166 Sadler Avenue

Sale History
SOLDin Dec 2016
220K±5,0000yr +4.8%
Tax Assessment
140k(prev. 169k)
-29k(-17.2%)
DateSold PriceNeighbourhood
2016-12Sold220K±5,00019/32
2016-07Sold210K±5,00020/32

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

Map
No data
$
High-income areaMedian household income ~$80K · top tier income demographics
3-min walk to transit2 nearby routes · score 74/100
Score

Property score

Overall score
62.7Fair
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
57.7
Fair
Living area
50
Year built
50
Lot size
95
Sales activity
69
Community Score
70.3
Good
Income
76
Education
54
Housing
63
Core need
76
Employment
76
Rankings

How it stacks up

Each metric compared against same street, same area, and citywide. Polygon points further from the centre = better rank.
Living Area
NO DATA
StreetAreaCity
Same street
Same area
Citywide
Winnipeg
Tax-Assessed Value
140 k
BELOW AVERAGE
StreetBottom 0%AreaBottom 0%CityBottom 1%
Same street
Bottom 0%
#173 / 172
Same area
Bottom 0%
#812 / 811
Citywide
Winnipeg
Bottom 1%
#191,636 / 194,455
Year Built
NO DATA
StreetAreaCity
Same street
Same area
Citywide
Winnipeg
Lot Size
9,196 sqft
NEAR AVERAGE
StreetBottom 27%AreaTop 48%CityTop 8%
Same street
Bottom 27%
#125 / 172
Same area
Top 48%
#389 / 811
Citywide
Winnipeg
Top 8%
#15,304 / 194,457
How rankings work — each polygon vertex is the property's percentile rank within that scope. Further from the centre = better.
Detailed ranking analysis ▼
166 Sadler Avenue: Living Area Analysis
166 Sadler Avenue: Tax-Assessed Value Analysis

Street Level (Sadler Avenue): Below Average. Ranked #173 out of 172 (Bottom -1%). The street average for comparable homes is 346.0k.

Neighborhood Level (Worthington): Below Average. Ranked #812 out of 811 (Bottom 0%). The neighborhood average for comparable homes is 365.5k.

Citywide Level (Winnipeg): Below Average. Ranked #191,636 out of 194,455 (Bottom 1%). The citywide average for comparable homes is 435.4k.

166 Sadler Avenue: Year Built Analysis
166 Sadler Avenue: Lot Size Analysis

Street Level (Sadler Avenue): Below Average. Ranked #125 out of 172 (Bottom 27%). The street average for comparable homes is 9,751 sqft.

Neighborhood Level (Worthington): Around Average. Ranked #389 out of 811 (Top 48%). The neighborhood average for comparable homes is 7,831 sqft.

Citywide Level (Winnipeg): Above Average. Ranked #15,304 out of 194,457 (Top 8%). The citywide average for comparable homes is 6,570 sqft.

Market

Worthington market pulse

Past 14 years sales snapshot (~80% of all data)
Sold count
264
last 14 years
Median price
303.3k
14-year area median
Price per sqft
$326/sqft
area average
Avg build year
1962
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
Some over ask
33%
Below ask33% above
3 of 9 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 “worthington” (Detached houses (non-condo), 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 #46110576 · Statistics Canada 2021 Census · Population 433
433
Population (2021)
40.4
Median age
2.3
Avg household size
2,547 / km²
Population density
Distribution by household income band
25k-30k
5%
30k-35k
3%
35k-40k
3%
40k-45k
5%
45k-50k
5%
50k-60k
5%
60k-70k
11%
70k-80k
11%
80k-90k
8%
90k-100k
3%
100k-125k
22%
125k-150k
8%
150k-200k
11%
$80K
Median household income
$79K
Average household income
11%
Low income (LIM-AT)
0.2
Income inequality (Gini)
3.0
P90 / P10 ratio
31%
Single-person households
21%
Families with children
72%
Labour participation
12%
Unemployment
Local · Day-to-day

Transit, amenities & safety

Everything within walking distance, plus crime and waste collection.

Nearby Amenities

Dining, education, healthcare, shopping & more

166 Sadler Avenue — 5 amenities found within 500 m, across 4 categories, including 2 education (nearest 390 m), 1 healthcare (nearest 32 m).

Search radius
🏫Education2
🏥Healthcare1
💪Sports1
Worship1

Crime & safety

Worthington · WPS public data
Full crime data →
Annual incidents
32
2026
vs. city average
+8%
▲ relative to avg
Year-over-year
▼ -91%
vs. prior year
Primary type
Property
63% of incidents

Waste collection schedule

Local garbage, recycling, and yard waste pickup
Garbage
friday
Recycling
friday
Yard waste
friday b

We are licensed Manitoba real estate agents. Contact us to obtain all MLS whole sold records for 166 Sadler Avenue. No advertising. Data source details →

Related homes

Highlights & common questions

Is this home right for you?

Property highlights

166 Sadler Avenue – Property Summary

Key Characteristics & Buyer Profile

This is a modest, older home on an unusually large lot. Built in the 1950s, it sits on nearly 9,200 square feet of land—placing it in the top 8% citywide for lot size in Winnipeg. That’s the standout feature here. The house itself is below average in living area (around 1,029 sqft) and assessed value ($169,000) relative to its street, neighbourhood (Worthington), and the city overall. The building is dated, and the value reflects that.

The appeal lies almost entirely in the land. For a buyer looking to renovate, rebuild, or hold for future development potential, this property offers something rare in a city where the average lot is 6,570 sqft. The home is likely livable but unremarkable; the real asset is the yard and what it allows. That said, the street-level land ranking is below average—so while the lot is big for the city, it’s not especially generous compared to immediate neighbours.

This property would suit a buyer who values space over finish, is comfortable with an older home or willing to invest in improvements, and is thinking long-term. It’s less suited to someone looking for a move-in-ready, modern turnkey home or a compact, low-maintenance property.


Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why is the assessed value so low compared to the city average?
The home is older, smaller in living area, and located on a street where values are below neighbourhood and city medians. The assessed value reflects the structure and land together—since the house itself is dated and modest, the total comes in well below the citywide average of $390,100.

2. Is the large lot a benefit for resale or future use?
Yes, but with nuance. Being in the top 8% citywide for lot size is a strong advantage. However, the lot is not especially large compared to others on Sadler Avenue specifically (which ranks in the bottom third of the street). The value depends on what you plan to do—subdividing or developing would require zoning checks, and the lot’s shape and location matter.

3. How does this home compare to others in Worthington?
The home ranks near the bottom for assessed value (808 out of 811 properties) in the neighbourhood. Land area is roughly average for the area. This suggests most homes in Worthington are either larger, newer, or better maintained. You’re buying into the neighbourhood at a lower price point, which can be an opportunity or a signal to investigate further.

4. What does the “Top 95%” citywide ranking mean for assessed value?
It means this property’s assessed value is higher than only 5% of comparable homes across Winnipeg. In practical terms, it’s one of the lower-valued homes in the city for its type. That’s not inherently negative—it can mean lower property taxes and entry price—but it does indicate less equity growth potential without major improvements.

5. Is this property better suited for renovation or demolition?
That depends on the home’s condition, which isn’t detailed here. Given the below-average living area, older year built, and low assessed value, a full renovation may cost more than the home is worth unless you’re doing the work yourself. The lot size makes demolition and new construction a reasonable consideration, but you’d need to confirm zoning, setback rules, and whether the existing foundation or services add value. A home inspection and consultation with a local builder would be wise before deciding.