Calgary Neighbourhood Profile

Castleridge

NE Calgary 6,130 residents 1,679 properties
Average Property Assessment
$528K
↓ Below city avg
YoY Value Change
+16.9%
↑ Above city avg
Properties
1,679
Permits Since 2024
65

Castleridge Calgary is a NE residential community established in 1980 on land transferred from the Municipal District of Rocky View in 1961, bounded by 64 Avenue NE to the north, Métis Trail to the west, McKnight Boulevard to the south, and Falconridge Boulevard to the east. The community holds 6,130 residents across 1,679 properties. Average assessed value runs at $528K, well below the citywide $732K. Values have climbed 16.9% year-over-year against the citywide 15.2% pace — above the broader Calgary pace during the current cycle. What sets Castleridge apart on the map is Baitun Nur, opened inside the community in 2008 as the largest mosque in Canada. Castleridge is part of Calgary’s 219 community profiles.

Key Insights

What the data says

Property Values

Average assessed value of $528K — below the city average of $732K.

Value Trend

Property values grew 16.9% year-over-year, outpacing the city average.

Lower Disorder Rate

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

Demographics

6,130 residents call Castleridge home, with 29.3% aged 20-39.

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Property Data

Property Values in Castleridge

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
$402,982
2024
$445,040
2025
$520,054
Year Year-End Assessment Roll Properties YoY Change
2023 $402,982 1,679
2024 $445,040 1,676 +10.4%
2025 $520,054 1,678 +16.9%
vs Calgary Average
Castleridge $528K
City Average $732K
-27.9% below city average

Why two numbers?

Assessment-roll averages in Castleridge have climbed 29.1% over the last 3 years, from $402,982 in the 2023 roll to $520,054 in the 2025 roll. The Average Property Assessment in the snapshot above ($528K) 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 Castleridge

18
New Construction
$1.3M invested
0
Renovations
$0 invested
0
Demolitions
$0 value
65
Total Permits
$2.9M total investment
Safety

Community Safety in Castleridge

In 2024, Castleridge recorded 176 disorder events — 28.7 events per 1,000 residents, below the city average of 53.5.

Year Events Change
2022 310
2023 246 -20.6%
2024 175 -28.9%
New methodology & data source (see note below)
2024 176
2025 203

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
Castleridge
28.7
City Average
53.5
Demographics

Who Lives in Castleridge

26.2%
Ages 0–19
1,605 residents
29.3%
Ages 20–39
1,795 residents
33.4%
Ages 40–64
2,050 residents
11%
Ages 65+
675 residents

Castleridge holds 6,130 residents across 1,679 properties. About 50% of residents are immigrants — one of the highest immigrant shares in Calgary and defining for the community's day-to-day character, with a strongly multicultural mix across the interior blocks. Household incomes here have historically tracked around the citywide median. Rental housing runs around 31%, moderate for a detached NE community and reflecting a mix of long-time owners and secondary-suite rentals across the interior blocks. For a similar NE community with a comparable multicultural character, the Martindale profile is the closest reference on demographic curve, and the Falconridge profile covers the immediate east neighbour across the seam.

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Traffic cameras near Castleridge

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

Living in Castleridge

Housing is dominated by 1980s single-family detached homes on standard NE suburban lots, with a small share of condos or apartments — under ten percent of buildings are multi-family. Renter share runs around 31%, moderate for a detached NE community. Interior streets follow the curvilinear pattern typical of early-1980s NE build-out with mature landscaping across most blocks. 64 Avenue NE on the north separates Castleridge from the wider NE communities on that side; Métis Trail on the west separates the community from the Calgary International Airport lands and the Westwinds industrial area; McKnight Boulevard on the south separates it from Whitehorn across the seam; and Falconridge Boulevard on the east separates the community from Falconridge, a same-era NE peer. There is no CTrain station inside Castleridge; the McKnight-Westwinds Blue Line terminus sits south across McKnight Boulevard in Whitehorn — a short drive from most interior blocks. For a similar 1980s NE community immediately south with a comparable build vintage, the Whitehorn profile is the closest reference on scale; for a same-vintage NE peer at a comparable multicultural character, the Martindale profile is the closer reference on demographic curve.

Things to do in Castleridge

Baitun Nur inside the community is the largest mosque in Canada — opened in 2008 by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community, one of the most distinctive landmarks in NE Calgary and one of the community’s clearest identifiers. Retail is a short drive rather than inside the interior blocks: the wider Whitehorn and Sunridge shopping cluster sits south and southwest along McKnight Boulevard, and the Falconridge Boulevard corridor east opens additional daily-services retail across the seam in Falconridge. The McKnight-Westwinds Blue Line terminus in Whitehorn is a short drive south, and the wider NE Blue Line network opens direct CTrain access into downtown from that station. For Calgary Board of Education and Calgary Catholic School District attendance-area details specific to individual addresses inside Castleridge, check the current CBE and CCSD attendance-area tools. Any specific business inside Castleridge is easiest to find through the Castleridge business directory, which pulls current City of Calgary business-licence records.

The Castleridge real-estate read

Castleridge’s average assessed value sits at $528K, well below the citywide $732K and reflecting the community’s detached-heavy housing on standard NE suburban lots. Values rose 16.9% year-over-year against the citywide 15.2% pace, above the broader Calgary pace during the current cycle — a pattern consistent with below-average NE communities closing ground on the wider Calgary value curve. Building activity is steady: 65 permits filed since 2024, weighted toward renovation, secondary-suite additions, and infill redevelopment on original detached blocks. The community’s average build year sits around 1982, consistent with the 1980 establishment and the early-1980s build-out. On safety, disorder runs at 28.7 events per 1,000 residents — well below the citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000, one of the quieter rates in the NE. Year-over-year, the community’s disorder rate held roughly steady compared with the year before. For a same-vintage NE community with a comparable multicultural character, the Martindale profile is the closest reference on demographic curve; for the immediate east neighbour across the seam, the Falconridge profile is the closer reference on price and tenure mix.

FAQ

Common Questions About Castleridge

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.

Is Castleridge a good place to live?

Castleridge is an established NE Calgary community with Baitun Nur — the largest mosque in Canada — inside the community, a strongly multicultural resident mix, and a below-average disorder rate for the NE. Housing is mostly detached at a well-below-citywide price band, with McKnight-Westwinds Blue Line access a short drive south into Whitehorn.

Is Castleridge safe?

Castleridge runs 28.7 disorder events per 1,000 residents against the citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000 — well below the city average and one of the quieter rates in the NE. Year-over-year the community's disorder rate held roughly steady compared with the year before.

What's the average house price in Castleridge?

Castleridge's average assessed value sits at $528K, well below the citywide $732K and reflecting the community's detached housing on standard NE lots. Values rose 16.9% year-over-year against the citywide 15.2% pace, above the broader Calgary pace during the current cycle.

What is Castleridge known for?

Castleridge is known for Baitun Nur — the largest mosque in Canada, opened in 2008 by the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community — and for one of the highest immigrant shares in Calgary. The community sits between Whitehorn south, Falconridge east across the Falconridge Boulevard seam, and the Calgary International Airport corridor west.

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Community

Community Association

Falconridge / Castleridge

The Falconridge / Castleridge represents the residents of Castleridge. Community associations organize local events, advocate for neighbourhood improvements, and connect residents.

falconridgecastleridge.ca
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