76.6
Good
Property score
76.6
Good
Overall 76.6
Smaller but newer than most nearby homes
1,327 sqft (bottom 22%)
Built in 2023 (2 yrs newer than avg)
Located in a high-income area
with median household income of ~105k
Transit 82.0
1-min walk to transit with 2 nearby routes

Sold for $250,000 over asking
Winnipeg Real Estate Sales Summary & Market Analysis May 11–17, 2026
Living Area
Below average
17% smaller than neighborhood avg.
Year Built
Above average
2 yrs newer than neighborhood avg.
Mother tongue
English · 45%Tagalog · 18%
Past 10 years West Kildonan Industrial sales snapshot (~80% of all data)
626
422.5k
$297/sqft
2021
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Property score
76.6 is composed by the two sections below.
Property Score
Community Score
Neighbourhood Sales
West Kildonan Industrial
How to read: Share of sales in each ~$50k price band for “west kildonan industrial” (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: #46110002
Community deep dive
$105K
Median household income
$112K
Average household income
6%
Low income (LIM-AT)
0.2
Income inequality (Gini)
2.7
P90 / P10 ratio
13%
Single-person households
40%
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
around averageYear Built
EliteLot 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
Crime & Safety
West Kildonan Industrial · WPS public data · 2026
Annual incidents
5
2026
vs. city avg
-83%
relative to avg
Year-over-year
▼ -93%
vs. prior year
Primary type
Violent
60%
Sales History
Same street
Same area
City-wide
| Metric | Same street | Same area | City-wide |
|---|---|---|---|
Sold price | Bottom 49% | Bottom 35% | Top 37% |
398 North Point Boulevard · Sold transaction data notes
Data Source
Data Coverage
Data Precision
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Related homes
Nearby interested homes
Address · Year Built · Living Area
Nearby properties
Address · Distance
Similar assessed value
Address · Tax-Assessed Value
Highlights & common questions: 398 North Point Boulevard, Winnipeg
398 North Point Boulevard – Property Summary
Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile
This is a newly built home (2023) in Winnipeg’s West Kildonan Industrial area. It offers 1,327 square feet of living space on a 2,593-square-foot lot, with an assessed value of $349,000.
What stands out: The property’s strongest feature is its age. It ranks in the top 1% city-wide for newness, making it one of the newest homes in Winnipeg. The living area is close to the city average, though slightly smaller than the typical home in this immediate neighbourhood. The lot is notably compact—well below neighbourhood and city averages. The assessed value is also below the local and city medians, which may reflect the smaller lot or the area’s current market.
Where the appeal lies: The appeal is pragmatic. You get a very new home with modern construction standards (likely better insulation, windows, mechanicals) without paying a premium for extra square footage or a large yard. It’s a lower-maintenance proposition: less land to tend, fewer old-house surprises. The street itself is average for living area and land size, so the home fits its immediate context reasonably well.
Who it suits: This property is best suited for a first-time buyer or someone downsizing who values new build quality over space. It could also work for an investor targeting the rental market, given low maintenance risk and a price point below neighbourhood average. It’s less ideal for families who want a big backyard or extra room to grow, and not for buyers looking for character or renovation potential.
Five Possible FAQs
1. Why is the assessed value below the neighbourhood average when the house is brand new?
The assessment reflects both the building and the land. While the house itself is new, the lot is notably smaller than most in West Kildonan Industrial (2,593 sqft vs. a neighbourhood average of 3,839 sqft). That smaller land component pulls the total assessed value down, even though the structure is modern.
2. The living area is below the neighbourhood average—does that mean the rooms feel small?
Not necessarily. The neighbourhood average (1,591 sqft) likely includes older homes with larger layouts. At 1,327 sqft, this home is more efficient in its use of space. Many new builds prioritize open-concept living, which can make the same square footage feel larger than a chopped-up floor plan from the 1960s. A visit to see the actual layout is the best test.
3. Is the small lot a problem for resale later?
It depends on the buyer pool at that time. Currently, smaller lots in new subdivisions are common and accepted by many buyers who prioritize indoor finish over outdoor space. However, if the market shifts toward larger yards or if this area becomes more family-oriented, it could be less attractive. The home’s newness and modern finishes will likely offset that for most buyers in the near term.
4. How does this property compare to a similarly priced older home in the same area?
An older home at $349k might offer a larger lot and more square footage, but it will likely need upgrades to roofing, HVAC, windows, or insulation. This property trades size for certainty—you pay less for upkeep and utility costs in the first decade. It’s a question of whether you prefer “more space with renovation risk” or “less space with turnkey peace of mind.”
5. What does “top 1%” city-wide for year built actually mean?
Out of nearly 195,000 homes city-wide, only about 1,331 are newer than this one. That puts this property among the newest in all of Winnipeg. Most homes in the city were built in the 1960s–1980s. Buying a 2023 build means modern building code compliance, better energy performance, and likely lower insurance premiums for structural risk compared to an older home.
Map & Street View
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