Highlights from ‘Building Permits, May 2024’

The following statistics were released from the Economics and Statistics Division on July 12, 2024. Full details from this dataset can be accessed here.

Monthly (seasonally adjusted, May 2024 vs April 2024)

  • Nova Scotia’s total building permits (residential and non-residential) fell by 10.4% to $312.5 million
  • Halifax permits declined by 18.0% to $206.2 million while permits outside the city rose 9.3% to $106.3 million
  • National permits declined 12.2% to $11.74 billion

  • Nova Scotia’s non-residential building permits declined 29.2% to $71.6 million
  • Halifax permits decreased 33.7% to $44.1 million
  • Outside the city, non-residential permit values fell 20.7% to $27.5 million
  • National non-residential building permit values decreased 5.0% to $4.62 billion
Year-to-date (January-May 2024 vs January-May 2023)

  • Nova Scotia’s total building permits (residential and non-residential) were up 33.9% in the first five months of the year comparing with the same period in 2023
  • Halifax permits increased 48.5% and outside the city permit values increased 15.1%
  • National permits were up 7.2% — Building permit values were up in all provinces except Saskatchewan, led by New Brunswick and Nova Scotia

  • Nova Scotia’s non-residential building permits fell 4.5% in the first five months of 2024 (compared with the same period in 2023)
  • Halifax permits decreased 14.9% while non-residential permits outside the city rose 13.7%
  • National non-residential building permit values rose 5.1%
Trends
  • Overall building permit values have generally been on a rising trend since the middle of 2021, though there have been periods of declining values over this period
    • Rising permit values are mostly driven by higher residential permits within Halifax as well as outside the city
  • Halifax commercial building permits have picked up while industrial and institutional/government projects have been trending down
  • Outside the city, permits have reached the peak and there is a recent decline in institutional/government permits