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Harvest Hills Homes for Sale in Calgary

Explore Harvest Hills real estate, active MLS® listings, recent sales, market trends, schools, commute times, amenities, and local buying advice from the CalgaryListings Group team.

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Harvest Hills · MLS®

Best For

  • Families wanting 90s value on the pond
  • New-build buyers inside an established address
  • Deerfoot commuters
  • Townhome entry hunters

Watch-Outs

  • Two eras — know which you’re buying
  • 90s poly-B vs new-build rules
  • Deerfoot’s hum on the east edge
  • Pond premiums — price honestly

Typical Homes

1990s two-storeys and bi-levels around the pond, townhome rows, and the newer infill quarter on the former golf lands.

Neighbourhood Feel

Two eras, one address — the pond’s 90s loop and the golf-lands’ new streets, with Deerfoot’s corridor at the fence.

Browse current Harvest Hills homes for sale. Want help deciding which listings are worth a closer look? Ask our team for a pricing read before you book a showing.

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Active Listings vs Recently Sold Homes in Harvest Hills

Active listings show what sellers are asking today. Recently sold homes show what buyers actually paid. Comparing both gives buyers and sellers a clearer view of current value in Harvest Hills.

What Sellers Are Asking

What Buyers Actually Paid

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Recently Sold Homes in Harvest Hills

What actually sold — and how it was priced — tells you more about Harvest Hills than any asking price. Recent sales from the last six months:

North Calgary Market Context for Harvest Hills

Updated monthly using North Calgary district data from CREB®. District figures describe the whole north — the Harvest Hills-only numbers live in the listings, sold, and asking-vs-paid sections above.

Is Harvest Hills a Buyer’s or Seller’s Market?

Months of supply tells you who holds the leverage: under 2 months favours sellers, around 3 is balanced, and past 4 buyers gain room. North Calgary district context, by property type:

Harvest Hills Detached, Condo & Townhome Trends

Thinking of Selling in Harvest Hills?

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Want the Real Sold Numbers Before You Offer?

We can show you what similar Harvest Hills homes have actually sold for, not just what sellers are asking.

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Harvest Hills on the Map

The official community boundary with layers you can toggle: homes for sale, recent sales, schools, parks, transit, everyday places, and development activity. Sources: MLS®, City of Calgary Open Data, and Google Places.

Harvest Hills Homes for Sale

For buyers, Harvest Hills offers a polished suburban lifestyle with a higher-end feel. For sellers, it is a neighbourhood where presentation, pricing strategy, property condition, and exposure matter because buyers are often comparing across several east Calgary communities at once.

At CalgaryListings Group, our team helps buyers and sellers understand not just what is available in Harvest Hills, but how each property fits the market, the street, the resale picture, and the buyer's long-term goals.

What We’d Tell You Before You Buy in Harvest Hills

Harvest Hills is not a neighbourhood where you can judge value by square footage alone. Two homes can look similar online and feel completely different once you factor in the street, lot position, finish level, natural light, floor plan, basement development, garage setup, and resale picture.

If you are buying here, the real question is not just “is this a nice home?” It is “does this home make sense compared with what else has sold, what else is active, and what buyers will care about when you eventually sell?” That is where Harvest Hills gets tricky — and where good advice matters.

Before you write an offer

Ask us to check the recent Harvest Hills sold data, the competing listings, the street, the property type, and the resale story. A home can be beautiful and still be overpriced. It can also look ordinary online and be one of the better buys in the community. Ask us what we think before you offer →

What We’d Tell You Before You Sell in Harvest Hills

Harvest Hills buyers expect polish. That does not mean every home needs to be fully renovated, but it does need to feel clean, cared for, current, and properly positioned against the homes it is competing with.

The mistake sellers make in Harvest Hills is assuming the community name will do all the work. It will not. Buyers at this level compare hard. They notice deferred maintenance, tired paint, weak photography, dated lighting, messy landscaping, and pricing that ignores recent sold data.

Before you price your home

We would look at your exact pocket of Harvest Hills, your property type, your condition, your competition, and the most recent solds before giving you a number. Neighbourhood averages are useful context, but they are not a pricing strategy. Get an Harvest Hills pricing opinion →

What Makes Harvest Hills Popular

Harvest Hills is the north’s two-era address: 1990s family streets looping its pond, and a new-build quarter rising where the golf course used to run — so a median around $488,000 spans poly-B-era bungalows and warranty-fresh detached under one name.

What sets Harvest apart is exactly that duality: established trees and comparables on one side, new construction without leaving the postal code on the other, and Deerfoot’s corridor directly at the fence.

The homework splits by era — poly-B checks on the 90s, builder-rules on the golf lands. Schools serve the community; verify designations before you buy.

Types of Homes in Harvest Hills

Harvest Hills real estate includes a mix of detached homes, estate homes, luxury properties, townhomes, and condos. The detached market is especially important, but the community also has lower-maintenance options for buyers who want the location without the size or maintenance of a larger home.

Detached Homes

Detached homes in Harvest Hills often appeal to move-up buyers, executive families, and relocation buyers. Many homes include front attached garages, larger floor plans, developed basements, and family-friendly layouts. Higher-end homes may include walkout basements, triple garages, mountain or valley views, custom finishing, and larger lots.

Browse Harvest Hills detached homes →

Luxury Homes

Harvest Hills' top end splits by era — pond-facing 90s two-storeys and the golf-lands' largest new builds, each pricing against its own comparables. Luxury buyers will usually look closely at architecture, finish quality, lot placement, privacy, garage space, ceiling heights, kitchen design, outdoor living, and overall condition.

Townhomes

Townhomes in Harvest Hills can be a strong fit for buyers who want the north Calgary location without a detached-home budget. They may appeal to professionals, downsizers, first-time move-up buyers, and families wanting access to the area's amenities. Buyers should review condo documents, reserve fund health, bylaws, parking, visitor parking, pet restrictions, and monthly condo fees before committing.

Condos

Harvest Hills condos can provide a more affordable entry point into the neighbourhood. They may work well for singles, young professionals, investors, downsizers, or buyers who want a lock-and-leave lifestyle. Buyers should pay close attention to the building, management, condo fees, parking, storage, financials, and resale demand.

Where Harvest Hills Buyers Should Be Careful

Not all homes in Harvest Hills are equal. Buyers should look closely at exterior materials, roof age, window condition, mechanical systems, basement quality, grading, drainage, garage layout, and any signs of deferred maintenance.

For townhomes and condos, condo document review matters. Monthly fees, reserve fund planning, insurance costs, bylaws, pet restrictions, parking rules, and future capital work can all affect whether a property is a good purchase.

For luxury homes, buyers should not assume a high price automatically means high quality. Custom finishes, smart-home systems, landscaping, exterior envelope, renovation history, and maintenance records should all be reviewed carefully.

Living in Harvest Hills

A good fit if you want

  • The pond’s 90s family loop
  • New construction inside an established address
  • Deerfoot directly at the fence
  • The airport twelve minutes
  • VIVO minutes west
  • Two eras of comparables to choose from

Maybe not the best fit if you want

  • One-era simplicity
  • Quiet on the Deerfoot edge
  • To skip era-specific homework
  • A golf course — it left
  • The lowest north entries

Daily Life in Harvest Hills

What does living here actually feel like, day to day? Here is the honest version, from a team that spends real time in this community.

The morning commute

Deerfoot is at the fence — downtown in 18 to 20 minutes, the airport in twelve — with Country Hills Boulevard’s row beside.

The school run

Schools serve the community with Catholic options close. Verify designations for the exact address.

Groceries & errands

The boulevard’s row and the Village’s ring carry the essentials minutes west.

Coffee & eating out

The boulevard’s restaurants and the Village’s row carry the evenings — five minutes’ walkless drive.

Walking, river & parks

The pond loop headlines the 90s side; the golf-lands’ new parks thread the infill quarter.

Where traffic backs up

Being straight with you: Deerfoot’s hum defines the eastern edge — the discount there is honest. The pond loop stays calm.

What weekends feel like

A pond loop, a boulevard errand sweep, a show-home wander on the old fairways — and the airport twelve minutes when family lands. Two eras, working.

Harvest Hills Pocket by Pocket

Most community pages treat Harvest Hills like one blob. It is not. Price, noise, walkability, and buyer competition change street by street — and knowing the pockets is where local advice earns its keep.

The pond-facing loop

The 90s premium — water views on the original streets.

Best for: pond-first families

The golf-lands new builds

Warranty-fresh streets on the old fairways — new-build rules apply.

Best for: new-construction buyers

The 90s heartland

Family two-storeys through the middle — poly-B status leads.

Best for: value families

The renovated tier

Updated 90s homes competing with the new quarter — price the gap.

Best for: sharp-pencil buyers

The townhome rows

Both eras’ attached entries — documents decide.

Best for: entry buyers

The Deerfoot-edge east

The honest discount — listen before you sign.

Best for: value-first buyers

Era is the market

A 90s bungalow and a golf-lands build are different assets — compare within era.

Everyone

Schools Near Harvest Hills

School access is one of the major reasons many buyers consider Harvest Hills. Distances and drive times below are measured from the community centre; every family should verify against the specific home address.

Confirm before you buy

School boundaries, transportation, admissions, and programming change. Verify directly with the Calgary Board of Education, the Calgary Catholic School District, and individual private or independent schools before purchasing.

Commute Times from Harvest Hills

Estimated from the centre of the community in typical off-peak conditions — peak-hour trips run longer, especially eastbound on Bow Trail in the morning. Tap any card for live directions.

Harvest Hills vs Nearby Communities

Many buyers considering Harvest Hills are also looking at Coventry Hills, Country Hills, Country Hills Village, Panorama Hills, and Beddington Heights.

Harvest vs Coventry Hills

Coventry runs the bigger single-era belt; Harvest runs two eras and the pond. Scale leans Coventry; duality leans Harvest. See our full Coventry guide →

Harvest vs Country Hills

The pond versus the fairways — water leans Harvest; golf leans Country Hills. See our full Country Hills guide →

Harvest vs the Village

Detached range versus walkability stack — houses lean Harvest; foot-life leans the Village. See our full Village guide →

Harvest vs Panorama Hills

Panorama’s 2000s belt versus Harvest’s two eras — uniform-newer leans Panorama; mixed-value leans Harvest. See our full Panorama guide →

Buying a Home in Harvest Hills

Buying in Harvest Hills requires more strategy than simply watching new listings. Desirable homes can move quickly, but overpriced homes can sit. The key is knowing the difference.

Our team helps buyers compare homes by location within the community, street and lot quality, property type, floor plan, finish level, basement development, garage configuration, renovation quality, school and commute needs, resale potential, condo document concerns where applicable, and current market competition.

We also help buyers decide when to move quickly and when to negotiate. That judgment matters in Harvest Hills because price ranges, buyer expectations, and property quality can vary dramatically.

Selling a Home in Harvest Hills

Selling in Harvest Hills requires strong positioning. Buyers in this area expect quality, and they are usually comparing your home against other north Calgary options.

Before listing, sellers should pay attention to paint and presentation, lighting, staging, landscaping, clean windows, flooring condition, kitchen and bathroom presentation, mechanical maintenance, exterior curb appeal, professional photography and video, and accurate pricing based on property type — not just neighbourhood average.

Wondering what your Harvest Hills home would compete against?

Get an Harvest Hills Home Value Review

Why Work With CalgaryListings Group

Our CalgaryListings Group team brings deep Calgary market experience, strong buyer and seller strategy, and a straightforward approach to real estate advice. We are not here to push every home as a good home. We are here to help clients make smart decisions.

For buyers, that means helping you understand value, risk, location, condition, and resale before you write an offer.

For sellers, that means honest pricing advice, strong preparation, professional marketing, and positioning your home properly in a competiti

Harvest Hills Community Profile & Census Data

How to read this: The City of Calgary’s Harvest Hills Community Profile is based on the 2021 Census of Canada, so this data is long-term neighbourhood context — not current market activity. Current prices, inventory, days on market, and sales trends should always be reviewed alongside the live MLS® data higher on this page.
7,805
Residents (2021)
2.7
Avg household size
Calgary: 2.6
84%
Owner households
Calgary: 69%
76%
Single-detached homes
$104K
Median household income
Calgary: $98K
15%
Residents aged 0–14
Calgary: 18%
12%
Homes built 2001–2010
56%
Post-secondary educated
Calgary: 61%

A look at who lives here

In 2021, Harvest Hills had 7,805 residents in private households — 15% aged 0 to 14 (below Calgary’s 18%), 71% aged 15 to 64, and 14% aged 65 and over. Its 2,860 households average 2.7 people against Calgary’s 2.6 — 20% are one-person households and 28% have four or more people. Of 2,235 census families, 86% are couple families, with married couples with children representing 44%; one-parent families account for 14%.

Ownership & the housing mix

Housing tenure runs 84% owner to 16% renter, well above Calgary’s 69/31 split. The dwelling mix is led by single-detached (76%), low-rise apartment (10%), row-house (9%). Condition data shows 96% of dwellings need only regular maintenance or minor repairs, and 96% of households are suitable for the number of residents.

Shelter costs & income

Median monthly shelter costs were $1,620 for owned dwellings and $1,800 for rented, versus Calgary’s $1,720 and $1,350. About 18% of households spent 30% or more of income on shelter (Calgary: 23%). Median household income was $104,000 in 2020 against $98,000 city-wide, and median individual income was $42,800 versus $44,400.

Education & work

Among residents 15 and over, 56% hold a post-secondary credential and 26% hold a university degree at bachelor level or above, versus 61% and 36% across Calgary. The labour force participation rate was 70%, employment 62%, and unemployment 12%. Top industries: Retail trade (13%); Health care and social assistance (12%); Professional, scientific and technical services (10%). Top occupation groups: Sales and service occupations (29%); Business, finance and administration occupations (19%); Trades, transport and equipment operators and related occupations (18%).

Getting to work

79% of commuters drive, 5% use public transit, and 2% walk (1% cycle) — against Calgary’s 77%% driving, 9%% transit, and 4%% walking. Commute times: 22% under 15 minutes, 46% at 15–29 minutes, and 24% at 30–44 minutes.

Languages, newcomers & mobility

75% of residents speak English most often at home (Calgary: 75%), with Yue (Cantonese) and Filipino) the most common non-official home languages. In 2021, 36% of residents were immigrants, compared with 33% across Calgary — neutral demographic context from the census. On mobility, 14% of residents had moved in the year before the census and 38% within five years (Calgary: 42%) — a read on how settled the community is and how much resale turnover to expect.

What it means for buyers & sellers

Taken together, the census shows an established, mixed community — useful long-term context for weighing Harvest Hills against its neighbours, alongside the live market data higher on this page.

Source: The City of Calgary Community Profiles — Harvest Hills, based on the 2021 Census of Canada. Numbers may vary slightly between census tables due to rounding. Census data is long-term context; verify current market conditions against live MLS® data.

ve north Calgary market.

Harvest Hills FAQ

Harvest Hills is the north's two-era community — 1990s family streets around its pond, plus a new-build quarter rising on the former golf lands. It suits families who want 90s value and buyers who want new construction inside an established address.
Yes — a median around $488,000 with sales centring near $515,000, spanning condos through new-build detached on the old course.
1990s two-storeys and bi-levels around the pond, townhome rows, and the newer infill quarter — townhomes to detached — on the former golf lands.
It closed and was redeveloped — the former fairways now carry the community's newest homes, which is why new construction and 90s stock share one name here.
Yes — schools serve the community, the pond anchors the loop, and VIVO sits minutes west. Verify designations before purchasing.
About 18 to 20 minutes by car via Deerfoot — the community sits right on the corridor.
Know which era you're buying — 90s stock carries the poly-B question; the golf-lands quarter carries new-build rules. Pond-facing homes carry the classic premium.

Not sure if Harvest Hills is the right fit?

Our CalgaryListings Group team can help you understand the neighbourhood, compare current listings, review pricing, and decide whether Harvest Hills is the right move for your goals.