Calgary Neighbourhood Profile

Crestmont

NW Calgary 2,275 residents 1,037 properties
Average Property Assessment
$854K
↑ Above city avg
YoY Value Change
+7.9%
↓ Below city avg
Properties
1,037
Permits Since 2024
80

Crestmont Calgary is a small community on the city’s far-western edge, south of the Trans-Canada Highway, with Valley Ridge to the north and Cougar Ridge to the south — one of the quietest neighbourhoods on the map with 22.9 disorder events per 1,000 residents against the citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000. Average assessed values sit at $854K, well above the citywide $732K, and they climbed 7.9% year-over-year against the citywide 15.2% pace during the current cycle — a case where the higher-value band is running slower than the broader Calgary curve. Crestmont is part of Calgary’s 219 community profiles.

Key Insights

What the data says

Property Values

Average assessed value of $854K — above the city average of $732K.

Slower Growth

Year-over-year growth of 7.9% trails the city average of 15.2%.

Lower Disorder Rate

22.9 events per 1,000 residents — below the city average of 53.5. A relatively quiet community.

Demographics

2,275 residents call Crestmont home, with 25.3% aged 20-39.

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Property Data

Property Values in Crestmont

Average Property Assessment
Pulled from the City of Calgary's live current-year assessment feed, using a broad aggregation across all residential parcels. Shown in the snapshot at the top of the page and in the "vs Calgary Average" card below.
Year-End Assessment Roll
Official year-end assessment roll for each year, using a narrower per-year methodology. Shown in the chart and table below. Authoritative for year-over-year trend comparisons.
2023
$704,984
2024
$792,731
2025
$855,192
Year Year-End Assessment Roll Properties YoY Change
2023 $704,984 992
2024 $792,731 1,033 +12.4%
2025 $855,192 1,028 +7.9%
vs Calgary Average
Crestmont $854K
City Average $732K
+16.6% above city average

Why two numbers?

Assessment-roll averages in Crestmont have climbed 21.3% over the last 3 years, from $704,984 in the 2023 roll to $855,192 in the 2025 roll. The Average Property Assessment in the snapshot above ($854K) is drawn from the live current-year assessment feed, which uses a broader aggregation than the year-specific rolls in the table — small differences between the two are normal.

Development

Building Activity in Crestmont

21
New Construction
$9.5M invested
0
Renovations
$0 invested
0
Demolitions
$0 value
80
Total Permits
$11.4M total investment
Safety

Community Safety in Crestmont

In 2024, Crestmont recorded 52 disorder events — 22.9 events per 1,000 residents, below the city average of 53.5.

Year Events Change
2022 32
2023 30 -6.3%
2024 27 -10%
New methodology & data source (see note below)
2024 52
2025 54

CPS revised how disorder events are counted in 2024 and moved to a new data source. Pre-2024 numbers reflect the older definition and aren't directly comparable to 2024-onward.

Partial year — coverage limited to months published by CPS to date.

Disorder Rate Comparison
Events per 1,000 residents
Crestmont
22.9
City Average
53.5
Demographics

Who Lives in Crestmont

27.7%
Ages 0–19
630 residents
25.3%
Ages 20–39
575 residents
39.6%
Ages 40–64
900 residents
7.3%
Ages 65+
165 residents

The community holds 2,275 residents across 1,037 properties, a small footprint that keeps Crestmont among the more intimately-scaled communities on Calgary's far-west edge. The age split shows a family-heavy community with a strong 40-to-64 presence — that band is the largest single segment on the profile, consistent with a community whose 2000s build-out has drawn mid-career professional families with school-age children. Kids and teens under 19 make up a substantial second block, and the 65-plus share is small, reflecting a neighbourhood that hasn't yet moved into a broad empty-nester phase — the first wave of buyers is still mostly in mid-career ownership. Household incomes here run above the citywide median, consistent with the community's higher price band and detached-only housing. For a similar west-Calgary community with a comparable family-heavy composition and higher price band, the West Springs profile is the closest reference on demographic curve.

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Traffic cameras near Crestmont

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Live images from City of Calgary traffic cameras within ~4 km of Crestmont. Each camera refreshes every 30 seconds — click any pin to see the latest view.

Living in Crestmont

Housing is almost entirely modern single-family detached homes on a compact 0.6 km² footprint that sits between the Trans-Canada Highway on the north and the surrounding Rocky View County land on the west. Most of the community was built out from the early 2000s onward with a second wave carrying through the 2010s — the average build year sits at 2012, which is one of the newer per-property averages on any Calgary community page. Interior streets follow a curving, self-contained layout on the escarpment above the Bow Valley, and blocks step out from the community centre toward the western edge of the built-up city. There is no CTrain station inside, and the community is served by feeder buses; the 69 Street Red Line terminus a drive south inside Cougar Ridge provides the nearest LRT connection into downtown. School catchments route to the wider west-Calgary public and Catholic networks — the small footprint means Crestmont doesn’t carry a K-6 school inside the community. For a same-vintage west-side peer at a comparable price band, the West Springs profile is the closest reference on scale and demographic curve.

Things to do in Crestmont

The community’s clearest single amenity is the immediate proximity to Canada Olympic Park and WinSport a short drive north across the Trans-Canada Highway — alpine skiing, snowboarding, mountain biking, and terrain-park events are all within a five-minute drive of the community’s northern boundary — one of the shortest driveway-to-hill runs of any Calgary neighbourhood in winter. The Bow River valley on the north opens Bow River pathway access into the wider west-Calgary green corridor, and the Rocky Mountain foothills are roughly 30 minutes west along the Trans-Canada with Banff National Park about 90 minutes further on. Valley Ridge Golf Club immediately north opens 18 holes of golf across the escarpment for course-side leisure, and the small commercial nodes east in Aspen Woods and further east in West Springs carry the closest daily-services retail and dining destinations for households on the west edge. Day-to-day retail is a short drive rather than inside the community — the small footprint doesn’t support inside-community strip retail, so residents typically drive east for groceries, coffee, and services. School catchments route to the wider west-Calgary public and Catholic networks; check the current Calgary Board of Education and Calgary Catholic School District attendance-area tools for the designated schools at a specific address. Any specific business inside the community is easiest to find through the Crestmont business directory, which pulls current City of Calgary business-licence records.

The Crestmont real-estate read

The community’s average assessed value sits at $854K, well above the citywide $732K — a signal of the community’s newer detached homes, ridge setting on the west edge, and higher-value buyer base since the 2000s build-out. Values rose 7.9% year-over-year against the citywide 15.2%, a pace that runs slower than the broader Calgary curve during the current cycle — a common pattern for higher-value bands where the run-up has already been priced in. Building activity is moderate: 80 permits filed since 2024, weighted toward renovation and secondary-suite additions on the built-out lots and the last remaining infill lots along the western edge. The community’s average build year sits at 2012, one of the newer per-property averages on any Calgary community page and consistent with a build-out that carried from the early 2000s through the 2010s. On safety, disorder runs at 22.9 events per 1,000 residents — well below the citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000 and one of the quietest figures on any west-Calgary community profile. Year-over-year, the community’s disorder rate held roughly steady compared with the year before. For a similar-value west-Calgary community at a comparable price band, the Aspen Woods profile is the closest reference; for a same-vintage NW peer along the Bow River corridor, Valley Ridge is the immediate northern neighbour.

FAQ

Common Questions About Crestmont

Why are there two average values on this page?

The page shows two related but distinct figures because they come from two different official City of Calgary datasets with different aggregation methods. The Average Property Assessment (in the snapshot at the top of the page and in the "vs Calgary Average" card) is drawn from the City's live current-year assessment feed, using a broad aggregation across all residential parcels. The Year-End Assessment Roll figures in the Property Values chart and table below come from a separate dataset that captures each year's official year-end roll, using a narrower per-year methodology. Both are official data — the small difference between them is normal and reflects the different aggregation windows. For an at-a-glance current value, use the Average Property Assessment; for authoritative year-over-year trends, use the Assessment Roll.

What's the average house price in Crestmont?

The average assessed value in Crestmont is $854K based on the City of Calgary's 2025 property assessments, well above the citywide average of $732K. Most of the housing is modern single-family detached homes built from the early 2000s onward on a compact 0.6 km² footprint on the far-west edge.

How is the Crestmont real estate market?

Crestmont values rose 7.9% year-over-year against the citywide 15.2% gain — a pace slower than the broader Calgary curve, a common pattern for higher-value bands. 80 permits have been filed since 2024, weighted toward renovation and infill on the last remaining lots.

Is Crestmont a good place to live?

Crestmont suits buyers who want a small west-Calgary community with modern detached housing, Bow Valley proximity, and one of the quietest disorder rates in the city. The trade-off is that the small footprint means no inside-community retail or schools — day-to-day services sit east in Aspen Woods and West Springs.

Is Crestmont safe?

Crestmont records 22.9 disorder events per 1,000 residents in the City's latest year, well below the citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000 — one of the quietest figures on any west-Calgary community profile. Year-over-year the community's disorder rate held roughly steady compared with the year before.

What is Crestmont known for?

Crestmont is best known for its compact 0.6 km² footprint on Calgary's far-western edge south of the Trans-Canada Highway, its modern detached housing built out from the early 2000s, and its immediate proximity to Canada Olympic Park and the Bow River valley to the north.

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