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These two neighbourhoods come up in the same conversation more than almost any other pair in east Regina, and there's a good reason for it. They share a border. They share Campbell Collegiate for high school. They're both residential, family-oriented, and far enough from major roads that your kids can play out front without you watching every car. But the price tags are different enough that buyers wonder what they're actually getting for the extra money in one versus the other — and whether they even need to spend it.

I've walked buyers through this comparison dozens of times, and I'll tell you what I always tell them: neither one is better. They're different. And the right choice depends entirely on what matters most to your family and where your budget sits. So let me walk you through it honestly, because that's what I'd want someone to do for me.

Price and What You Get

This is where the conversation usually starts, and it should. The numbers tell a clear story.

Parkridge homes typically sell between $280,000 and $330,000. The median new listing price sits around $329,000 as of early 2026. You're looking at bungalows, bi-levels, split-levels, and some two-storeys built between the 1980s and early 2000s, with townhomes added as recently as 2017. Double garages are standard. Lots are generous. Backyards have 40-plus years of mature trees and landscaping. At the top of the range, around $329,000, you can find a five-bedroom, three-bathroom home with a finished basement and a double attached garage. That's a lot of house for the money.

Wascana View starts where Parkridge's ceiling ends. The median listing price is $759,000, with active listings running from about $619,000 up past $1.3 million. These are custom-built homes on large lots, most built after 2000. Walkout basements, vaulted ceilings, triple garages, and professionally landscaped yards are common. The lots back onto environmental reserves and greenspace fingers that weave through the neighbourhood.

The gap between them — roughly $300,000 to $400,000 for a comparable-sized home — isn't because Parkridge cuts corners. It's because Wascana View comes with a premium location on the edge of McKell Wascana Conservation Park, larger lots, newer construction, and the kind of custom finishes that add up. If you're asking whether the extra money is worth it, that depends on whether green space access and newer builds are at the top of your list, or whether you'd rather keep that $300,000 in your pocket and put it toward renovations, savings, or just a more comfortable mortgage payment.

Neighbourhood Character

Parkridge feels like a neighbourhood that's had time to exhale. It was approved in 1983, and most of the homes went up through the '80s, '90s, and early 2000s. The trees are massive. The streets are quiet. The neighbours know each other by name, not just by face. Kids ride bikes out front. People wave from their driveways. There's a settled, lived-in quality here that you can't manufacture in a new subdivision no matter how many community events the developer organizes. Turnover is low because people don't leave — they plant roots and stay.

Wascana View has a different kind of energy. It's quieter, more private, and more nature-oriented. The homes are spaced further apart. The streets curve along the Wascana Creek valley, and the lots were deliberately positioned so many back onto green corridors. It feels less like a neighbourhood block and more like living on the edge of a conservation area — because you literally are. The community is owner-occupied, with an active Neighbourhood Watch, and it ranks as one of the top three safest neighbourhoods in Regina alongside The Creeks and Harbour Landing.

Here's the honest trade-off: Parkridge gives you community closeness. Wascana View gives you space and nature. Both are quiet. Both are safe. But they feel different when you're standing in the middle of them, and you'll know within five minutes of driving through which one fits how you want to live.

Schools and Family Life

Both neighbourhoods feed into Campbell Collegiate for high school, so that part's a wash. The difference is at the elementary level.

In Parkridge, most kids walk to Henry Braun School (K-8) without crossing a single major road. That's the kind of thing you don't fully appreciate until you've spent two years doing the school drop-off loop somewhere else. The street layout was designed with families in mind — the roads are quiet enough that kids build independence early, walking or biking to school on their own.

In Wascana View, the neighbourhood school is Ecole W.S. Hawrylak, which offers French Immersion programming. If bilingual education matters to your family, that's a significant draw — not every part of the city has easy access to immersion at the elementary level. On the Catholic side, Ecole St. Elizabeth School covers elementary, and Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School handles grades 9 through 12.

If walkability to school is your priority, Parkridge has the edge. If you want French Immersion or Catholic school options without driving across the city, Wascana View gives you more choices.

Parks and Outdoor Life

This is Wascana View's strongest card, and it's not close. The neighbourhood borders McKell Wascana Conservation Park — 171 acres of native prairie habitat with roughly 4 kilometres of trails along Wascana Creek. The East Side Paths corridor runs 6.5 kilometres of paved trail, and the Pilot Butte Creek Pathway adds another 7.7 kilometres. Birdwatching, trail running, cross-country skiing — it's all accessible from your back door. The five-finger greenspace design means walking paths connect through the community, so kids can walk to school through parkland without touching a main road.

Parkridge has a different approach. Parkridge Park anchors the neighbourhood, and the spray pad is the summer gathering spot. On a hot afternoon, it's full of kids and parents, and nobody organized it — people just show up. There are basketball courts and walking paths, and the mature tree canopy throughout the neighbourhood gives the whole area a shaded, comfortable feel in summer that newer subdivisions can't touch.

If you want trail networks and conservation-grade green space, Wascana View is in a league of its own. If a community park with a spray pad, mature trees, and usable backyards is enough, Parkridge delivers without the premium.

Shopping and Daily Errands

Neither neighbourhood has walkable retail inside it — no corner store, no coffee shop, no groceries you can get to on foot. You're driving for everything in both cases. The difference is how far.

Parkridge wins here. You're a five-minute drive to Costco, Superstore, and Walmart along the east Regina shopping corridor. It's one of the most convenient locations in the city for errands.

Wascana View is a 10- to 15-minute drive to the Victoria Avenue corridor for the same shopping. Not far by any means, but twice the distance Parkridge offers. If quick errand runs matter to your daily routine, that adds up over the years.

The Bottom Line

Choose Parkridge if you want the most house for your dollar, you value a tight-knit community where neighbours actually know each other, you want your kids walking to school without crossing a major road, and you'd rather put $300,000 toward your family's future than into a lot premium.

Choose Wascana View if you can comfortably afford $600,000-plus, you value nature access and trail networks over neighbourhood walkability, French Immersion schooling is a priority, and you want newer custom construction on a large lot backing onto green space.

Both are good answers. The question is which one is the right answer for you.

If you're exploring both areas, browse Wascana View listings and Parkridge listings to see what's currently available. For a wider look at this part of the city, East Regina homes for sale covers every neighbourhood in the area. I'm happy to walk you through the options — I'll truly listen to what matters to your family and help you figure out the right fit.

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Parks and Green Spaces

Wascana View's signature feature is its five-finger greenspace design. Instead of cramming homes edge-to-edge and sticking a single park in the middle, the neighbourhood was built with five corridors of green space that reach between the houses and connect to the broader Wascana Creek valley. You can walk from almost anywhere in the neighbourhood to trails and open space without touching a main road. Kids walk to Jack MacKenzie School through parkland. Families loop evening walks through the fingers without needing to plan a route — you just step outside and go.

Wascana View Park itself sits within the neighbourhood, offering walking paths, benches, and a peaceful setting along the water. It's the kind of park where you'll see people sitting quietly with a book, not organized soccer tournaments. For something bigger, McKell Wascana Conservation Park is about 10 minutes away — 171 acres of native prairie and wetland with roughly 4 kilometres of groomed trails, a floating dock, and interpretive stations. It's genuinely one of the best outdoor spaces in the city. Birdwatching in spring, trail running in summer, cross-country skiing in winter. And of course, Wascana Centre's full 930-hectare urban park system — the lake, the legislative grounds, the cycling paths — is right there. Most people in Regina drive to Wascana Centre. People in Wascana View walk.

Shopping and Errands

There's nothing commercial inside the neighbourhood itself, so you're driving for every errand. That's the trade-off for the green space and quiet. The closest major stop is Victoria Square, about a 5-to-7-minute drive along Victoria Avenue East. You'll find a Safeway for groceries, Sport Chek, Dollarama, GoodLife Fitness, and a handful of other shops and services. A Walmart Supercentre is just down the road from there.

For bigger shopping — Costco, Landmark Cinemas, specialty retail — you're heading a bit further east or south, but nothing in Regina is really far. Most errands land in the 5-to-15-minute range by car. It's manageable, but you won't be walking to pick up milk. If walkable daily shopping matters to you, Greens on Gardiner with its Acre 21 hub is a better fit for that lifestyle.

Restaurants and Coffee

I'll be straightforward — Wascana View isn't a dining destination, and there's nothing within walking distance of the neighbourhood. Your closest options are clustered along Victoria Avenue East, about a 5-to-10-minute drive. You'll find Earls Kitchen + Bar for a nicer sit-down meal, Cravings for all-day breakfast and comfort food, Rickys for casual family dining, and Jersey Mike's or Wendy's for quick stops. Lebowski's Kitchen + Lounge at Victoria Square is a solid casual spot too.

For coffee, you're driving to a Tim Hortons or Starbucks on the commercial strip — there's no neighbourhood cafe to stroll to. It's the reality of living in a nature-focused enclave rather than a mixed-use community. Most residents here cook at home more often and treat restaurants as a short drive rather than a walkable habit.

Recreation and Fitness

Sandra Schmirler Leisure Centre is nearby and covers the basics — swimming pools with slides, a tot pool for younger kids, a whirlpool, sauna, and fitness facilities. GoodLife Fitness at Victoria Square is another option if you prefer a gym membership. But honestly, a lot of people in Wascana View use the trail system as their primary fitness. Between the creek paths, the five-finger greenways, and the broader Wascana Centre network, you've got kilometres of running, walking, and cycling routes right outside your door.

Commute and Getting Around

From Wascana View, you're looking at about 10 to 15 minutes to downtown Regina depending on traffic. Access to Victoria Avenue and the Arcola corridor keeps things straightforward. If you work in southeast Regina's commercial areas, it could be as short as 5 minutes. Transit exists but it's not practical for most — this is a car neighbourhood, and the triple garages on most homes confirm it. The Regina Bypass is accessible for trips south or east of the city without fighting through downtown.

The Honest Downsides of Living Here

You're car-dependent for everything. There's no corner store, no coffee shop, no walkable commercial within the neighbourhood. Every grocery run, every takeout order, every errand requires getting in the car. If you've lived somewhere walkable and loved it, this will feel like a step backward.

The pricing is a real barrier. Homes here typically range from $600,000 to well over $1 million. It's Regina's premium market, and there's no entry-level option. Property taxes scale accordingly — on a million-dollar home, you're paying significantly more annually than the city average. If your budget is tighter, nearby The Creeks offers excellent green space at a more accessible price point.

The homes are 20 to 30 years old. Construction quality is strong — these were custom builds — but roofs, furnaces, windows, and mechanical systems are hitting their replacement timelines. Budget for inspections and potential upgrades. This isn't a neighbourhood where you buy and forget about maintenance for 10 years.

Finally, it's very quiet. Some people love that; others find it isolating, especially if you're used to the energy of a more mixed neighbourhood. There's no community gathering spot, no neighbourhood pub, no walkable social anchor. Life here centres around your home, your yard, and the trails.

If you'd like to see what's currently on the market, browse Wascana View listings or give me a call at 306-581-1212. No rush — I'm happy to answer questions whenever you're ready.

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Approved in 1986 and built through the 1990s and 2000s, the homes here are custom-built estate properties on generous lots with 25-plus years of mature landscaping. It's premium-priced, and I'll be upfront about that. But when you understand what you're getting — the land, the parkland access, the kind of setting that can't be replicated anywhere else in the city — it earns the price tag. You can browse current Wascana View listings here to see what's available.

Who Lives in Wascana View?

The people who live here chose this neighbourhood deliberately. They weren't just house shopping — they were looking for a specific kind of life.

You'll find established professionals, executives, and families who've been here since their kids were small. Turnover is low. The community is owner-occupied, with an active Neighbourhood Watch program and the kind of quiet streets where you recognize your neighbours. People take care of their properties and they take care of the shared green spaces that make this neighbourhood what it is.

It's not flashy. You won't find spec builds or oversized show homes. What you'll find is quality construction, thoughtful landscaping, and people who value nature, privacy, and space over anything else.

What You'll Pay

This is Regina's premium market, and the pricing reflects it. Here's what the range looks like:

Entry level ($600K-$750K): Smaller lots or homes that need some cosmetic updating. Still solidly built — you're just not getting the best greenspace backing at this price point.

Mid-range ($750K-$1M): Where most activity happens. Three- or four-bedroom homes on good-sized lots with mature landscaping and quality finishes. Double or triple garages are standard. Walkout basements are common.

Premium ($1M-$1.7M): The largest lots, direct parkland backing, and homes maintained to a very high standard. Recent sales at $1.49M and $1.69M show where the ceiling sits.

The premium here isn't just about the house — it's about the lot. Two homes with identical square footage can be $200K apart depending on what's behind them. Greenspace backing, walkout basements with valley views, and mature trees all drive the price up.

See what's currently available in Wascana View

Schools and Families

If you've got kids, Wascana View gives you strong options without driving across the city.

Jack MacKenzie School (K-8, public) is the neighbourhood school and one of the most well-regarded in Regina. It offers French Immersion programming — not every part of the city has easy access to immersion at the elementary level. It's within walking or biking distance for most homes.

Campbell Collegiate is the public high school. It's one of the largest in the city with strong academics and athletics — not right in the neighbourhood, but a 10- to 15-minute drive.

On the Catholic side, Ecole St. Elizabeth School covers elementary, and Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School handles grades 9 through 12. LeBoldus is well-known for both academics and sports.

Between public, French Immersion, and Catholic options, you've got real choices without sending your kids across the city.

Parks, Trails, and Things to Do

This is where Wascana View separates itself from every other neighbourhood in the city.

Wascana Centre — all 930 hectares of it — is right there. Walking paths, cycling routes, the lake, and maintained urban parkland accessible from your back door. Most Regina residents drive to Wascana Centre. People in Wascana View walk.

McKell Wascana Conservation Park is 171 acres of native prairie habitat with roughly 4 kilometres of trails along Wascana Creek. Benches, interpretive stations, and stretches of undeveloped grassland that feel like you're nowhere near a city. Birdwatching, trail running, cross-country skiing in winter — it's a genuine conservation area, not a manicured city park.

The five-finger greenspace design means walking paths connect through the community. Kids can walk to school through parkland. You can loop a 30-minute walk without touching a main road.

Sandra Schmirler Leisure Centre is nearby for swimming, fitness, and organized sports.

The Honest Downsides

I'd rather you hear this from me than discover it after you've bought. Wascana View is an exceptional neighbourhood, but it's not for everyone.

The pricing is premium — $600K to $1.7M. There's no getting around it. If your budget is under $600K, Wascana View isn't realistic, and I'd rather point you somewhere that works than waste your time. Nearby Varsity Park offers a more accessible price point with a similar southeast location.

It's car-dependent. There's no commercial within the neighbourhood — no corner store, no coffee shop, no walkable groceries. You'll drive 5 to 10 minutes for errands. Triple garages are common here for a reason. If walkable amenities matter to you, this isn't the right fit.

The homes are 20 to 30 years old. The construction quality is excellent — these were custom builds. But roofs, furnaces, and windows all have lifespans, and some are coming due. Factor that into your budget and get a thorough inspection.

There's a controversial road proposal. There's been ongoing discussion about a potential road development through McKell Wascana Conservation Park. Residents feel strongly about protecting that green space — it's one of the core reasons people move here. It's worth knowing about and following if you're considering buying.

Property taxes scale with home value. On a $1M-plus home in Regina, you're looking at significant annual property taxes. Make sure you've run those numbers before falling in love with a listing.

Is Wascana View Right for You?

If you'd rather look out your window at native prairie than at another roofline, and you've got the budget, Wascana View is hard to beat. It was built around the land, not the other way around — and 25 years later, that decision has paid off in ways newer developments can't replicate.

It's not the right fit if you want walkable retail, newer construction, or a lower price point. For similar southeast quality, The Creeks offers comparable prestige with its own greenspace character. And if you're exploring the broader area, East Regina has neighbourhoods at every price point worth considering.

The best thing you can do is drive through. Take the loop along Wascana View Drive, look at how the homes sit against the valley, and see if it clicks. When you're ready, check what's currently available in Wascana View — I'm happy to walk you through the options.

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What Homes Cost Right Now

As of early 2026, there are six active listings in Wascana View, with a median price of $869,000 among those currently available. The median for new listings coming onto the market is slightly lower at $759,000, which tells me that the higher-end homes tend to sit a bit longer—not because they're overpriced, but because there's just a smaller pool of buyers at that level. The range you'll see here typically starts around $500,000 and can climb well past $1 million depending on square footage, lot size, and finishes.

What you're paying for in Wascana View isn't just the house—it's the location, the mature landscaping, the access to green space, and the proximity to Wascana Country Club and the McKell Wascana Conservation Park. These aren't cookie-cutter builds. You'll find custom features, vaulted ceilings, main-floor master suites, and professionally finished basements. Most homes were built after 2000, so you're not dealing with major renovations or outdated systems. That peace of mind is built into the price.

If you're comparing Wascana View to other neighbourhoods in East Regina, you'll notice prices here are significantly higher than nearby areas like Woodland Grove or Windsor Park, but they're in line with other luxury pockets like The Creeks.

How Prices Have Changed

Regina's overall market has seen moderate growth over the past couple of years, with the citywide average home price up about 6% from 2024 to 2026, now sitting at $346,000. The benchmark price across the city is $335,100, up 4.4% year-over-year. Royal LePage is forecasting another 4% aggregate growth in 2026, and I'd say Wascana View is likely to track along those same lines or slightly outpace them.

Luxury neighbourhoods like this one don't tend to spike dramatically, but they also don't dip much during slower periods. What I've seen over the years is that Wascana View holds its value really well. Even when the broader market softens, this area stays resilient because the buyer pool is different. People buying here aren't stretching to qualify—they're choosing the neighbourhood intentionally, often downsizing from acreages or upgrading from other parts of the city.

There's also very little turnover. About 95% of homes here are owner-occupied, and the average household income is around $194,842. That means most people aren't moving because they have to—they're moving because their needs have changed. So when a home does come up, it tends to be well-maintained and thoughtfully updated.

How Fast Homes Sell Here

Right now, homes in Wascana View are spending a median of 20 days on the market. That's faster than the citywide average of 29 to 32 days, which tells you there's real demand. When a home is priced well and shows nicely, it doesn't sit around. I've seen properties here receive multiple offers within the first week, especially if they're under the $800,000 mark.

The market across Regina is technically a seller's market, with just 2.88 months of supply. That means there aren't a lot of homes available relative to the number of buyers looking. In Wascana View specifically, inventory is even tighter. With only six active listings, buyers don't have the luxury of waiting around. If something fits their criteria, they need to move quickly.

That said, homes priced above $1 million do take a bit longer to sell—not because they're not worth it, but because there are fewer buyers at that level. If you're selling a higher-end home here, patience and the right pricing strategy are key. If you're buying, you've got a bit more time to consider your options at the top end of the market.

What You Get at Different Price Points

Here's what you can generally expect at different price levels in properties throughout Wascana View:

Around $600,000 to $750,000, you're typically looking at a 2,000 to 2,500 square foot home with three or four bedrooms, a double or triple attached garage, and a developed basement. These homes might be on slightly smaller lots or have fewer custom upgrades, but they're still well-built and well-located. You'll often find main-floor laundry, open-concept kitchens, and at least one gas fireplace.

From $750,000 to $1 million, you're getting more space—often 2,800 to 3,500 square feet—with larger lots, higher-end finishes, and more custom features. Think granite or quartz countertops, hardwood floors, coffered ceilings, spa-like bathrooms, and professionally finished basements with wet bars or home theatres. Many of these homes back onto green space or have walkout basements.

Above $1 million, you're looking at the top tier: homes over 3,500 square feet, often with four or five bedrooms, multiple bathrooms, high ceilings, custom millwork, luxury appliances, and premium landscaping. These are the properties that might have in-ground irrigation, outdoor kitchens, or three-car garages. They're rare, and when they come up, they're worth a close look.

Is It a Buyer's or Seller's Market?

Right now, Regina as a whole is in a seller's market, and Wascana View is no exception. With only 2.88 months of supply citywide and even tighter inventory in this neighbourhood, sellers have a bit of an edge. Homes are selling faster than the city average, and well-priced listings are getting attention quickly.

If you're selling here, you're in a strong position—but that doesn't mean you can list at any price and expect a quick sale. Buyers at this level are sophisticated. They're comparing finishes, lot locations, and property conditions carefully. Pricing accurately from the start is still the best strategy.

If you're buying, don't let the seller's market intimidate you. Yes, you might face competition on the best listings, but you're also buying into a neighbourhood with long-term value. The key is to be ready to move when the right home comes up, and to work with someone who knows the area well enough to help you assess value quickly.

What to Know Before You Buy or Sell Here

If you're thinking about buying in Wascana View, make sure you're comfortable with the price range and the property taxes that come with it. Luxury neighbourhoods mean higher assessments, and that's something to factor into your budget. Also, take time to explore the different pockets of the neighbourhood—some homes back onto the green space "fingers" that weave through the area, while others are closer to Wascana Creek or the conservation park.

If you're selling, staging and presentation matter. Buyers at this level expect homes to show well, so it's worth investing in professional photos, a deep clean, and maybe some minor updates if needed.

Whether you're looking at homes in nearby areas like The Creeks or Woodland Grove, or you're specifically drawn to Wascana View, I'm here to help you make sense of the market and find the right fit. Reach out anytime—I'm happy to walk you through what's available and what makes sense for your situation.

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Elementary Schools

Jack MacKenzie School is the workhorse elementary for Wascana View, serving kindergarten through grade 8. It's right in the catchment area, so odds are good your address'll fall under this school's boundaries. What makes it stand out? They've built real programs here, not just the basics. French Immersion is strong if that's your family's direction. Band starts in the upper grades, and there's a Student Leadership program that gives older kids actual responsibility—not busy work. Teachers tend to stay, which matters. The school's got good community support, active parent volunteer culture, and they actually use their facilities for after-school programs. Fair warning: like most southeast Regina schools, it's newer and still filling up, but that also means the building itself is in great shape and not falling apart.

École Wascana Plains School is your other elementary option, and it's the full French Immersion choice in the area. Located at 5125 East Green Brooks Way, it's still in southeast Regina and relatively close if immersion's your priority. It's under Regina Public Schools but operates entirely in French from K through 8, so if you're serious about raising bilingual kids, this is where to start. Commute'll be a bit longer than Jack MacKenzie, but plenty of Wascana View families make it work.

Beyond those two, you've got Catholic options nearby if your family's faith-based schooling is important. St. Gabriel School (K-8) serves the broader southeast area, and Dr. Martin LeBoldus High School (9-12) is the Catholic secondary option. Neither's directly in Wascana View, but they're accessible from here.

High Schools

This is where you'll need to check your exact address, because Regina Public Schools assigns high schools by catchment area, not by neighbourhood choice. Most of Wascana View feeds into one of the southeast-area high schools, but I'll be honest—you've got to verify with Regina Public Schools directly using their school finder tool. Plug in your address and you'll get your assigned school. What you're looking for: Does the school have the programs your teen wants? (Music, athletics, vocational options, IB, AP?) What's the commute? How's the culture? You can drive by, check out their athletics schedule, and see if there's a vibe match. Some families choose to do a transfer request to another school if there's a specific program or fit they're after—it's possible, just not automatic.

Childcare and Early Learning

If your kids aren't school age yet, Wascana View's got licensed daycare options in and around the neighbourhood. Southeast Regina's seen a lot of growth, which means more childcare has opened up, but—real talk—licensed spots are still hard to come by in Regina. Waitlists exist. If you're pregnant or planning ahead, get yourself on those lists now. You've got both in-home and centre-based options. Sandra Schmirler Leisure Centre nearby also runs some early learning and before-school programs, which can bridge the gap if you're juggling work schedules.

Family-Friendly Features

Playgrounds: Wascana View's got them. The neighbourhood was built with families in mind, so there are green spaces scattered through the area where kids can actually play without you losing your mind about traffic. Spray pad access is usually through Sandra Schmirler Leisure Centre, which is close by and a summer staple for Regina families.

Pathways: One of the nicest things about Wascana View is the pathway system. Your kids can actually bike or walk to school, to the park, or to friends' houses without crossing major roads every five seconds. That peace of mind is worth something.

Safety: Streets are quiet, designed for residential living, not cut-through traffic. You'll see families out in the evenings and on weekends. It feels safe because it's designed to be safe.

Close to Acre 21: The commercial hub's nearby, so you're not 20 minutes from a grocery store or coffee shop. Convenience matters when you've got kids.

What Parents Should Know

Catchment verification is your responsibility. Before you buy, confirm which schools your address falls under. Regina Public Schools' website has a school finder tool. Use it. Don't assume. I've had families buy a home thinking they'd be in one school's area, then realize they weren't.

Registration happens in the spring for the following fall. Mark your calendar and get in early. Popular programs fill up fast.

You're new to a younger neighbourhood. That's mostly great—newer schools, newer infrastructure. But it also means there's less established history and fewer established social circles compared to older areas. If your kids are starting school here, they'll need to make friends like everyone else is.

French Immersion waitlists are real. If that's your plan, get on the list early. Same goes for band or other specialized programs.

The east side's been growing fast. Schools are generally good here, but like any rapidly developing area, there's growth pains. Portables show up sometimes. Class sizes can fluctuate. It's not a dealbreaker, just reality.

If you've got questions about specific addresses, school assignments, or whether a particular home'll work for your family's situation, that's exactly what I'm here for. No rush, no pressure—I'll give you all the options and help you figure out what actually matters for your family. Check out what's available in Wascana View, read about what it's like living here, or explore nearby Greens on Gardiner and other east Regina neighbourhoods.

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