Calgary Neighbourhood Profile

Redstone

NE Calgary 9,050 residents 2,910 properties
Average Property Assessment
$635K
↓ Below city avg
YoY Value Change
+10.9%
↓ Below city avg
Properties
2,910
Permits Since 2024
377

Redstone Calgary is one of the newer NE communities on the city’s outer ring, bounded by Métis Trail NE to the west, Stoney Trail to the north, 60 Street NE to the east, and 128 Avenue NE at the Skyview Ranch line to the south. Most of the residential build here is post-2010 detached and attached, and the average assessed value sits at $635K — up 10.9% year-over-year, a touch behind the citywide 15.2% run-up. What sets Redstone apart on the map is how quiet the safety data reads: 17.1 disorder events per 1,000 residents against a citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000, which puts Redstone among Calgary’s quieter communities regardless of era or quadrant. Redstone is part of Calgary’s 219 community profiles.

Key Insights

What the data says

Property Values

Average assessed value of $635K — below the city average of $732K.

Value Trend

Property values grew 10.9% year-over-year, trailing the city average.

Lower Disorder Rate

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

Young & Urban

40.2% of residents are aged 20-39, giving Redstone a young, vibrant character.

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Property Data

Property Values in Redstone

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
$518,295
2024
$595,281
2025
$660,152
Year Year-End Assessment Roll Properties YoY Change
2023 $518,295 2,718
2024 $595,281 2,713 +14.9%
2025 $660,152 2,718 +10.9%
vs Calgary Average
Redstone $635K
City Average $732K
-13.3% below city average

Why two numbers?

Assessment-roll averages in Redstone have climbed 27.4% over the last 3 years, from $518,295 in the 2023 roll to $660,152 in the 2025 roll. The Average Property Assessment in the snapshot above ($635K) 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 Redstone

132
New Construction
$86.9M invested
0
Renovations
$0 invested
0
Demolitions
$0 value
377
Total Permits
$100.3M total investment
Safety

Community Safety in Redstone

In 2024, Redstone recorded 155 disorder events — 17.1 events per 1,000 residents, below the city average of 53.5.

Year Events Change
2022 136
2023 149 +9.6%
2024 144 -3.4%
New methodology & data source (see note below)
2024 155
2025 140

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
Redstone
17.1
City Average
53.5
Demographics

Who Lives in Redstone

29.9%
Ages 0–19
2,710 residents
40.2%
Ages 20–39
3,635 residents
24.4%
Ages 40–64
2,205 residents
5.5%
Ages 65+
500 residents

Redstone holds 9,050 residents across 2,910 properties, and the age split leans young. About 2,710 kids and teens are under 19, and the 20-to-39 band is the biggest group in the community at roughly 3,635 — the working-age share you'd expect in a community whose houses mostly went up after 2010. The 40-to-64 group runs about 2,205, and residents 65 or older sit near 500 — under 6% seniors, one of the lowest senior shares among Calgary's NE communities. That skew reads on the ground as young families with school-age children on the same block as couples in their late 20s and 30s with new babies or no kids yet. Redstone's mix of ages is closer to Calgary's outer-ring newer NE communities than to the older Blue Line neighbourhoods a few kilometres south. For a comparable-value NE community with a similar age curve, the Carrington profile is the closest match.

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Traffic cameras near Redstone

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

Living in Redstone

Redstone reads as outer-ring NE Calgary at street level. The community sits north of Stoney Trail and west of 60 Street NE, near the ring-road interchange that funnels most residents onto Deerfoot Trail for the commute south into the city. Homes are almost entirely 2010s detached houses, attached townhomes, and some newer semi-detached inserts on standard NE-suburb lot sizes. Streetscapes are still filling in — young trees along the collector streets, garages fronting the alleys or the roads depending on the block, and playgrounds set inside the interior loops rather than on the perimeter. There’s no CTrain inside Redstone; Métis Trail carries the closest transit spine north and south, and residents commuting downtown either drive Deerfoot or connect by bus to the Blue Line’s Whitehorn end at 32 Avenue NE. Calgary International Airport sits a short drive south along Métis Trail, and planes coming in over the community’s southwest edge are audible from the yards there — inland blocks hear less of it. Winter driving out to Stoney Trail is faster than a comparable inner-city commute because the ring road takes traffic out to Deerfoot without slogging through signalized arterials. Snow clearance runs quickly here — the streets are wide, the alley network gives the plow trucks room to work, and there’s no mature-tree canopy narrowing the driving lane after a storm. For a similar newer NE build a few blocks southwest, the Cityscape profile is the closest reference.

Things to do in Redstone

Redstone doesn’t have a well-known landmark yet — the community launched in the early 2010s and its amenities are still building out. Day-to-day retail runs along Métis Trail and Country Hills Boulevard: gas stations, quick-service restaurants, and the standard NE strip-plaza mix that lines Calgary’s outer-ring arterials. For a full grocery run most residents drive south to the Country Hills or Coventry Hills commercial corridor, or east toward the SaddleTowne and Falconridge shopping clusters. Interior parks in Redstone are neighbourhood tot lots and small green pockets between the residential loops rather than a large City-owned open space; Nose Hill Park sits a 15-minute drive west across Deerfoot Trail for the closest sizeable off-leash trail network, and the Bow River pathway is a comparable drive south. Redstone kids who go to Catholic or CBE schools attend a mix of Redstone-area and adjacent-community schools, since Redstone’s own catchments are still filling in as the neighbourhood grows. Any specific business inside Redstone itself is easiest to find through the Redstone business directory, which pulls current City of Calgary business-licence records for the community. For a similar-value NE community with a slightly different retail scene, the Carrington profile is the closest match a few kilometres west.

The Redstone real-estate read

Redstone’s average assessed value sits at $635K, and the 10.9% year-over-year run-up is a touch behind the citywide 15.2% — the community’s price gains are tracking the broader Calgary market rather than pulling away or lagging by a wide margin. Building activity is the story here: 377 permits filed since 2024, with a heavy new-construction share as the community continues to fill in. That’s one of the more active permit totals in Calgary’s NE quadrant, and it means the housing will keep shifting for at least the next few years — new streets, new lot sizes, and new floor plans layering onto the earlier post-2010 phases. With 9,050 residents across 2,910 properties, that’s just over three people per household on average — a family number that fits the young-age skew and matches the visual character of the sidewalks at street level. The property values panel above breaks down the current distribution across the community. For a similar-value NE community, the Carrington profile is the closest reference; for an older NE community at a comparable value point, the Mayland Heights profile reads as the closer inner-NE contrast.

FAQ

Common Questions About Redstone

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 Redstone?

The average assessed value in Redstone Calgary is $635K, a touch below the citywide average of $732K. Most of the housing is post-2010 detached and attached homes on standard NE-suburb lots, and the community is still adding new-construction inventory year over year.

How is the Redstone real estate market?

Redstone's assessed values rose 10.9% year-over-year, slightly behind the citywide 15.2% gain. 377 permits filed since 2024, heavily weighted to new construction, mean the community is still actively building out rather than settling into a steady resale market.

Is Redstone a good place to live?

Redstone works well for buyers who want a newer home on an outer-ring NE lot at a price a bit below the Calgary average. The community skews younger than most, disorder numbers are among the quietest in Calgary at 17.1 events per 1,000 residents, and the trade-off is a longer drive into the core.

Is Redstone safe?

Redstone records 17.1 disorder events per 1,000 residents against a citywide baseline of 54 per 1,000 — well below the average and one of the quieter communities in Calgary's NE. The Safety section above shows current Calgary Police Service counts and how Redstone compares with its NE neighbours.

What is Redstone known for?

Redstone is one of Calgary's newer NE communities, launched in the early 2010s and still building out along the ring-road frontage north of Stoney Trail. It's known day-to-day for its outer-NE quiet, its post-2010 detached and attached housing, and its proximity to Calgary International Airport a short drive south along Métis Trail.

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