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If you've been searching for homes in Regina's east end, there's a good chance you've come across both "Glencairn" and "Glencairn Village" and wondered whether they're the same place or two completely different neighbourhoods. You're not the only one. I get this question a lot, and honestly, the way real estate listings and city maps handle these names doesn't make it any clearer. Some sites treat them as one neighbourhood. Others split them apart. And when you're trying to figure out where you actually want to live, that kind of confusion isn't helpful. So let me walk you through what's really going on here, because once you understand the layout, it all makes a lot more sense.

The Short Answer

Glencairn and Glencairn Village are technically part of the same broader neighbourhood area in east Regina. The city doesn't draw a hard boundary line between them. But if you talk to people who actually live there, they'll tell you there's a distinction. The southern section is what most people call Glencairn, and the northern section — closer to Dewdney Avenue — is what gets referred to as Glencairn Village. They share schools, parks, and transit routes, but the housing stock and the feel of each section have their own personality.Glencairn (The Southern Section)

Glencairn (The Southern Section)

Glencairn proper sits in the southern half of the area, stretching closer to Victoria Avenue. Most of the homes here were built between the mid-1960s and the early 1980s, so you're looking at a neighbourhood that's had decades to settle in. The streets are lined with mature trees, the lots are a decent size, and the housing is mostly bungalows, bi-levels, and split-levels — the kind of solid, practical builds that Regina did really well during that era.

Price-wise, Glencairn tends to sit around $300,750 on average, working out to roughly $248 per square foot. That's below Regina's single-family average, which hovers in the $350K to $375K range depending on the quarter. For a lot of buyers, especially families looking to get into a home without stretching themselves thin, that math works.

The neighbourhood has a good amount going on day to day. Glencairn Shopping Centre on Dewdney handles most of the essentials. There are multiple parks scattered through the area — Mahon Park, Milford Park, Rootman Park, and Oxford Park all give families and dog walkers plenty of green space. The Glencairn Neighbourhood Recreation Centre has a Jumpstart Playground that's popular with younger kids. And F.W. Johnson Collegiate, a public high school, sits right inside the neighbourhood, which is a big deal if you've got teenagers and don't want them busing across the city.

One thing I'll mention because I think it matters: Glencairn has a genuinely multicultural community. There are a lot of South Asian and Filipino families in the area, and that diversity shows up in the local businesses, the food options nearby, and the overall feel of the neighbourhood. It's a welcoming place.

Glencairn Village (The Northern Section)

Glencairn Village is the portion that sits closer to Dewdney Avenue, on the northern side of the area. The development here is slightly newer in spots — you'll still find the same bungalows and bi-levels that define Glencairn overall, but there are some newer builds mixed into the housing stock that give parts of the Village a bit of a different look.

St. Theresa School is one of the anchors here. It's a Catholic elementary school serving Pre-K through Grade 8, with around 395 students. If Catholic education is something your family values, having that right in the neighbourhood is convenient.

The Victoria East retail district is close by, so you've got easy access to shopping, restaurants, and services without needing to drive across the city. And for recreation, Glencairn Village has the Glencairn Bolodrome and Clarence Mahon Arena — both of which see steady use through the year, whether it's bocce in the summer or hockey and skating in the winter.

The overall vibe is quiet and residential. It's not flashy, and that's kind of the point. People who live here tend to stay for a long time, which tells you something about how the neighbourhood holds up.What They Have in Common

What They Have in Common

Whether you're looking at the Glencairn side or the Glencairn Village side, there are a few things that carry across the whole area.

Both sections are affordable. We're talking below Regina's single-family average, which makes them worth a serious look if you're budget-conscious but still want an established neighbourhood with real infrastructure — not a brand-new subdivision where you're waiting three years for a grocery store.

The school catchments overlap, so families in either section are served by the same schools. Transit-wise, Routes 21 and 7 run through the area, and you're looking at a 15 to 20 minute car commute to downtown Regina. It's not walkable to the core, but it's not a long haul either.

I want to be straightforward about one thing, because I think it's important to give people all the information rather than just the pretty parts. The crime rate in Glencairn sits slightly above the city average — around 5,459 incidents per 100,000 residents compared to Regina's overall rate of about 5,257. Most of that is property crime, not violent crime. It's not something that should scare you off, but it's something you should know about. I'd rather you hear it from me than discover it later and feel like someone hid it from you.

Both sections also have that mature, established feel — big trees, older infrastructure that's been maintained, and neighbours who know each other. If you're comparing this to the newer developments on the south end of the city, the trade-off is that you get character and affordability here, but the homes are older and may need some updating. That's a trade-off worth thinking about honestly.

Which One's Right for You?

Here's the truth: the differences between Glencairn and Glencairn Village are real but they're subtle. If you need to be close to F.W. Johnson Collegiate or you want to be nearer to Victoria Avenue, the southern Glencairn section probably makes more sense. If Catholic schooling at St. Theresa matters to your family, or you'd rather be closer to the Dewdney corridor, Glencairn Village is worth focusing on.

Either way, you're in the same part of the city, with the same price range and the same overall lifestyle. The best move is to browse Glencairn homes for sale and see what's actually available right now — sometimes the right house picks the section for you.

And if you're not sold on Glencairn specifically but you like this part of the city, it's worth looking at nearby neighbourhoods like Parkridge or Windsor Park, or casting a wider net across East Regina homes for sale. I'm happy to walk you through what's out there. I'll give you all the options, and we'll figure out what actually fits — no rush, no pressure. I truly listen to what matters to you, and we go from there.

If you want to start looking at what's on the market, Glencairn listings are a good place to begin.

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