Edmonton Neighbourhood Profile
Gold Bar
Gold Bar is an Edmonton neighbourhood of about 910 homes — 100% houses and 0% condos, most homes built around 1958. The typical (median) house is assessed at $393,000, 12% below the citywide median (188th of 277 neighbourhoods). Across its established houses — largely the same properties over time — the median assessed value changed +22% from 2012 to 2025. 68% of homes are owner-occupied, median household income is $96,000, and 3 public schools are designated for it. Figures throughout are City assessed values — directional and comparative, not exact sale prices ("typical" means the median).
Total homes
910
100% houses · 0% condos
Typical house
$393,000
12% below citywide · 188th of 277
House $/sq ft
$375
$4,036/m² · 24% above citywide
Typical lot
5,974 ft²
555 m² · 12% above citywide
Typical age
1958
median house build year
Where it is
At a glance.Gold Bar's location and boundary, with schools marked — green areas are parks and open space.

The homes
What's built here — the housing stock, its age, and the condo & rental supply.
What's here
Mostly houses. 100% houses (freehold) · 0% condos (condominium-titled).
Building types in detail
Bedrooms — homes here by bedroom count:
6% of homes needed major repairs in 2021, as assessed by their own residents.
Building-type, bedroom and condition figures from the 2021 federal census.
When it was built
Most homes here were built before 1960. The median build year is 1958.
Full age breakdown
Condos & multi-family
8 purpose-built rental / multi-family buildings, typically built around 1967.
How condos & rentals are counted
8 rental / multi-family buildings, typically built around 1967 — 2 small (under $1M), 5 mid ($1–10M), 1 large (over $10M). Purpose-built rentals (assessed as a single parcel each), separate from the owned homes counted above. Unit counts aren't in the open data.
Living here
The people and the day-to-day — who lives here, and the schools, shops, parks and transit around them.
Who lives here
Mostly homeowners. Median household income $96,000.
Resident snapshot from the 2021 federal census.
Median household income
$96,000
46% earn $100k+
Homeowners
68%
32% rent
Bachelor's degree or higher
25%
of residents 15+
Commute to work
87%
drive · 7% transit · 4% walk/bike
Median age 39.2; 32% of households have kids at home; 41% lived at a different address five years earlier.
Residents by age
Median age 39.2.
Household income spread
8% of households reported $200k or more; 17% under $50k.
Government transfers made up 17% of residents' 2020 income (including 5.2% pandemic supports — 2020 was a COVID income year); 5.7% of residents were below the low-income measure (LIM-AT).
Household total income, 2020, from the 2021 federal census (income shares and low-income prevalence as reported). Statistics Canada rounds and suppresses small counts, so shares may not sum exactly to 100.
Households & families
Average household size 2.5; families with kids at home average 1.8 children.
What residents do for work
Occupation groups (share of the labour force):
Industries residents work in (top 10; the rest combined):
Unemployment rate in the census reference week (May 2021): 11.2% — a pandemic-period snapshot.
How long people stay
10% of residents had moved within the previous year; 41% lived at a different address five years earlier.
Counts every change of address — moves within Gold Bar, into it, owners and renters alike.
Housing costs & affordability
A household earning the local median income would put about 11% of it toward typical owner shelter costs here — or 18% toward the typical rent.
Typical owner shelter cost
$910/mo
47.4% of owners hold a mortgage
Typical rent
$1,450/mo
median tenant shelter cost
Affordability in detail
Households spending 30% or more of their own income on their own shelter — the standard affordability-stress measure: 10.5% of owner households · 31% of renter households. (Different from the headline above, which compares the median cost against the median income — a typical-household what-if, not a count of stretched households.)
In core housing need (unaffordable, unsuitable or inadequate, with no affordable local alternative): 0% of owners · 24.3% of renters.
Owners' own estimate of their home's value (2021): $400,000 median — self-reported, so it can differ from the assessed medians above.
Owner costs reflect current owners — including long-time, mortgage-free ones — not the cost to buy in today. The income-share figures compare 2020 median household income with shelter costs reported in 2021.
Schools
3 designated public schools. Edmonton Public catchment for Gold Bar: Gold Bar, Hardisty and McNally.
All schools, levels & catchment notes
Designated public schools (Edmonton Public Schools catchment for Gold Bar):
Catchments are set by the school board and can change — and the City's published catchment data can lag new schools and boundary updates — so confirm the current designated school with Edmonton Public Schools before relying on it.
Schools located in Gold Bar:
- PublicGold BarElementary
Independent / private schools aren't in the City's open data, so they aren't listed here. School-quality ratings are published separately by the Fraser Institute (not affiliated with this site).
Shopping & amenities
About 12 businesses in Gold Bar, employing roughly 186 people.
Business mix & how this is counted
From the City's business census (2025 survey).
The mix of what's here, from currently-licensed businesses:
Counts come from City of Edmonton business licences and the City's business census — a licence means a business is registered at an address here, not a guarantee it's open today , and includes home-based businesses (about 45% of licences here). Landlord rental licences are excluded, and a listing isn't an endorsement.
Parks & green space
3 parks (50 hectares) and 1 playground in Gold Bar — includes a natural area.
Parks
3
50 hectares total
Playgrounds
1
Green-space types & notes
Types of green space:
- School & community park2
- Natural area1
Counts come from the City of Edmonton's parks and playgrounds open data. A park is attributed to the neighbourhood its centre point falls in, so a large park or greenway that spans several areas is counted once — treat boundaries as approximate. Trail corridors appear here as greenways; off-street bike routes aren't included.
Transit & connectivity
No LRT line in Gold Bar today. The nearest station is Holyrood (Valley Line Southeast), about 3.8 km away (straight-line). The neighbourhood is served by 6 bus routes.
Looking ahead, the nearest future stop is MacEwan Arts / 112 Street on the Valley Line West, about 6.7 km from the centre — under construction, targeted to open later this decade. Timelines can slip, and a nearby line doesn't imply any change in property values.
Nearest LRT
3.8 km
to Holyrood
Bus routes
6
serving the area
Future LRT
6.7 km
MacEwan Arts / 112 Street · under construction
Bus routes & notes
6 bus routes serve Gold Bar: 1, 1A, 53, 522, 633 and 635. They run from 14 boardable stops inside the neighbourhood.
No route here meets the frequent-service bar (≈ 15-minute weekday headway).
Bus routes and frequency come from the City's ETS GTFS schedule — the routes whose trips call at stops inside Gold Bar, with “frequent” meaning at least 100 weekday trips through the neighbourhood (about a bus every 15 minutes or better, counting both directions). Distances are straight-line (“as the crow flies”) from the neighbourhood centre — the actual walking or driving route is longer. Future stations are under construction; their locations and timelines come from City of Edmonton project pages and can change. Day-to-day commute mode (drive / transit / walk) is shown under “Who lives here.” Source: City of Edmonton LRT & ETS (GTFS) Open Data.
The market
Assessed value over time, and recent building activity.
Assessed value over time
Median assessed value changed +22% from 2012 to 2025.
That tracks Gold Bar's houses — largely the same homes throughout — so it's a real value change, not a shifting mix.
Building activity
Since 2015: 281 building permits, about 25 net new homes, and 18 secondary-suite permits.
Of those new units, roughly 68% are individually-owned (houses + condos), 32% purpose-built rental, and 0% in mixed-use buildings.
Split by building type (a strong proxy, not a guarantee of final tenure).
Permits year by year
Permits count every new home built — including purpose-built rental apartments and mixed-use buildings — so this can run well above the "total homes" figure above, which counts only individually-owned houses and condos.
Source
City of Edmonton Open Data — assessment, property info, building permits; Statistics Canada 2021 Census of Population (City of Edmonton neighbourhood tabulation). Contains information licensed under the Open Government Licence – City of Edmonton.
About these figures. They use the City of Edmonton's annual property assessment — its mass-appraisal estimate of value as of July 1 the prior year, informed by that year's sales but applied across the whole roll at once. That makes it a reliable directional and comparative signal (ideal for "how does this neighbourhood compare"), but not the exact price a specific home would sell for today — for that you need a comparative market analysis. Resident demographics and housing-cost figures (income and its distribution, age, education, commute, tenure, household types, shelter costs, occupations and industries, mobility) and the building-type, bedroom and condition mix are from the 2021 federal census — the most recent neighbourhood-level vintage; the City notes it fell during the pandemic, so treat these figures as directional. Census figures are adapted from Statistics Canada, 2021 Census of Population; this does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada. Trevor Tardif is a licensed REALTOR® with REAL Broker AB Ltd, Edmonton, Alberta. Content on this site does not constitute financial or investment advice.
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