Sotheby's International Realty Canada closed a waterfront estate on Lake Tremblant at a price the brokerage describes as a new Québec luxury residential record. The firm declined to disclose the exact figure, but confirmed the transaction exceeded prior benchmark sales in the province's secondary-home corridor. The buyer was a private individual represented by independent counsel; the seller had owned the property for less than a decade.
The estate sits on Lake Tremblant's western shore, roughly 90 minutes north of Montréal, in a municipality where assessed values for lakefront parcels have climbed 28% since 2020 according to municipal roll data. The property includes a main residence, guest quarters, and direct water access with a private dock. Construction quality and interior finishes were cited by the listing agent as principal value drivers, alongside scarcity—fewer than 12 comparable waterfront lots remain undeveloped around the lake. The transaction closed in late March after 43 days on market, shorter than the regional luxury average of 87 days for properties above CAD 5 million.
This sale matters because it confirms that Québec's luxury residential segment is no longer a weekend-chalet market pricing on nostalgia and proximity. Since 2021, the Laurentians have absorbed CAD 310 million in luxury home purchases by buyers from Toronto, New York, and Europe, according to Sotheby's internal transaction data. The Lake Tremblant record suggests that top-tier properties in the region now compete on absolute quality and setting, not just on discount-to-Muskoka or discount-to-Hamptons logic. Allocators tracking North American second-home capital flows should note that Québec's luxury stock remains thin—total inventory above CAD 8 million across the Laurentians is under 20 units—which means incremental demand from U.S. or offshore buyers can move pricing quickly. The province's favorable treatment of non-resident property owners, relative to British Columbia and Ontario, adds structural appeal for wealth migration strategies.
Operators and allocators should watch for follow-on transactions in the CAD 7 million to CAD 12 million range over the next 90 to 120 days. If two or three additional sales close near or above this benchmark, the market will have established a new pricing band rather than a one-off outlier. Also worth monitoring: whether Sotheby's or Engel & Völkers list additional Tremblant parcels in Q2, and whether developers begin acquiring adjacent land for spec-build luxury inventory. Municipal permitting timelines in Mont-Tremblant average 9 to 14 months, so any new supply would appear in 2026 at the earliest.
The undisclosed sale price will surface in public land-registry filings within 60 days, giving allocators a clean datapoint for Québec luxury residential comps and a read on whether this market is pricing ahead of fundamentals or simply catching up.