Winnipeg

57.5

Fair

Overall 57.5

Smaller than most nearby homes

983 sqft (bottom 5%)

Built in 1926 (14 yrs older than avg)

Located in a high-income area

with median household income of ~101k

Transit 76.0

1-min walk to transit with 1 nearby route

Within 500m: 2 dining spots, 2 parks, 1 fuel station, and 1 place of worship nearby

Living Area

Below average

58% smaller than neighborhood avg.

Year Built

Near average

14 yrs older than neighborhood avg.

Mother tongue

English · 85%French · 2%

Past 10 years Wellington Crescent sales snapshot (~80% of all data)

Sold Count

208

Median price

707.5k

$/sqft

$349/sqft

Avg build year

1940

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Property score

57.5 is composed by the two sections below.

Property Score

38.8Low
Living Area983 sqft42Low
Year Built192620Low
Lot Size3,837 sqft46Low
Neighbourhood Sales Activity53Fair

Community Score

85.6Excellent
Household Income85Excellent
Education Level100Excellent
Housing Stress83Excellent
Core Housing Need88Excellent
Employment Health60Fair

Neighbourhood Sales

Wellington Crescent

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

Market Conditions · WinnipegSeller's Market
Buyer'sBalancedSeller's

Sales-to-New-Listings

64.6%

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

65%

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: #46110378

Community deep dive

$101K

Median household income

$122K

Average household income

7%

Low income (LIM-AT)

0.3

Income inequality (Gini)

3.6

P90 / P10 ratio

32%

Single-person households

22%

Families with children

Population, labour & age

Population (2021)541
Labour force participation rate68%
Median age44.0
Avg household size2.1
Unemployment rate16%
Population density2459 / km²

Households & income

Low income (LIM-AT, % pop.)7%
Single-person households32%
Couple families with children22%
Median household income (2020)$101K

Housing

Renter households19%
Condominium dwellings0%
Median dwelling value (owners)$380K

Diversity, education & language

Immigrants (share of pop.)11%
Visible minority9%
Bachelor's or higher (25–64)63%
Mother tongue (1st)English · 85%
Mother tongue (2nd)French · 1%

Figures are for the census dissemination area containing this listing location; sources and margins may apply per Statistics Canada.

Rankings

Living Area

below average
983 sqft
0255075100
Same streetBottom 27%Same areaBottom 5%CitywideBottom 24%
Same street · Borebank Street
#295 / 404
Bottom 27% · Avg 1,211 sqft
Same area · Wellington Crescent
#521 / 548
Bottom 5% · Avg 2,343 sqft
Citywide · Winnipeg
#147,470 / 194,458
Bottom 24% · Avg 1,342 sqft

Tax-Assessed Value

around average
360k
0255075100
Same streetBottom 21%Same areaBottom 8%CitywideTop 50%
Same street · Borebank Street
#318 / 404
Bottom 21% · Avg 426.2k
Same area · Wellington Crescent
#505 / 548
Bottom 8% · Avg 805.6k
Citywide · Winnipeg
#97,764 / 194,458
Top 50% · Avg 390.1k

Year Built

around average
1926
0255075100
Same streetBottom 10%Same areaBottom 40%CitywideBottom 15%

Lot Size

below average
3,837 sqft
0255075100
Same streetBottom 8%Same areaBottom 4%CitywideBottom 23%

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

138 Borebank Street — 6 amenities found within 500 m, across 4 categories, including 2 dining (nearest 466 m), 2 parks (nearest 350 m).

Search radius
🍽️Dining2
🌳Parks2
Fuel Stations1
Worship1

Crime & Safety

Wellington Crescent · WPS public data · 2026

Annual incidents

13

2026

vs. city avg

-56%

relative to avg

Year-over-year

-93%

vs. prior year

Primary type

Property

77%

Sales History

Sold 12/2021CA$300k–350k
Sold price

Same street

Bottom 29%

Same area

Bottom 10%

City-wide

Top 48%

Related homes

Highlights & common questions: 138 Borebank Street, Winnipeg

138 Borebank Street – Property Summary

Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile

This is a 1926 home with 983 square feet of living space and a 3,837-square-foot lot, located in the Wellington Crescent area of Winnipeg. Its assessed value is $360,000.

The property ranks below average on nearly every metric when compared to its own street and neighbourhood. On Borebank Street, it sits in the bottom quarter for living area, assessed value, and lot size. In the broader Wellington Crescent neighbourhood—which includes much larger, higher-value properties—it ranks near the bottom in almost all categories. Citywide, the picture is more mixed: the home lands around the median for assessed value, but still below average for living area and lot size.

The appeal here is less about size or prestige and more about entry-point affordability within a sought-after area. This is not a “starter home” in the traditional sense—it’s a much smaller, older house surrounded by significantly larger ones. That could suit a buyer who values the Wellington Crescent location (tree-lined streets, proximity to the river, established neighbourhood character) but is priced out of the typical homes there. It may also appeal to someone looking for a renovation project on a modest lot, where the land itself carries less weight than the address. The property is best suited to a buyer who prioritizes location over square footage, and who is comfortable owning an older home (1926) that may require updates.


Five Possible FAQs

1. Why is the assessed value around average citywide but so low compared to the neighbourhood?
The Wellington Crescent neighbourhood includes some of Winnipeg’s most expensive properties. The $360,000 assessment puts this home near the citywide median, but it’s far below the neighbourhood average of $805,600. Essentially, you’re in a high-value area, but the home itself is valued more like a typical city home.

2. How does the lot size affect the property’s usability?
At 3,837 square feet, the lot is smaller than most in the area—about 40% smaller than the street average. That limits expansion potential, especially compared to neighbouring properties. It’s fine for a single-family home with a modest yard, but don’t expect room for large additions or extensive landscaping.

3. Is a 1926 home a practical purchase for someone who isn’t handy?
It depends on its current condition. The year-built data only tells you the age, not the quality of updates. Many 1920s homes have solid construction but may need electrical, plumbing, or insulation upgrades. A pre-purchase inspection is especially important here to understand what you’re taking on.

4. What does the “Top 73%” ranking really mean?
It means the home ranks higher than 27% of comparable properties on the street for living area—so it’s in the lower third. The bars and percentages compare this home against a “rough median benchmark” of similar homes. In plain terms, for most metrics, this property is smaller, older, and on less land than the majority of nearby houses.

5. Could this be a good investment property?
Potentially, if the purchase price is low enough relative to the location. The citywide median assessment suggests the price isn’t inflated by the neighbourhood. However, the small lot and older structure limit resale upside unless you renovate. It’s more of a lifestyle buy—living in Wellington Crescent on a smaller budget—than a pure investment play.

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