Area · Montreal's South Shore

Longueuil,
three cities in one.

Vieux-Longueuil, Saint-Hubert, Greenfield Park: three boroughs, three different markets, and a single city of nearly 250,000 residents. Here is how I navigate it, and how I guide you through it.

RE/MAX Platine
438 830-9581
Population

≈ 250,000

5th most populous city in Quebec

Boroughs

3

Vieux-Longueuil, Saint-Hubert, Greenfield Park

Montreal access

Metro

Longueuil–Université-de-Sherbrooke terminus

Commercial

+394%

increase in commercial transaction volume, 2026

The neighbourhoods

Where to live in
Longueuil.

Three boroughs, three markets. Here are the broad strokes of each, so your search starts on the right side of the city from day one.

  • Vieux-Longueuil

    The heritage heart of the city, with zones where regulations protect the historic character. Prices remain reasonable for the location, especially with property tax rates more favourable than Montreal's. The bike path running through the area and the mature trees are part of the appeal, not just a marketing detail.

  • Saint-Hubert

    The largest of the three boroughs, with roughly 87,650 residents across 66 km². This is often where I send first-time homebuyers: large lots, more accessible prices than neighbouring areas, and decent access to Montreal despite the slightly longer distance.

  • Greenfield Park

    The only part of Longueuil with official bilingual status. A more compact profile, popular with buyers looking for a middle ground between Saint-Lambert's anglophone feel and Longueuil's prices.

The real estate market

What the market
is saying.

Longueuil is three markets that share little beyond the name on the deed of sale. A buyer's budget often determines the borough before the style of house even comes up.

Commercial transaction volume in Longueuil jumped 394% compared to last year, according to my July 2026 market tracking, driven by activity around Saint-Hubert's industrial and logistics hub.

Read the full South Shore market update →

Why Longueuil

What makes
the difference.

The metro, directly

Longueuil–Université-de-Sherbrooke station is the terminus of the yellow line. If you want downtown without depending on a fixed-schedule commuter train, that is a strong argument, especially in Vieux-Longueuil and Greenfield Park.

A real entry point into the market

Saint-Hubert remains one of the areas where a first-time buyer can still find a generous lot without blowing the budget. That is not true everywhere on the South Shore.

An expanding commercial hub

The growth of Saint-Hubert's industrial and logistics sector is also changing the profile of investors interested in Longueuil, beyond residential.

Other areas

I also work elsewhere on the South Shore

The next step

One call, zero pressure.

15 minutes on the phone to understand your plans in Longueuil. No commitment, just a straightforward conversation.

Free evaluation Ask a question