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    Stay up to date with the latest and most exclusive insights from our blog on the Victoria real estate market. Each week, Faber Real Estate Group with Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty shares fresh tips and emerging trends for buyers, sellers, and investors across Greater Victoria. From expert advice on preparing your home for sale to timely snapshots of local market conditions, this is your go-to source for everything happening in Victoria, BC real estate.

     

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    Why the Cheapest Neighbourhood Can Cost You More
    April 14, 2026

    When buyers start house hunting, price usually gets the first look. That makes sense. Budget matters. But price alone rarely tells you whether a neighbourhood will actually fit your life. In Greater Victoria, that matters even more right now. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, with board commentary pointing to many micro-markets with different conditions and demand. In other words, buyers have more choice, but they also need to be more thoughtful about where they want to live, not just what they can afford. The better question is not just, “What can I buy here?” It is, “What will my day-to-day life feel like here?” Start with your real routine Before comparing neighbourhoods, compare your lifestyle first. A lot of buyers say they want a “good area,” but what they really mean is one of these: Close to work and less time in the car Easy walks to coffee shops, groceries, and parks Quiet streets and more yard space Better access to schools, recreation, or the beach A neighbourhood that feels social and active A home base that feels calm and low-maintenance That is why two neighbourhoods at similar price points can feel completely different in real life. One may look better on paper, while the other fits your routine far better. Look at lifestyle in five categories 1. Commute and movement Think about where you go most often, not just where you go once in a while. Ask yourself: How often do you commute downtown? Do you need quick access to UVic, the airport, ferries, or the Westshore? Do you prefer driving, walking, cycling, or transit? Will your routine still work in winter, during school traffic, or on busy weekdays? This is where neighbourhood choice becomes practical. A longer commute may be worth it for more space. But if you hate driving, a cheaper home farther out may cost you in time, stress, and flexibility. 2. Walkability and daily convenience Walkability is not just about being able to go for a stroll. It is about reducing friction in everyday life. Some buyers are happier in a neighbourhood where they can walk to groceries, cafés, restaurants, and the waterfront. Sidney, for example, describes its downtown as vibrant and pedestrian-friendly, and the town also highlights flat terrain and dedicated walking and cycling routes. Others would rather trade that convenience for a larger home, newer construction, or a quieter setting. The key is knowing which trade-off matters more to you. 3. Recreation and free time A neighbourhood should support how you spend your off-hours, not just where you sleep. For some buyers, lifestyle means trails, lakes, fitness facilities, and family recreation close to home. Langford, for example, highlights major recreation assets including City Centre Park, the Westhills YMCA-YWCA, and the Island Training Centre. For others, it is about beach access, local shops, or being able to walk along the water after dinner. Sidney’s waterfront walkway, public beach access points, and downtown connection are good examples of how a place can shape your daily rhythm. A neighbourhood that matches your weekends often matters just as much as one that matches your workweek. 4. Energy and atmosphere Every neighbourhood has a different pace. Some feel lively, social, and connected to shops, restaurants, and street activity. Others feel quieter, more residential, and more private. Neither is better. They simply suit different people at different stages of life. This is where buyers can make expensive mistakes. A home can be perfect, but if the surrounding area feels too busy, too quiet, too student-oriented, too car-dependent, or too far from your usual routine, the fit starts to wear on you. 5. Long-term fit Try to buy for the life you expect over the next three to five years, not just the life you have today. Ask: Will this location still work if your job changes? Are you planning for kids? Are you hoping to downsize maintenance? Will aging parents visit often? Do you want a lock-and-leave condo lifestyle or more room to grow? The best neighbourhood decision is often the one that still feels right after your routine changes a little. Compare neighbourhoods using a “day in the life” test One simple way to compare areas is to imagine an ordinary Tuesday. Picture: Your morning coffee Your school run or commute Your grocery trip Your dog walk Your gym or recreation time Your evening plans Your weekend errands Now ask which neighbourhood makes that day easier. This sounds basic, but it is one of the most useful filters a buyer can use. It shifts the decision away from emotion, headlines, or square footage alone and puts it back on real-life function. A few Greater Victoria examples This is where lifestyle becomes clearer. If you want walkability and an urban routine Neighbourhoods closer to Victoria’s core often appeal to buyers who want cafés, restaurants, shops, parks, and shorter drives. The City of Victoria notes there are 12 unique neighbourhoods across the city, each with its own feel and community identity. If you want family recreation and newer-home options Many Westshore buyers are choosing lifestyle through newer housing stock, more recreation infrastructure, and a bit more breathing room in their day-to-day environment. Langford’s recreation amenities are a strong example of that appeal. If you want a quieter, walkable small-town feel Sidney stands out for buyers who value a pedestrian-friendly downtown, waterfront access, cycling routes, and a slower pace. The point is not that one area is better. It is that each serves a different version of a good life. Price still matters, but it should not lead the whole decision A lower price in the wrong neighbourhood can feel expensive later. You may spend more time commuting, more money on transportation, more effort on everyday errands, or more energy trying to make the location work for a lifestyle it was never a fit for. On the other hand, paying slightly more for the right area can improve daily life in ways buyers often notice only after they move in. That is why the smartest neighbourhood comparison usually includes both numbers and lifestyle. A better way to shop Instead of ranking neighbourhoods by price alone, try ranking them by: Commute fit Walkability Recreation access Noise and pace Family needs Long-term flexibility Housing style you prefer Then compare price. That order matters. Price tells you what is possible. Lifestyle tells you what is worth pursuing. Final thoughts In a market with more inventory and more neighbourhood choices, buyers have a real opportunity to be more intentional. Greater Victoria is full of micro-markets, and the best move is not always the cheapest one. It is the one that fits how you want to live. If you are trying to narrow down the right area for your next move, contact Faber Real Estate Group and we can help you compare neighbourhoods based on the lifestyle that fits you best. Matt, 5-Star Review, via Google Professional, knowledgeable and just stand up guys. Would recommend for all your real estate needs! Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Victoria’s 2026 Market May Be Giving Buyers a Better Window Than They Think
    April 11, 2026

    If you have been waiting for the right time to buy, the current Victoria real estate market deserves a closer look. The opportunity right now is not really about chasing a dramatic price drop. It is about something more practical: more choice, more negotiating room, and more time to make careful decisions than buyers have had in years. In Greater Victoria, 579 properties sold in March 2026 while active listings climbed to 3,261, creating a sales-to-active-listings ratio of about 17.8 per cent. That sits at the low end of the Victoria Real Estate Board’s balanced-market range and points to a market that feels far more manageable for buyers than the high-pressure conditions many remember. That matters because the best buying opportunities do not always show up when prices are falling sharply. In Victoria, benchmark prices have stayed relatively steady. The Victoria Core benchmark for a single-family home was $1,330,200 in March 2026, down 1.1 per cent from a year earlier, while the benchmark condo value was $553,800, down 0.8 per cent year over year. Prices have softened only modestly, but the bigger shift is that buyers now have more room to think, compare, and negotiate. More Inventory Changes the Conversation For a long time, many buyers in Greater Victoria felt pushed into fast decisions. Low inventory, tight timelines, and heavy competition created an environment where hesitation could mean missing out. That is not what this market looks like today. Active listings were up 7.9 per cent year over year at the end of March, and the Victoria Real Estate Board described current conditions as offering plentiful opportunity for both buyers and sellers, with fewer high-pressure transactions and more time for due diligence. That shift matters. More inventory does not guarantee a deal on every property, and it does not mean sellers have lost all leverage. What it does mean is that buyers can be more selective about location, layout, condition, and long-term fit. They can compare several options instead of forcing one property to work simply because there are no alternatives. In practical terms, that often leads to better decisions. A Better Buying Setup Does Not Mean an Easy Market Balanced conditions are different from a distressed market. Buyers still need to be realistic about pricing, financing, and the fact that well-positioned homes can attract strong interest. But balanced conditions do create a healthier process. The market is still active, with March sales up 24.5 per cent from February, yet the supply side remains strong enough to reduce some of the urgency that defined earlier years. That combination gives prepared buyers a better chance to move strategically instead of emotionally. This is where many people misread the market. They assume a good time to buy only happens when prices are falling hard or headlines sound negative. In reality, some of the strongest buying windows happen when prices are relatively stable but buyers gain better access to inventory and better negotiating conditions. That is much closer to what Victoria looks like right now. Why Breathing Room Matters So Much The real advantage in today’s market is not that every home is cheap. It is that buyers can act with more discipline. They can book an inspection without feeling rushed. They can review strata documents or title details more carefully. They can negotiate on price, dates, or conditions with more confidence. And they can walk away from the wrong property without feeling like they have lost their only chance. VREB has explicitly noted that current supply and demand levels are allowing both sides of the sale to make decisions and undertake due diligence with less pressure. That breathing room can be especially valuable for first-time buyers, upsizers, downsizers, and anyone trying to buy with a plan rather than from fear of missing out. A more workable market does not remove risk, but it does improve the quality of decision-making. Prepared Buyers Still Have the Advantage A better market for buyers still rewards preparation. The strongest buyers in this environment are the ones who understand their financing, know their comfort level, and have clarity around what matters most in a home. When the right property comes up, they can act decisively. When a property is overpriced or not the right fit, they can step back without panic. That is one of the biggest changes from the urgency-driven market many buyers still have in mind. This market is less about reacting fast and more about recognizing value clearly. Buyers who are organized and informed can use these conditions to make smarter, more confident decisions. A Smart Way to Think About Buying in 2026 Instead of asking whether everything feels perfect right now, a better question is whether conditions are more favourable for buyers than they have been in recent years. In Greater Victoria, the answer is increasingly yes. Inventory remains healthy, prices have been relatively steady, and the market is giving buyers more space to compare options and negotiate thoughtfully. Provincially, BCREA said inventory is running near its highest level in over a decade, with just over 40,000 homes for sale across BC, which should help keep broader market conditions balanced through 2026. That does not mean every buyer should rush into the market. But for people who are financially ready and planning for the long term, this may be one of the more practical buying windows Victoria has offered in a while. Not because the market is weak, but because it is more balanced, more navigable, and less driven by pressure. Final Thoughts The current market will not be the right fit for every buyer. But for those who are prepared, patient, and focused on long-term goals, today’s Victoria market may offer something that has been missing for a long time: more selection, less frenzy, and a better chance to buy with clarity. If you want help building a smart buying plan in today’s market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice on where the real opportunities are in Greater Victoria. Wilson, 5-Star Review, via Google “Amazing people there! They will help you through the entire process and will always make you feel like family. For those first time home buyers, don't be intimidated entering the market because they will explain every process and guide you through.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    How to Spot Red Flags During a Showing
    April 11, 2026

    Knowing how to identify red flags during a home showing can protect buyers from unexpected repair costs and long-term maintenance issues. In Victoria’s competitive but balanced market, buyers often have more time to evaluate properties carefully. While many homes show beautifully, some warning signs can indicate hidden problems beneath the surface. Learning what to watch for helps buyers make informed, confident decisions. Unusual Odours Can Signal Hidden Problems Strong air fresheners, candles, or recently opened windows during a showing can sometimes mask underlying issues. Persistent musty smells may indicate moisture intrusion, mould growth, or ventilation problems. Sewer-like odours can point to plumbing or drainage concerns. While not every smell indicates a major defect, consistent or overpowering scents should prompt further investigation. Signs of Water Damage or Moisture Intrusion Water damage remains one of the most expensive issues homeowners face. Buyers should look for staining on ceilings, bubbling paint, warped flooring, or soft drywall. Basements and crawl spaces deserve extra attention, especially in Victoria’s coastal climate where moisture management is critical. Spotting these red flags during a home showing early can help buyers avoid costly remediation later. Fresh Cosmetic Updates That Seem Strategic New paint and updated flooring can enhance a home’s appeal, but buyers should look closely at why renovations were completed. Fresh paint covering only one wall or section of ceiling may conceal past leaks or repairs. Quick cosmetic upgrades without addressing structural or mechanical systems may suggest deferred maintenance. Structural Warning Signs Cracks in walls, uneven floors, or doors that do not close properly can indicate structural movement. Minor settling is normal in many homes, especially older Victoria properties, but large horizontal cracks or significant floor sloping should raise concerns. Structural repairs can be expensive and may require professional evaluation before moving forward. Electrical and Plumbing Irregularities Outdated electrical panels, exposed wiring, or a lack of grounded outlets can signal safety and insurance challenges. Buyers should also check water pressure, drainage speed, and signs of pipe corrosion. These issues are common in older homes and do not automatically eliminate a property from consideration, but they should factor into negotiations and budgeting. Poor Exterior Maintenance The exterior often reveals how well a home has been maintained overall. Peeling paint, damaged roofing, deteriorating siding, or failing gutters can indicate broader upkeep issues. In Victoria’s climate, proper drainage and roof condition play major roles in preventing moisture intrusion. Exterior neglect can suggest future repair costs beyond cosmetic fixes. Neighbourhood and Location Concerns A showing should include evaluating the surrounding area. Excessive traffic noise, nearby commercial activity, or poorly maintained neighbouring properties can impact long-term enjoyment and resale value. Buyers should visit at different times of day to gain a full perspective of the property and community environment. Documentation and Disclosure Gaps Incomplete disclosure statements, missing renovation permits, or unclear strata documentation can be major warning signs. Buyers should review available records carefully and ask questions about past repairs, upgrades, and building maintenance. Proper documentation supports transparency and reduces legal or financial risk. Why Professional Inspections Still Matter Even experienced buyers can miss hidden defects. Home inspections, strata document reviews, and specialist evaluations provide objective assessments of property condition. Identifying red flags during a home showing helps buyers decide whether to proceed, negotiate, or request further inspections before finalising a purchase. Making Smart and Confident Buying Decisions Every property has minor imperfections, but recognising major warning signs helps buyers separate manageable maintenance from serious risk. Victoria’s housing market offers diverse property options, and careful evaluation ensures buyers choose homes that align with both lifestyle goals and financial comfort. Past performance does not dictate future results, but informed due diligence consistently leads to stronger real estate outcomes. If you are planning to view homes in Greater Victoria, reach out to our team to help you evaluate properties, identify potential concerns, and confidently navigate your home search.   Matt, 5-Star Review, via Google Professional, knowledgeable and just stand up guys. Would recommend for all your real estate needs! Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    The Importance of Choosing the Right Real Estate Agent
    April 10, 2026

    Buying or selling a home is a major decision, and the person guiding you through it can have a real impact on the outcome. Many people focus first on timing, price, or marketing, but choosing the right real estate agent is one of the most important parts of the process. The right agent does more than unlock doors or post a listing online. They help you understand the market, avoid costly mistakes, build the right strategy, and make better decisions at each stage of the move. Why the choice matters so much A real estate transaction involves more than showing homes or putting a sign on the lawn. There are pricing decisions, negotiation points, timing issues, contract details, due diligence, and communication that all need to be handled well. A strong agent helps bring structure to what can otherwise feel stressful or unclear. A weak fit can lead to missed opportunities, poor communication, and avoidable frustration. That is why choosing an agent should not be treated as a small step. It is a key decision that shapes the whole experience. A good agent helps you set the right strategy Every home and every client situation is different. For sellers, the right agent helps answer questions like: How should the home be priced? What preparation will make the biggest difference? What marketing plan fits this property? How should offers be evaluated? For buyers, the right agent helps answer questions like: Is this property priced fairly? How does this compare to other options? What risks should I be aware of? When should I act and when should I wait? That kind of guidance matters because real estate is rarely just about finding a property or getting it on the market. It is about making the right decisions at the right time. Experience should lead to better judgement Many agents can speak confidently. What matters is whether they can back that up with sound judgement. A good real estate agent should be able to: Explain local market conditions clearly Support pricing with real comparables Spot red flags early Communicate honestly, even when the answer is not what you hoped to hear Adjust strategy when the market response changes This is where experience becomes valuable. Not because experience alone guarantees success, but because it should help the agent guide clients more clearly through real situations. Communication is not a bonus, it is a core part of the job One of the biggest complaints people have in real estate is poor communication. Calls are delayed. Updates are vague. Clients are left wondering what is happening. The right agent keeps you informed. They explain what to expect, update you regularly, and make sure you understand what matters next. That kind of communication builds confidence. It also reduces stress, which is a major part of the client experience. Marketing matters, but strategy matters more A lot of people choose an agent based on promises about marketing. Marketing matters, especially for sellers, but it should not be the only thing you look at. Professional photos, video, social media, and listing exposure all help. But marketing works best when it is supported by the right pricing, preparation, timing, and positioning. A home with strong marketing but weak strategy can still underperform. The right agent understands how those pieces work together. Negotiation is more than pushing for a number Negotiation is often misunderstood. It is not just about being aggressive. It is about reading the situation, understanding leverage, and protecting your interests. For sellers, that may mean knowing when to hold firm, when to counter, and when an offer with a lower price but better terms is actually the better choice. For buyers, it may mean knowing when to push, when to stay clean and simple, and when a property is worth moving quickly on. A strong agent helps you stay grounded and strategic rather than emotional and reactive. Local knowledge can make a real difference Real estate is local. Even within Greater Victoria, conditions can vary by neighbourhood, property type, price point, and buyer pool. The right agent should understand: How one area compares to another What buyers are responding to right now Where pricing is holding strongest What concerns tend to come up in certain property types How local market conditions affect strategy That kind of local perspective helps clients make decisions based on real context, not just general advice. The cheapest option is not always the best value Some people choose an agent based mainly on commission or the promise of savings. Cost matters, but value matters more. A stronger agent may help you: Price more accurately Negotiate more effectively Avoid mistakes in timing or presentation Reduce unnecessary stress Improve the overall outcome That does not mean the most expensive agent is always the best. It means the cheapest option is not always the smartest one either. What to look for when choosing an agent A few signs of a strong fit include: Clear and honest communication Strong knowledge of the local market A practical strategy, not just sales talk Good listening skills A process that feels organised The ability to explain things simply A style that matches how you like to work Trust matters here. You want an agent who gives you confidence, not pressure. Final thought The importance of choosing the right real estate agent is not just about credentials or marketing. It is about finding someone who can guide you with clear advice, strong judgement, and a strategy that fits your goals. If you are planning to buy or sell in Greater Victoria and want a real estate team that values clarity, communication, and practical guidance, contact Faber Real Estate Group to start the conversation. Gary B., 5-Star Review, via Google “We bought a apartment and sold an apartment through Faber Group. It was a pleasure working with them, sold our apartment in one day at full price. No request was too much for them.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Inflation, Interest Rates, and Home Buying: Should You Wait?
    April 10, 2026

    Inflation in Canada has eased significantly from the highs people were dealing with in earlier years. Statistics Canada reported that the Consumer Price Index rose 1.8 percent year over year in February 2026, down from 2.3 percent in January. On a seasonally adjusted monthly basis, CPI rose 0.1 percent in February. The Bank of Canada continues to target 2 percent inflation over time, so current inflation is much closer to that normal range than it was during the more volatile period buyers remember. That does not mean everything feels cheap. Many households are still feeling the cumulative effect of higher prices, especially for food, insurance, and everyday living costs. But from a policy and planning perspective, inflation is much calmer than it was when uncertainty was peaking. What about interest rates? The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25 percent on March 18, 2026. In that same announcement, it said inflation is expected to remain near the 2 percent target, while also noting that global risks, including conflict in the Middle East and energy-price volatility, are adding uncertainty to the outlook. For buyers, that means rates are no longer in the same shock phase they were in when borrowing costs were rising rapidly. That is helpful. But it does not mean the economy is fully predictable, and it likely never will be. The market is still adjusting, and buyers still need to make decisions based on their own affordability rather than on the hope that the perfect rate environment is just around the corner. What is happening in the Greater Victoria market? Locally, the market is giving buyers more room than it did in tighter years. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales in March 2026, up 24.5 percent from February, with 3,261 active listings at month end, up 12.3 percent month over month and 7.9 percent year over year. VREB described the market as offering good supply and reasonable demand, creating opportunities for both buyers and sellers. That matters because a more balanced market can reduce one kind of risk. Buyers often have more time to compare properties, review documents carefully, and make decisions with less pressure. BCREA has also said inventory across BC is near its highest level in more than a decade and expects markets to remain broadly balanced in 2026, with supply helping keep price growth more tempered. So, should you wait until things are more certain? For most buyers, waiting for full certainty is not a real strategy. It is a way of postponing a hard decision. There are always reasons to wait: inflation could change rates could shift prices could soften the economy could strengthen the economy could weaken The problem is that certainty usually becomes visible only after the best window has already passed. Markets move before confidence returns. That does not mean you should rush. It means waiting should be based on something specific, not on a vague hope that the world will suddenly feel simple again. When waiting may make sense Waiting can be reasonable if: your job or income feels unstable your down payment is not yet where it needs to be your monthly payment would feel too stretched you may need to move again in the short term you are not clear on what you want to buy or where In those situations, waiting is not fear-based. It is strategic. Buying a home should support your life, not strain it beyond what feels manageable. When buying now may make sense Buying now may make sense if: your employment and income are stable you have your down payment ready you can comfortably handle today’s payment you plan to stay in the home for several years you are buying based on lifestyle and long-term goals, not short-term headlines In a more balanced market, buyers often have something valuable that disappears in hotter conditions: time. Time to compare. Time to negotiate. Time to think more clearly. That can be a meaningful advantage, especially if you are prepared. The bigger risk is often buying the wrong way, not buying at the wrong time A lot of buyers worry about whether now is the perfect time to buy. In practice, the bigger issue is often whether they buy the right property, at a payment they can handle, with a strategy that matches their goals. That is a more useful standard than trying to predict the exact next move in inflation or rates. The strongest buyers in uncertain markets are usually not the ones who feel no concern. They are the ones who prepare well, understand their numbers, and act when the property and the plan both make sense. What inflation means for buyers in practical terms If inflation stays closer to target, that can help support a more stable borrowing and planning environment. If inflation rises again, that could put renewed pressure on rates and affordability. Right now, the signal is calmer than it was before, but not completely risk-free. That is why buyers should focus less on guessing the economy and more on stress-testing their own budget. A good question to ask is not just, “Can I qualify?” It is, “Will this still feel manageable if my costs rise, my plans change, or the economy stays uneven for longer than expected?” Final thought Buying a home in the current economy does not require perfect certainty. It requires a clear understanding of your finances, your timeline, and what today’s market is actually offering. Inflation in Canada has cooled closer to normal levels, the Bank of Canada is holding its policy rate at 2.25 percent, and Greater Victoria buyers currently have more choice than they did in tighter markets. That does not make the decision automatic, but it does mean buyers can make more deliberate decisions than they could in more rushed conditions. If you are trying to decide whether now is the right time to buy in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice that looks at your budget, goals, and today’s market conditions in a practical way. Ola A., 5-Star Review, via Google “We had a great experience working with Scott from Faber real estate group to purchase our new home. Scott was professional, knowledgeable, and responsive. He had an impressive expertise in the local market and always made us feel like a top priority. His negotiation skills were outstanding, and he took care of every detail, from arranging inspections to researching potential issues with the property. Throughout the process, Scott was patient, understanding, and went above and beyond to provide us with extra resources and options.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    More Listings, Better Decisions: How to Buy Smart in Today’s Market
    April 9, 2026

    Buying in a market with more inventory can feel like a relief, especially after years of hearing about bidding wars, rushed decisions, and limited options. In Greater Victoria, buyers have had more selection this spring. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, up 12.3 percent from February and 7.9 percent from March 2025, while March sales rose to 579, up 24.5 percent month-over-month. VREB said current conditions are creating good opportunities for both buyers and sellers, with solid supply and reasonable demand. That sounds positive, and it is, but more choice does not automatically make buying easy. It changes the strategy. When buyers have more options, the advantage is not just having more homes to look at. The real advantage is having more room to compare, think clearly, and make better decisions. More choice is only helpful if you use it well When inventory is tight, buyers often feel pressure to act quickly and compromise more. When inventory expands, the risk shifts. Instead of feeling rushed, some buyers become overwhelmed, second-guess themselves, or keep waiting for a perfect property that may never come. This is why how to buy a home when inventory gives you more choice is really about staying focused. More listings should create better decision-making, not more confusion. Start with your criteria before you start touring More inventory only helps if you know what matters most to you. Before touring homes, get clear on: Your budget and monthly comfort level Your preferred areas Property type Non-negotiables versus nice-to-haves Renovation tolerance Timeline for moving Without that clarity, extra inventory can become a distraction. Buyers start looking at everything instead of looking at the right things. Compare homes more strategically A market with more selection gives you something buyers do not always have in tighter conditions: context. Instead of asking, “Do I like this home?” ask: How does this compare to similar options in the same price range? Does this property offer better value than competing listings? What trade-offs am I making here? If I pass on this one, how easy is it to find something similar? That shift matters. Good buying decisions usually come from comparison, not emotion alone. Do not mistake more inventory for unlimited negotiating power This is where some buyers get off track. More listings can create better negotiating conditions in some segments, but that does not mean every seller is desperate or every home is overpriced. Well-presented properties in desirable locations can still attract strong interest, especially if they are priced properly. More choice gives you leverage to be selective. It does not guarantee you can write low offers on every property and expect success. Look more carefully at why a home has not sold When inventory increases, some listings sit longer. That can create opportunity, but it can also create false confidence. A home that has been on the market for a while might be: Overpriced Poorly presented In a weaker location Burdened by strata, condition, or layout concerns Simply overlooked and worth a second look Longer days on market can be useful information, but not all stale listings are bargains. Some are opportunities. Some are warnings. Use the extra time for better due diligence This is one of the biggest advantages buyers have in a market with more choice. When the pace is more balanced, you may have more time to: Review strata documents properly Compare recent sales more carefully Understand neighbourhood differences Ask better questions about condition and upgrades Revisit a property before writing an offer That is where better buying decisions happen. More time should not be wasted. It should be used to reduce regret. Focus on value, not just price A lot of buyers assume that if inventory rises, the goal is simply to get the cheapest deal possible. That is not always the right move. The better goal is to find strong value. That could mean: Better location for the same price Better layout than competing homes Lower future maintenance risk Stronger resale appeal More flexibility for your next stage of life The best purchase is not always the one with the biggest discount. It is often the one that fits your needs well and still makes sense long-term. Be patient, but not passive A market with more choice rewards patience. It does not reward indecision. There is a difference between waiting for the right property and avoiding commitment altogether. If you are prepared, understand your criteria, and find a home that compares well against the current options, hesitation can cost you just as much as rushing. More inventory gives you room to think. It should not keep you stuck. Why guidance matters even more in this kind of market Some buyers assume they need less help when the market is less competitive. In reality, more choice often means more analysis, more comparison, and more nuanced strategy. That is where good guidance helps. Not by pushing you to move faster, but by helping you sort through options, understand value, and know when a property is worth acting on. Final thought Understanding how to buy a home when inventory gives you more choice is really about turning more selection into better decisions. In a market like Greater Victoria, where supply has improved and buyers have more room to compare options, the smartest buyers stay clear on their goals, do better due diligence, and focus on value instead of noise. If you are planning to buy and want help evaluating your options with a clear strategy, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice tailored to your budget, goals, and target areas. Gigi S., 5-Star Review, via Google Scott and his team is highly professional group . Scott is a very friendly person ,care for needs and requirements of his client . He makes sure that the property you are buying is your dream place and where you would like to see yourself staying forever . I'm glad that we found such a great realtor. Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    The Difference Between Market Value, Assessed Value, and Appraised Value
    April 9, 2026

    Many homeowners hear the terms market value, assessed value, and appraised value used almost interchangeably. They sound similar, but they do not mean the same thing. Understanding the difference matters because each number serves a different purpose, and relying on the wrong one can lead to poor pricing decisions. If you are buying or selling real estate in Greater Victoria, knowing how market value vs assessed value vs appraised value works can help you interpret pricing more clearly and avoid confusion. Why these values are often misunderstood One of the biggest mistakes sellers make is assuming their BC Assessment value is the same as what their home should list for. Buyers can also get stuck on appraisal numbers without understanding how they fit into the bigger picture. The truth is simple: these three values are created in different ways, by different parties, for different reasons. What is market value? Market value is what a buyer is willing to pay and a seller is willing to accept in the current market, under normal conditions. This is the number most people care about when they are preparing to list or make an offer. Market value is shaped by real-time conditions such as: Recent comparable sales Current competition Location Property condition Upgrades and layout Buyer demand Interest rates and market sentiment Market value changes with the market. A home’s market value today may be different from what it was six months ago, even if the home itself has not changed. What is assessed value? Assessed value is the value assigned to a property by the provincial assessment authority for property tax purposes. In BC, that is generally the number homeowners see on their annual BC Assessment notice. This figure is useful, but it has limitations. It is not designed to be a precise pricing tool for an active listing. Why? Because assessed value is based on a valuation date from the previous year and is created for taxation, not for current market strategy. That means assessed value may be: Lower than current market value Higher than current market value Fairly close to market value in some cases It depends on how the market has moved since the valuation date and how your specific property compares to broader assessment models. What is appraised value? Appraised value is a professional opinion of value prepared by a licensed appraiser. This is often ordered by a lender during the financing process, but it can also be requested privately by a homeowner, buyer, or legal representative. The purpose of an appraisal is usually to support financing, estate matters, separation, taxation issues, or other formal decisions. An appraiser looks at factors such as: Comparable sales Property condition Size and layout Location Improvements Current market trends Appraised value is more specific than assessed value, but it still has a defined purpose. In a financing situation, the lender uses it to confirm the property supports the loan amount. The simplest way to think about it A practical way to understand these three terms is this: Market value is what the market is likely willing to pay now Assessed value is a tax-based estimate from the assessment authority Appraised value is a formal opinion of value prepared by an appraiser Each can be helpful, but they should not be treated as identical. Why these numbers can all be different It is very common for market value, assessed value, and appraised value to differ. Here is why: The market changes over time Assessments are not created for listing strategy Appraisals are done for a specific purpose on a specific date Individual buyer demand can affect what someone is willing to pay Unique features may not be reflected equally in every valuation method For example, a home with excellent updates, views, or a highly desirable layout may attract stronger market interest than its assessed value suggests. On the other hand, a seller who relies only on assessment data may price too aggressively and miss the market. Which value matters most when selling? When selling, market value is usually the most important number. That is because your list price and marketing strategy should be based on current buyer behaviour, competing listings, and recent comparable sales. Assessed value can provide context. An appraisal can also provide useful support in some situations. But neither automatically tells you what the market will do right now. The best pricing strategy looks at the full picture, then uses current market evidence to position the property properly. Which value matters most when buying? For buyers, market value still matters most in terms of deciding what a home is worth to you in the current market. However, appraised value can become very important if financing is involved. If a lender’s appraisal comes in below the agreed purchase price, a buyer may need to increase their down payment, renegotiate, or reconsider the purchase depending on the contract and financing terms. Assessed value can be useful for general context, but it should not be the main reason to decide whether a property is priced fairly. A common mistake sellers make A lot of sellers say, “My assessed value is this, so my home must be worth more than that.” Sometimes that is true. Sometimes it is not. A better question is: what are buyers comparing my home to right now? That shift in thinking usually leads to better pricing, better early activity, and a better chance of a successful sale. Final thought Understanding market value vs assessed value vs appraised value can help you make better real estate decisions and avoid using the wrong number for the wrong purpose. If you are planning to buy or sell in Greater Victoria and want help understanding how your home should be valued in today’s market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear advice tailored to your property and goals. Cindy H., 5-Star Review, via Google “The Faber team go above and beyond! Scott is wonderful to deal with and has a great attitude. I definitely recommend.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Marketing a Home in a Crowded Spring Market
    April 9, 2026

    Spring is often the busiest season in real estate, but more listings do not automatically mean more success. In Greater Victoria, the spring market is building in a fairly typical seasonal pattern, with both sales and listings rising into March. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales in March 2026, up 24.5 percent from February, while active listings climbed to 3,261, up 12.3 percent month-over-month and 7.9 percent year-over-year. VREB described current conditions as offering good supply and reasonable demand, giving buyers more time to compare options and do their due diligence. That is exactly why marketing a home in a crowded spring market needs to be more deliberate. When buyers have more choice, they do not chase every listing. They focus on the homes that feel well-priced, well-presented, and easy to understand. More inventory changes the job In a tighter market, simply coming online at the right time can create attention. In a more competitive spring market, attention has to be earned. What often gets missed is this: sellers think they are competing against last year’s best sale, but buyers are comparing what is available right now. With inventory levels higher and conditions more balanced across BC in 2026, the strategy has to shift from “list and wait” to “launch with purpose.” Pricing is still your strongest marketing tool Many sellers treat price as separate from marketing. It is not. Price is what determines whether buyers click, book, and act. If your home enters the market slightly ahead of the competition on value, it creates momentum. If it enters slightly above the market, buyers may still look, but they are more likely to hesitate, compare, and move on. In a crowded spring market, that hesitation matters because there is always another option coming. The first week matters most. That is when your listing is freshest, buyer alerts are triggered, and the market gives you its clearest feedback. A strong launch price does not mean underpricing. It means pricing in a way that gives buyers a reason to choose your home over the other properties they are seeing that same weekend. Presentation has to reduce friction When buyers are viewing multiple homes, they remember the ones that feel easy. Easy to picture themselves in. Easy to understand. Easy to say yes to. That means the basics matter more than ever: Clean, bright, and uncluttered spaces Strong listing photos and video A clear feature list that highlights upgrades and lifestyle benefits Pre-listing touch-ups that remove obvious objections Showing readiness from day one In a crowded spring market, presentation is not about making a home look perfect. It is about removing distractions so buyers focus on the value, layout, and lifestyle instead of the work they think they will need to do. Your listing needs a clear story Most homes do not lose attention because they are bad properties. They lose attention because their value is not obvious. Good marketing answers the buyer’s unspoken question quickly: Why this home instead of the others? That story might be: Better location for the price Stronger condition than competing listings More flexibility for families, investors, or downsizers Better outdoor space Recent upgrades that reduce future expense A layout that fits how people actually live When that story is clear, the marketing feels sharper. The photos make more sense. The write-up feels more persuasive. The showings feel more focused. Timing still matters, but strategy matters more Yes, spring brings more buyers. It also brings more competition. That means timing alone is no longer the advantage many sellers think it is. Launching in spring without a plan can leave your home buried among other new listings. Launching with the right prep, pricing, and exposure can still produce excellent results. The real goal is not just to be on the market during spring. The goal is to be one of the homes buyers remember and revisit. Exposure is important, but conversion is the real goal A lot of sellers want to hear that their home will get maximum exposure. That matters, but exposure alone does not create offers. The better question is this: does the marketing convert interest into action? That means your marketing should be built to move buyers through four steps: Notice the listing Understand the value Feel confident booking a showing See enough evidence to make an offer If any one of those breaks down, more exposure will not fix the problem. What works best in this kind of market In a market with more options and more buyer comparison, the homes that perform best usually share the same traits: Realistic, strategic pricing Strong visual presentation Clear property positioning Easy access for showings Fast response to feedback Willingness to adjust quickly if the market response is softer than expected This is where experience matters. Not because every home needs an aggressive tactic, but because every home needs the right tactic. Final thought Marketing a home in a crowded spring market is not about doing more for the sake of doing more. It is about making the right decisions early so your home stands out for the right reasons when buyers have plenty of choice. If you are planning a spring sale in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice on pricing, presentation, and a marketing strategy built for today’s market.   Florenda S., 5-Star Review, via Google “We worked with Cal & Scott selling our home recently. The effort they put into the sale was amazing with the photo virtual walk through set, the video, the night shots and open houses. Our house sold very quickly even in a slowdown in the market.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    How Land Assembly Works in Greater Victoria Growth Corridors
    April 8, 2026

    As growth planning evolves across Greater Victoria, more attention is shifting toward key corridors where municipalities want to see additional housing, mixed-use development, and more walkable urban form. That is what makes land assembly opportunities in growing corridors an increasingly important topic for property owners, builders, and investors watching the region closely. In Saanich, the 2024 Official Community Plan directs most housing and employment growth toward Centres, Corridors, and Villages, while current planning work includes the Quadra McKenzie Plan, the Shelbourne Valley Plan update, the Tillicum Burnside Plan, and the Uptown Douglas Corridor Plan. Victoria’s newly adopted Victoria 2050 Official Community Plan is also intended to guide the city’s growth over the coming decades. For owners, this creates a strategic shift. A property that once looked like a standard holding may now sit in an area where future land use policy supports greater density or a broader mix of uses. That does not automatically create redevelopment value, but it can change the conversation significantly. The key is understanding where corridor planning is moving, what form of growth is being encouraged, and whether a single site or group of adjacent properties could eventually support a stronger redevelopment opportunity. What a Land Assembly Actually Means A land assembly is when two or more neighbouring properties are brought together to create a site large enough to support a development that would not be feasible on a single parcel alone. In growing corridors, that often matters because municipalities are planning for more housing near major transportation routes, commercial nodes, and daily amenities. Saanich’s corridor planning documents specifically describe corridors as places intended to support additional housing in locations with strong access to active transportation networks and frequent transit. This is why land assembly can become relevant even for owners who were not originally thinking about redevelopment. The opportunity may not come from the current use of the property. It may come from the site’s position within a future growth area. Why Growing Corridors Matter Not all redevelopment potential is equal. Corridor growth areas tend to attract more interest because municipalities often want them to absorb a meaningful share of future housing growth while supporting better transportation choices and more complete communities. Saanich’s Centre, Corridor and Village planning work is explicitly intended to implement the Official Community Plan vision of directing most housing and employment growth to those areas. That matters because value in a land assembly is rarely just about today’s house or building. It is about future use, future density, site dimensions, frontage, access, servicing, and policy support. When those elements begin to align, corridor properties can become much more strategically important than they first appear. Where These Conversations Are Happening In Greater Victoria, some of the most relevant conversations are happening in municipalities that are actively updating corridor and growth-area plans. Saanich Saanich has been especially active, with current or recent planning work tied to: Quadra McKenzie Shelbourne Valley Tillicum Burnside Uptown Douglas Corridor The draft Quadra McKenzie Plan describes multiple Centres, Corridors, and Villages within the plan area, including the McKenzie Corridor and Quadra Corridor. The Uptown Douglas Corridor plan is also being advanced as a long-term framework to guide change over the next 30 years. Victoria Victoria’s 2025 Official Community Plan update, Victoria 2050, sets the broader long-term growth framework for the city. That does not mean every site is a redevelopment play, but it does reinforce the importance of understanding which areas are positioned for more change over time. The takeaway is simple: if a property sits along or near a corridor where municipalities are planning for increased housing intensity, broader redevelopment interest may follow. What Makes a Corridor Property More Interesting A corridor property becomes more compelling when several factors start working together: strong frontage or depth adjacency to other parcels that could be assembled location near frequent transit proximity to commercial services or village centres supportive land use designations or draft planning direction site geometry that improves development efficiency This is where many owners miss the bigger picture. A single property may not appear remarkable on its own, but when combined with neighbouring lots, the redevelopment potential can change substantially. That is often where land assembly value begins. Why Owners Should Be Careful Not to Over-Assume This is also where caution matters. Being in or near a growing corridor does not automatically mean a property is ready for redevelopment today, nor does it guarantee a specific future value. Policy direction, servicing, lot configuration, setbacks, urban design requirements, market timing, and municipal approvals all shape what is actually possible. The right question is not whether a property is in a growth area alone. The better question is whether the site has realistic redevelopment potential within the policy framework that is emerging. That is why owners should avoid making decisions based only on rumours, marketing language, or assumptions about what a developer might someday pay. What Buyers and Investors Should Ask For buyers considering assembly-oriented properties, a few questions matter early: What does the current Official Community Plan say about this area? Is there an active local plan, corridor plan, or village plan underway? Are neighbouring sites likely to cooperate in an assembly? What type of density or use appears to be supported? Is the opportunity immediate, medium-term, or highly speculative? How does current holding cost compare with likely redevelopment timing? The strongest land assembly strategies are usually built on patience, planning context, and realistic timelines rather than excitement alone. Why Timing Is So Important Corridor opportunities can take years to mature. Municipal planning may move ahead of market demand, or market demand may outpace the pace of approvals. Either way, land assembly is rarely a quick transaction story. It is more often a strategy story. That is particularly true in areas where plans are still being refined or updated, because draft direction can be informative but is not the same as final zoning or approved development rights. This is where good advice matters. Owners need to understand whether they should hold, sell, or begin conversations with neighbours. Buyers need to know whether they are purchasing real potential or simply paying a premium for a story that may take too long to materialize. Final Thoughts Land assembly opportunities in growing corridors are becoming more relevant across Greater Victoria as municipalities continue to direct growth toward transit-supportive, walkable areas. For some property owners, that may create meaningful future opportunity. For others, it may simply mean their asset deserves a closer strategic review than it did a few years ago. The key is to separate possibility from certainty. Corridor growth planning can create opportunity, but the best decisions still come from understanding policy, timing, site context, and market reality. If you want help evaluating whether a property may have land assembly potential in a growing Greater Victoria corridor, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear, strategic guidance. Don S., 5-Star Review, via Google “I would recommend them to anyone buying real estate on the Vancouver Island. The team is very knowledgeable, courteous and professional, adding a personal touch to building a strong relationship.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    What to Ask at a New Construction Presentation Centre
    April 8, 2026

    Walking into a new construction presentation centre can feel exciting. The displays are polished, the finishings look great, and the marketing makes the project feel like an easy yes. But knowing what to ask at a new construction presentation centre can make the difference between buying with confidence and missing important details that affect value, timing, and long-term satisfaction. The goal is not just to be impressed. The goal is to understand exactly what you are buying, what is included, what can change, and how the builder’s process will affect your timeline and budget. Buyers who ask the right questions early usually make better decisions later. Start With the Developer and Track Record Before focusing on floorplans and upgrades, ask about the developer’s experience. Questions to ask: What other projects has the developer completed? Are there local examples I can view? Has the builder delivered projects on time in the past? What is their reputation for quality and warranty service? This matters because the brochure tells you what is planned. The builder’s track record gives you a better sense of what is likely to be delivered. Clarify Exactly What Is Included One of the most important parts of what to ask at a new construction presentation centre is understanding what comes standard and what costs extra. Questions to ask: Which finishings, appliances, and features are standard? Which items shown in the showroom are upgrades? Are parking and storage included? Are air conditioning, blinds, or appliance packages extra? What are the estimated strata fees? Presentation centres are designed to showcase the best version of the product. That does not always mean every feature you see is included in the base price. Understand the Deposit Structure Many buyers focus on purchase price but do not dig into deposit timing. Questions to ask: What is the total deposit required? When are deposit instalments due? Are deposits held in trust? Are there any circumstances where the deposit structure can change? This is especially important for buyers balancing savings, existing home equity, or a future sale. A project may look affordable on paper but still create cash flow pressure depending on the deposit schedule. Ask About Estimated Completion and Delays Completion dates in new construction are often estimates, not guarantees. Questions to ask: What is the current estimated completion window? How often is construction updated to buyers? What happens if the project is delayed? When is the buyer expected to complete? This helps set realistic expectations. New construction can be a strong option, but timing flexibility matters, especially if you need to coordinate a move, sale, financing, or tenancy notice. Review the Disclosure Statement Carefully In British Columbia, the disclosure statement is one of the most important documents in a pre-sale purchase. Questions to ask: Can I review the disclosure statement before writing? Have there been any amendments? Are there material changes buyers should know about? What rights does the buyer have if there are changes? The presentation centre may feel like a sales environment, but the disclosure documents are where the real protection and details live. Buyers should never rely only on verbal answers. Ask About Assignment Rights and Restrictions Not every buyer asks this, but they should. Questions to ask: Are assignments allowed? If so, are there assignment fees? Does the developer have to approve the assignment? Are there restrictions on marketing or timing? Even if you plan to complete, life can change. Understanding assignment rules gives you more clarity on your options later. Understand GST, Closing Costs, and Other Extras The list price is not always the full cost. Questions to ask: Is GST included in the purchase price? What closing costs should I expect? Are there development levies, utility hookup fees, or adjustment costs? Is there an estimated property tax amount? This is where buyers can get caught off guard. A home that feels within budget can become more expensive once GST, legal fees, strata adjustments, and other closing costs are added. Ask About Floorplans, Measurements, and Changes Floorplans can shift during construction, and that matters. Questions to ask: Are room dimensions approximate? Can the layout change during construction? What is the method used to calculate square footage? What happens if the finished size differs from the plan? A smart buyer does not just ask how big the home looks. They ask how the size is measured and what flexibility the developer has to make changes. Look Beyond the Unit and Ask About the Building A great suite in an underwhelming building can still be a poor fit. Questions to ask: What amenities are planned? Are there restrictions on rentals or pets? How many parking stalls are available for owners and visitors? What type of heating and cooling system is being used? What sound attenuation and construction methods are planned? These questions give you a better picture of day-to-day livability, future resale appeal, and operating costs. Ask About Warranty and Service After Completion This is one of the most overlooked parts of what to ask at a new construction presentation centre. Questions to ask: What warranty coverage applies? How are deficiencies reported after possession? Is there a formal walkthrough before completion? Who handles post-completion service? The handoff process matters. Even strong projects can have deficiencies, and buyers should know how issues are handled once they move in. Know the Neighbourhood Plan, Not Just the Building The project itself is only part of the decision. Questions to ask: What future phases are planned nearby? Will additional buildings affect views, privacy, or sunlight? What commercial or community features are expected in the area? How is the neighbourhood expected to grow? This is especially relevant in fast-changing areas where early buyers may benefit from growth, but also need to understand construction, density, and future surroundings. Bring Your Own Professionals Into the Process Presentation centre staff are there to sell the project. That is their role. Your role is to verify, compare, and protect your interests. Before moving forward, buyers should consider: having their REALTOR® review the opportunity asking a lawyer to review key documents confirming financing strategy early comparing the project against resale alternatives The smartest buyers do not just ask good questions. They ask the right people to help interpret the answers. Final Thoughts Knowing what to ask at a new construction presentation centre helps buyers move past the marketing and focus on what really matters: value, risk, timing, and fit. The right questions can uncover hidden costs, clarify expectations, and help you compare a pre-sale opportunity against other options in the market. If you are considering new construction in Greater Victoria and want help evaluating a project before you commit, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear advice and a strategy built around your goals.   Brandon S., 5-Star Review, via Google “My wife and I sold our condo in View Royal and bought a place in Esquimalt with the help of The Faber Group. Scott helped us to find and buy the perfect home for our growing family in a very competitive market. He got to know our wants and needs and worked within our schedule with a small baby. Once we found the perfect place Scott helped us to get it for under the asking price and sold our condo in one day on the market with multiple offers over asking! We are so grateful that Scott helped us through this process, answering our many questions and alleviating our concerns. Thank you for helping us sell our first home and buy a beautiful house for our family.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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