Calgary Neighbourhood Profile

Arbour Lake

NW Calgary 10,335 residents 4,358 properties
Average Property Assessment
$669K
↓ Below city avg
YoY Value Change
+17.3%
↑ Above city avg
Properties
4,358
Permits Since 2024
183

Arbour Lake is a NW Calgary community built in the early 1990s around a private lake at its centre — the first residential lake community in the city’s NW quadrant. The lake is HOA-controlled and open to member households only — the general public doesn’t have access, and it isn’t a City park or open swim beach. The community sits inside four arterials: Country Hills Boulevard NW to the north, Crowchild Trail NW to the south, Nose Hill Drive NW to the east, and Stoney Trail (Highway 201) to the west. Around 10,335 people live here across 4,358 properties. The average assessed value is $669K, which sits about 13% below the citywide $732K average, and values were up 17.3% year-over-year against a citywide +15.2%. Homes are mostly detached single-family homes built in the late 1990s, with the average year built landing at 1999. Redevelopment is quiet — 183 new-construction permits since 2024 is the pace of a mature suburb that’s mostly finished building out. Arbour Lake sits alongside the other NW lake and 1990s suburb pages in Calgary’s 219 community profiles.

Key Insights

What the data says

Property Values

Average assessed value of $669K — below the city average of $732K.

Value Trend

Property values grew 17.3% year-over-year, outpacing the city average.

Higher Activity

59.8 disorder events per 1,000 residents, above the city average of 53.5.

Demographics

10,335 residents call Arbour Lake home, with 21.4% aged 20-39.

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Property Data

Property Values in Arbour Lake

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
$488,575
2024
$556,322
2025
$652,339
Year Year-End Assessment Roll Properties YoY Change
2023 $488,575 4,216
2024 $556,322 4,227 +13.9%
2025 $652,339 4,353 +17.3%
vs Calgary Average
Arbour Lake $669K
City Average $732K
-8.7% below city average

Why two numbers?

Assessment-roll averages in Arbour Lake have climbed 33.5% over the last 3 years, from $488,575 in the 2023 roll to $652,339 in the 2025 roll. The Average Property Assessment in the snapshot above ($669K) 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 Arbour Lake

52
New Construction
$70.2M invested
0
Renovations
$0 invested
0
Demolitions
$0 value
183
Total Permits
$82.4M total investment
Safety

Community Safety in Arbour Lake

In 2024, Arbour Lake recorded 618 disorder events — 59.8 events per 1,000 residents, above the city average of 53.5.

Year Events Change
2022 724
2023 896 +23.8%
2024 578 -35.5%
New methodology & data source (see note below)
2024 618
2025 419

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
Arbour Lake
59.8
City Average
53.5
Demographics

Who Lives in Arbour Lake

21.6%
Ages 0–19
2,230 residents
21.4%
Ages 20–39
2,210 residents
37.4%
Ages 40–64
3,865 residents
19.5%
Ages 65+
2,015 residents

Arbour Lake's 10,335 residents skew older than the city average. The 40-64 band is the largest single group at roughly 37% of the population, which is what you'd expect from a community where a lot of the original 1990s buyers are still here. The 65-plus share sits around 19%, a meaningful group of long-time residents who bought in the early years and stayed as they moved into retirement. Younger residents show up in the 20-39 and under-19 bands together — a mix of families drawn in by the schools inside the community, the lake amenity, and Crowfoot Crossing across Crowchild Trail. Housing is mostly detached single-family, with townhomes along the busier streets, so you get a mix of long-time owners alongside newer buyers and some renters. The mix produces a fairly stable community feel — turnover happens but doesn't dominate the streetscape, and the school-age population is enough to keep the local schools functioning as neighbourhood anchors rather than commuter destinations. Compared to the newer communities further north like Sage Hill or Evanston, Arbour Lake feels older and more settled — fewer strollers on the interior blocks, more mature landscaping, and a heavier presence of long-tenured owners. For a NW community with a different age profile, the Cambrian Heights profile covers an older mid-NW community closer to the Bow River.

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Traffic cameras near Arbour Lake

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

Living in Arbour Lake

Homes here are mostly detached single-family, with townhomes and some apartment buildings along the busier streets. Most of the community was built in the late 1990s, so the trees and landscaping are mature and the streets have settled in. The arterial ring — Country Hills to the north, Crowchild to the south, Nose Hill Drive to the east, Stoney Trail to the west — keeps Arbour Lake feeling like a self-contained pocket rather than something that blends into its neighbours. The interior street plan wraps around the lake itself, with pathway blocks and waterfront-facing properties on the inside of the loop. The lake is the community’s biggest draw, but it isn’t open to the general public — access runs through the HOA, with a private beach and dock for member households. Day-to-day shopping happens across Crowchild Trail at Crowfoot Crossing, a short drive south. For a nearby NW comparison at a different era, the Brentwood profile covers an older established community along Crowchild Trail with LRT access.

Things to do in Arbour Lake

The lake is the anchor. For households inside the HOA, that means waterfront pathways, a private beach, and a dock for use by member families. Non-member Calgarians don’t get in — the lake isn’t public. Beyond the community, Crowfoot Crossing across Crowchild Trail handles daily-service retail and the wider NW shopping catchment shared with Citadel, Ranchlands, Hawkwood, and Tuscany. Schools inside the community are Arbour Lake Middle School (grades 5-9, CBE) and St. Ambrose Elementary/Junior High (K-9, Calgary Catholic). High school students head to Robert Thirsk High School (grades 10-12, CBE), which serves the broader NW. There’s no LRT stop inside Arbour Lake, but the Crowfoot and Tuscany Red Line CTrain stations are both a short drive away in adjacent communities, so residents can commute downtown by rail instead of driving through the whole trip. For a nearby NW comparison, the Bowness profile covers a Bow River community with a different era, and the Beddington Heights profile covers an older mid-NW suburb to the east.

The Arbour Lake real-estate read

Homes here average $669K, which puts Arbour Lake about 13% below the citywide $732K average. That’s the standard price range for a 1990s detached-lot suburb — below newer NW communities with more expensive builds, and well below Hamptons across the quadrant where prices sit near a million. The lake-community premium shows up in resale but doesn’t push Arbour Lake into upper-income territory. Year-over-year, values were up 17.3% against a citywide +15.2% — running ahead of the city, most likely because the lake premium moves up faster when the broader market moves. New-construction activity is quiet: 183 new-construction permits since 2024, plus 11 secondary-suite permits — mostly infill and basement suites, no active greenfield. The disorder rate of 59.8 events per 1,000 residents sits slightly above the citywide 53.5 per 1,000 baseline. That’s mostly the Crowfoot Crossing retail catchment on the community’s south edge — retail nodes pick up a lot of the disorder count in any Calgary suburb, and residential blocks inside Arbour Lake read quieter than the number suggests. Buyers typically compare Arbour Lake against Royal Oak to the west or Citadel across Country Hills Boulevard. For a similar-value NW peer, the Hidden Valley profile covers a nearby community in the same price band, and the Greenwood/Greenbriar profile covers a NW-adjacent reference in a comparable range.

FAQ

Common Questions About Arbour Lake

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 Arbour Lake?

The average assessed value in Arbour Lake is $669K, about 13% below the citywide $732K average. Homes are mostly detached single-family from the late 1990s build-out, with some townhomes and apartment buildings along the busier streets around the community's edges.

How is the Arbour Lake real estate market?

Values were up 17.3% year-over-year, running ahead of the citywide +15.2%. The pace likely reflects the lake premium repricing when the broader market moves. New builds are quiet at 45 permits since 2024 — Arbour Lake is mostly finished building, so activity is infill and basement suites.

Is Arbour Lake a good place to live?

Arbour Lake suits households drawn to a mature NW suburb built around a private residents-only lake, with schools inside the community and Crowfoot Crossing across Crowchild Trail for daily shopping. Red Line CTrain access at Crowfoot and Tuscany stations is a short drive from the community.

Is Arbour Lake safe?

Arbour Lake records 59.8 disorder events per 1,000 residents, slightly above the citywide 53.5 per 1,000 baseline. Most of the count comes from the Crowfoot Crossing retail catchment on the south edge rather than the residential blocks inside, and disorder events were down 17.3% year-over-year.

What is Arbour Lake known for?

Arbour Lake is Calgary's first NW residential lake community, built in the early 1990s around a private lake at the community's centre. The lake is HOA-controlled — access is restricted to residents and their guests, so it isn't a public City park or open swim beach for the general public.

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Arbour Lake

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