On Montreal’s North Shore, Boisbriand holds a sweet spot: close enough to the city for work, green and residential enough for family life. In 2026, the local market follows the same normalization seen across Quebec, which we break down in our summer 2026 outlook. Here are the median prices by property type in Boisbriand, and what they reveal about the market.
1. Boisbriand at a Glance
Boisbriand is part of the North Shore, the belt of suburbs north of the island of Montreal, connected to the city by Highway 15. The town grew around residential hubs such as Faubourg Boisbriand, an « urban village » style neighbourhood mixing houses, condos and local shops. This blended profile explains the variety of the housing stock: you will find single-family homes alongside condos and income properties.
2. Median Prices by Property Type
Based on CourtiConnect data, here are the median prices observed in Boisbriand, with the number of sales behind each figure:
- Single-family home: $674,500 (64 sales)
- Condo: $445,000 (39 sales)
- Duplex: $882,750 (6 sales)
- Triplex: $801,000 (16 sales)
Houses and condos account for most transactions: 64 and 39 sales respectively. The duplex (6) and triplex (16) samples are smaller, so those medians should be read with some caution.
3. Reading the Market
The Boisbriand house median, $674,500, sits very close to the single-family median in the Montreal CMA ($645,000 in May 2026 per APCIQ). In other words, buying a house in Boisbriand costs roughly the same as the metropolitan average, but with the space and lifestyle of a North Shore suburb. The condo, at $445,000, remains a more affordableentry point to the local market: about $230,000 less than the median house, a gap that matters for first-time buyers.
4. For Buyers
For anyone targeting the North Shore, Boisbriand offers a solid balance of price and proximity to Montreal. The condo at $445,000 suits first-time buyers and households who value location over square footage. The house at $674,500 targets families looking for space without straying too far from the city. In a rebalancing market, buyers benefit from getting pre-approved and comparing several properties before negotiating: supply is more abundant than a few months ago.
5. For Sellers
On the seller side, these medians are a starting point, not a sale price. Every property differs by area, condition and renovations. To price right from the start — the key to selling quickly and well in a better-supplied market — nothing replaces an analysis of recent Boisbriand comparables. CourtiConnect’s CoteQC tool cross-references more than 33,000 real sales across Quebec to position your property against the local market, free of charge.