There are around 140 new and newly built homes on the market across Brantford and Brant County right now — everything from brand-new builder inventory to homes finished in the last five years. Entry-level units start under $300,000 and the typical ask sits in the mid $700,000s. Most of the building is happening in two places: Paris and West Brant, with smaller pockets in the Oakhill area and out in the county. Every live listing is on the map below.
New isn't automatically better — it's a trade. You get a warranty, modern systems, and nothing to renovate; you give up mature trees, settled streets, and often a longer closing. If you're weighing it, the new vs. resale math is worth ten minutes before you fall for a model home. Curious about the growth areas themselves? Start with West Brant and Paris.
Every new and recently built home on the market, straight from the MLS®. Pan, zoom, and click any pin for the details.
As of mid-2026 there are roughly 140 new and newly built homes listed across Brantford and Brant County. The typical asking price is in the mid $700,000s. Entry-level new condos and townhomes start under $300,000, new freehold townhomes mostly sit in the $500,000s to $600,000s, and new detached homes generally run from the high $600,000s past $1,000,000 depending on size and lot.
The two big growth areas are Paris — which currently has the most new-build listings in the county — and West Brant, Brantford's main expansion front around Shellard Lane. There are smaller clusters in the Oakhill area in Brantford's southwest and scattered infill and estate builds in the county around Burford, Scotland, and St. George. About half of the current new listings are detached homes and roughly a third are townhomes.
It depends on what you're paying for. New gets you a Tarion warranty, modern systems and code, and no renovation list — but you typically pay a premium per square foot, wait longer to close, and start with a bare yard on an unfinished street. Resale gets you mature neighbourhoods and negotiating room, but you inherit the home's age. Run the real math on both — including upgrades, fencing, appliances, and landscaping that new builds often don't include — before deciding.
Yes. New homes built by a registered builder in Ontario are covered by the Tarion warranty program: one year on workmanship and materials, two years on major systems like plumbing, electrical, and the building envelope, and seven years on major structural defects. A nearly-new resale (under seven years old) usually still carries the remaining balance of that warranty, which transfers to you as the new owner.
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