Coventry Hills
Coventry Hills Calgary is a far-north NE community established in 1991, sitting inside a self-contained pocket bounded by four big arterials: Stoney Trail on the north, Deerfoot Trail and Nose Creek on the east, Country Hills Boulevard on the south, and Harvest Hills Boulevard on the west. Because all four sides are busy roads, cut-through traffic mostly stays on the perimeter and the interior streets stay residential and quiet. Panorama Hills sits directly across Harvest Hills Boulevard to the west, and Country Hills and Harvest Hills communities are across Country Hills Boulevard to the south. The Nose Creek corridor along the east edge is a natural greenspace strip between the community and Deerfoot Trail. Coventry Hills was built as a suburban residential community — mostly single-family detached homes across the interior blocks, with townhomes along the busier collector streets. Since 2024, the City has issued 111 new-construction permits inside the community, driven mostly by secondary-suite additions and infill in the older subdivisions rather than any brand new subdivision. The disorder rate is 17.3 events per 1,000 residents, well below Calgary’s baseline of roughly 54 per 1,000, which makes it one of the quieter far-north NE communities. Coventry Hills sits in the 1990s-suburban group inside Calgary’s 219 community profiles.
What the data says
Property Values
Average assessed value of $574K — below the city average of $732K.
Slower Growth
Year-over-year growth of 8.5% trails the city average of 15.2%.
Lower Disorder Rate
17.3 events per 1,000 residents — below the city average of 53.5. A relatively quiet community.
Demographics
17,350 residents call Coventry Hills home, with 27.3% aged 20-39.
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Property Values in Coventry Hills
| Year | Year-End Assessment Roll | Properties | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $476,953 | 5,513 | — |
| 2024 | $510,367 | 5,516 | +7% |
| 2025 | $553,716 | 5,513 | +8.5% |
Why two numbers?
Assessment-roll averages in Coventry Hills have climbed 16.1% over the last 3 years, from $476,953 in the 2023 roll to $553,716 in the 2025 roll. The Average Property Assessment in the snapshot above ($574K) 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.
Building Activity in Coventry Hills
Community Safety in Coventry Hills
In 2024, Coventry Hills recorded 301 disorder events — 17.3 events per 1,000 residents, below the city average of 53.5.
| Year | Events | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 316 | — |
| 2023 | 341 | +7.9% |
| 2024 | 305 | -10.6% |
| New methodology & data source (see note below) | ||
| 2024 | 301 | — |
| 2025† | 251 | — |
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.
Who Lives in Coventry Hills
Coventry Hills was built for families and that's still who lives here. The mix skews toward two-parent households with school-age kids, and a second wave of residents has moved in over the years as the original owners sold or downsized. Some of the first buyers from the early 1990s are still here and are now in the empty-nester or early-retirement stage, but the community's demographic centre of gravity is still working-age families using the K-12 school lineup inside the boundaries. The townhome runs along the collector streets bring in a mix of renters and first-home buyers, which adds some variety to the mostly-detached community. The Nose Creek corridor and the local school playgrounds are where a lot of the day-to-day community life happens — this is a walk-your-kid-to-school kind of community more than a downtown-commuter one. For a comparable NE 1990s peer, the Citadel profile on the NW side of the NE ring is the closest reference to look at.
Traffic cameras near Coventry Hills
Live images from City of Calgary traffic cameras within ~4 km of Coventry Hills. Each camera refreshes every 30 seconds — click any pin to see the latest view.
Living in Coventry Hills
Coventry Hills was one of the first-wave 1991-established NE suburbs and by now it’s fully built out and settled in. Homes are mostly single-family detached across the interior blocks, with townhomes along the collector streets and some small multi-family runs along the arterial streets. The four boundaries — Stoney Trail, Deerfoot Trail, Country Hills Boulevard, Harvest Hills Boulevard — are all busy roads, which is what gives the community that self-contained-pocket feel. Once you turn off the arterial into the interior, the streets get quiet quickly. The Nose Creek corridor along the east edge is a strip of natural greenspace that buffers the community from Deerfoot Trail and connects into the wider NE pathway system. There’s no LRT station inside or right next to the community, so most people drive. Downtown-directed commuters typically head south on Deerfoot Trail. The neighbours are Panorama Hills across Harvest Hills Boulevard to the west, and Country Hills and Harvest Hills across Country Hills Boulevard to the south. For a NW-quadrant peer at a comparable scale and era, the Panorama Hills profile is the closest immediate comparison.
Things to do in Coventry Hills
Most daily errands here happen along the arterial retail nodes rather than at any single interior anchor, which is typical for a 1990s NE community. Country Hills Boulevard along the south edge carries a mix of daily-service retail — grocery, coffee, restaurants, dry cleaners — and the wider Harvest Hills and Country Hills commercial nodes are a short drive away. The Nose Creek corridor along the east edge connects the community into the wider NE pathway system running north-south alongside Deerfoot Trail, and residents use it for walking, running, and biking. Schools serving the community include Coventry Hills School (K-5) and Northern Lights School (K-5) at the elementary level, Nose Creek School (grades 6-9) at junior high, and North Trail High School (grades 10-12) at senior high, all under the Calgary Board of Education. The Catholic catchment is covered by St. Clare Catholic Elementary (K-6). Having a full K-12 lineup inside the boundaries is one of the community’s biggest draws for families. If you’re comparing Coventry Hills against a NE peer on the north-west side, the Citadel profile is the closest reference, and the Panorama Hills profile covers the larger NW neighbour immediately across Harvest Hills Boulevard.
The Coventry Hills real-estate read
Assessed values in Coventry Hills sit in the mid-tier of NE 1990s communities — in line with the surrounding first-wave NE suburbs at a similar era and lot size. Building activity is more than you’d expect for an established 1990s community: 111 new-construction permits since 2024, and most of that is secondary-suite additions and small infill in the older subdivisions rather than any brand new subdivision. Newer NE communities like Cornerstone and Redstone further north are still being built out on new land, so if you’re looking for a brand new home in the NE those are where the volume of new construction is. The disorder rate of 17.3 events per 1,000 residents runs well below Calgary’s baseline of roughly 54 per 1,000, which makes Coventry Hills one of the quieter far-north NE communities on the safety data. The Property Values section above shows the current distribution across the community and how the recent assessment cycles have moved. Because all four boundaries are major arterials, day-to-day street activity stays largely residential rather than through-traffic — one of the defining features of the 1990s NE pockets. Buyers looking at Coventry Hills typically compare it against Panorama Hills across Harvest Hills Boulevard, or the newer NE builds like Cornerstone if they want brand new construction.
Common Questions About Coventry Hills
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 Coventry Hills?
Assessed values in Coventry Hills sit in the mid-tier of NE 1990s communities, in line with the surrounding first-wave NE suburbs at a similar era. Homes are mostly 1991-era single-family detached on standard suburban lots, with townhomes along the collector streets and secondary suites layered in through recent permits.
How is the Coventry Hills real estate market?
Coventry Hills has seen 111 new-construction permits since 2024. Most of that is secondary-suite additions and small infill in the older subdivisions rather than any new subdivision — the community is fully built out. Values move roughly in step with the broader NE 1990s comparison group.
Is Coventry Hills safe?
The disorder rate in Coventry Hills is 17.3 events per 1,000 residents, well below Calgary's baseline of roughly 54 per 1,000. It's one of the quieter far-north NE communities on the safety data. The Safety section on this profile shows the current Calgary Police Service counts and how Coventry Hills compares against its NE peers.
What is Coventry Hills known for?
Coventry Hills is a 1991-established NE community with all four boundaries running along major arterials — Stoney Trail, Deerfoot Trail, Country Hills Boulevard, and Harvest Hills Boulevard. That makes it a self-contained pocket where the interior streets stay quiet. The Nose Creek corridor along the east edge is the main greenspace.
How far is Coventry Hills from downtown Calgary?
Coventry Hills sits in far-north NE Calgary along Stoney Trail. There's no LRT station inside or right next to the community, so most people drive to downtown. Deerfoot Trail south is the main route into the core, and outside of rush hour the drive is around 20 to 25 minutes.
Businesses in Coventry Hills
Community Association
Northern Hills Community Association
The Northern Hills Community Association represents the residents of Coventry Hills. Community associations organize local events, advocate for neighbourhood improvements, and connect residents.
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