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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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    What Happens Between an Accepted Offer and Completion Day?
    May 1, 2026

    Once an offer is accepted, the deal is not always finished right away. The period from an accepted offer to completion day is where the important details get handled, conditions are reviewed, documents are prepared, and both the buyer and seller work toward a successful closing. For many people, this part of the process feels quiet from the outside. In reality, a lot is happening behind the scenes. First, the Contract Becomes the Roadmap After an offer is accepted, the Contract of Purchase and Sale sets out the key dates and obligations. This usually includes: The accepted purchase price Deposit details Subject removal deadline Completion date Possession date Adjustment date Included items Any special terms or conditions The contract becomes the guide for what happens next. Buyers, sellers, real estate agents, mortgage brokers, inspectors, strata managers, lawyers, and notaries may all be involved depending on the property and contract terms. The Home Buyer Rescission Period May Apply In BC, many residential purchases are subject to the Home Buyer Rescission Period. This gives buyers three business days after acceptance to rescind the contract, with a rescission fee of 0.25% of the purchase price if they choose to do so. Weekends and holidays do not count as business days. This is separate from subject conditions. It is also not something buyers or sellers can simply waive under the standard Home Buyer Rescission Period rules. For sellers, this means an accepted offer may still carry some short-term uncertainty. For buyers, it provides a brief period to reconsider the decision, but it should not replace proper due diligence. Subject Conditions Are Reviewed If the offer includes subject conditions, this is usually the most active part of the process. Common buyer subjects may include: Financing approval Home inspection Strata document review Insurance approval Title review Sale of the buyer’s existing home Lawyer or notary review During this stage, the buyer works through the conditions written into the contract. If the buyer is satisfied, they remove subjects in writing by the deadline. If they are not satisfied and the contract allows it, they may choose not to remove subjects. This is where timelines matter. A buyer should not wait until the last minute to arrange financing, inspections, insurance, or strata document review. The Deposit Is Paid Once subjects are removed, the deposit is usually due according to the terms in the contract. The deposit is commonly held in trust by the buyer’s brokerage or another agreed-upon party. It forms part of the purchase price at completion. For buyers, this is a meaningful step because the deal is typically firm once subjects are removed. For sellers, this provides more confidence that the transaction is moving forward. Lawyers and Notaries Begin the Closing Work After the deal becomes firm, the conveyancing process begins. In BC, conveyancing is the legal and administrative process required to transfer ownership from the seller to the buyer. BCREA notes that this process is required to complete real estate transactions in BC and involves coordination between real estate professionals, lawyers, and notaries. The buyer’s lawyer or notary may review: Title Mortgage instructions Property transfer documents Statement of adjustments Insurance requirements Funds required to complete The seller’s lawyer or notary may handle: Mortgage discharge Sale proceeds Transfer documents Statement of adjustments Payouts and closing costs This is also when buyers should make sure their down payment funds are accessible and ready well before completion. The Statement of Adjustments Is Prepared The statement of adjustments accounts for costs that need to be divided between the buyer and seller. These may include: Property taxes Strata fees Rent, if applicable Utilities or local service charges Other prepaid or outstanding items The adjustment date is usually tied to when the buyer takes financial responsibility for the property. This helps make sure each party pays only for the portion of expenses that applies to their ownership period. Buyers Arrange Insurance and Final Financing Before completion, buyers usually need home insurance in place. If there is a mortgage, the lender will often require proof of insurance before releasing funds. For strata properties, buyers may also need to review the strata corporation’s insurance and arrange their own condo insurance. This is a key step that should not be left until the final day. Insurance issues can delay closing if they are not handled early. Sellers Prepare to Move Out For sellers, the time between acceptance and completion is about staying organized. This often includes: Confirming moving dates Cancelling or transferring utilities Preparing keys, fobs, remotes, and documents Leaving the home in the agreed-upon condition Removing items not included in the sale Coordinating final cleaning If possession is the same day as completion, timing can feel tight. If possession is the day after completion, the seller may have a bit more flexibility. Completion Day Transfers Ownership Completion day is when legal ownership transfers from the seller to the buyer in exchange for the purchase price. BCFSA explains that the completion date is stated in the Contract of Purchase and Sale, and this is the day legal ownership changes hands. On completion day, the buyer’s lawyer or notary sends funds, the seller’s lawyer or notary handles payouts, and the transfer is registered. Buyers do not usually receive keys the moment funds move. Key release depends on completion being confirmed and the possession terms in the contract. Possession Day Is When the Buyer Gets Control Completion and possession are not always the same day. BCFSA explains that possession is the day the buyer can move in or take control of the property, and it may be different from the completion date. For example: Completion may happen on Thursday Possession may happen on Friday at noon Adjustment may also be Friday This structure gives time for funds to clear, ownership to transfer, and the seller to move out properly. Why This Period Matters So Much The accepted offer gets the deal started. Completion day finishes it. The period between the two is where risk gets reduced, expectations get clarified, and the details get handled. A smooth closing usually comes from clear timelines, strong communication, and early preparation. For buyers, this means taking due diligence seriously before subjects are removed. For sellers, this means understanding that the deal still needs to move through conditions, legal work, and completion before it is truly finished. The better each side understands the process, the fewer surprises there are. Final Thoughts An accepted offer is an important milestone, but it is not the finish line. Between an accepted offer and completion day, there are several steps that protect both the buyer and seller. Subjects need to be handled, deposits need to be paid, lawyers and notaries need to prepare documents, financing must be finalized, and possession details need to be clearly understood. If you are buying or selling in Greater Victoria, having the right guidance during this stage can make the process feel much more manageable. For advice on buying, selling, or preparing for completion day in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear guidance through each step of the process.   Liam G., 5-Star Review, via Google “The real estate market felt daunting, especially when it was our first time entering it. But, working with Scott made the whole process so much easier. He was really excellent at asking questions, showing us a variety of places, and helping us narrow down exactly what we were looking for. Scott was flexible, never pushy, and I really felt supported by him throughout! He made a big difference in helping us find THE place and we couldn’t do it without him. I can’t wait to work with Scott again in the future!” Faber Real Estate GroupRoyal LePage Coast Capital Realty📞 250-244-3430📧 [email protected]ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporationℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate CorporationVanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor“Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    How to Compare Two Homes When Both Feel Like the Right Choice
    April 29, 2026

    Trying to compare two homes can feel harder than expected when both seem like strong options. One may have the better layout. The other may have the better location. One might feel more emotional, while the other makes more practical sense. That is where buyers can get stuck. The goal is not always to find the “perfect” home. Often, the better goal is to decide which home supports your lifestyle, budget, and long-term plans with the fewest unnecessary compromises. Start With Your Daily Life, Not the Listing Photos A home can show beautifully and still not fit how you actually live. Before comparing finishes, square footage, or staging, ask how each home would affect your normal routine. Think about your commute, school drop-offs, grocery trips, parking, pets, hobbies, guests, work-from-home needs, and weekend lifestyle. A good home should not just impress you during a showing. It should make everyday life easier. Ask yourself: Which home fits our daily routine better? Which location will we appreciate more six months from now? Which home solves the problems we were trying to fix by moving? Which compromises will become annoying over time? Sometimes the better home is not the one that feels more exciting. It is the one that reduces friction in your life. Separate Emotional Value From Market Value Emotion matters in real estate. You are not buying a spreadsheet. You are buying the place where your life will happen. However, emotion should not be the only deciding factor. When you compare two homes, look at each one through three lenses: Personal valueHow well does it fit your lifestyle, needs, and future plans? Market valueDo recent comparable sales support the price? Risk valueAre there repairs, strata concerns, location issues, layout problems, or resale limitations? A home that scores well in all three areas is usually a stronger choice than one that only wins emotionally. Compare the Trade-Offs Clearly Every home has trade-offs. The mistake is pretending they do not exist. One home may offer more space but a longer commute. Another may offer a better neighbourhood but less yard. One may be move-in ready, while the other may need updates but offer better long-term upside. Write the trade-offs down side by side. Compare: Location Price Monthly carrying costs Condition Layout Outdoor space Parking Storage Renovation needs Strata rules, if applicable Future resale appeal Neighbourhood growth or change This helps shift the decision from “Which one do I like more?” to “Which one makes more sense for the life I am trying to build?” Think About Resale Before You Buy Even if you plan to stay for years, resale should still matter. Life changes. Jobs change. Families grow. Priorities shift. A home that works today should also have broad appeal later. When comparing two homes, consider which one future buyers may prefer. Look at location, layout, natural light, parking, school catchments, walkability, noise, strata health, outdoor space, and renovation potential. A quirky feature may feel charming now, but could narrow your buyer pool later. A slightly less exciting home with stronger fundamentals may be easier to sell when the time comes. Do Not Let Small Differences Distract From Big Ones Buyers often get caught comparing details that can be changed, while overlooking things that cannot. Paint colour, light fixtures, cabinet hardware, and landscaping can usually be improved. Location, lot position, natural light, ceiling height, parking, and layout are harder to change. When two homes feel close, separate the fixed features from the flexible ones. Fixed features matter more because they shape long-term value and livability. Use the “Regret Test” This is one of the simplest ways to compare two homes. Ask yourself: “If we bought Home A and Home B sold to someone else, how would we feel?” Then reverse the question. “If we bought Home B and Home A sold to someone else, how would we feel?” Your answer may reveal which home you are more attached to. However, take it one step further. Ask whether that attachment is based on practical fit or short-term emotion. The right choice should feel both exciting and grounded. Know When to Walk Away From Both Sometimes two good options still do not mean either one is the right option. If both homes require you to stretch too far, ignore major concerns, or compromise on your true needs, it may be better to pause. More choice can create pressure, but pressure should not replace good judgement. A disciplined buyer is not just someone who knows when to act. A disciplined buyer also knows when to wait. Final Thoughts When you compare two homes, the best decision usually comes from slowing the process down and looking at lifestyle, value, risk, and resale with clear eyes. The right home should not only feel good during the showing. It should support your life after possession day, protect your budget, and make sense for your long-term plans. If you are deciding between two homes and want a clear second opinion, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice tailored to your goals, budget, and preferred neighbourhoods. Bokz V., 5-Star Review, via Google “Thank you Cal and Scott for helping us to find our home. Excellent service highly recommended.” Faber Real Estate GroupRoyal LePage Coast Capital Realty📞 250-244-3430📧 [email protected]ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporationℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate CorporationVanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Downsizing in Victoria: How to Plan the Move Strategically
    April 29, 2026

    Downsizing in Victoria is rarely just about moving into a smaller home. For most homeowners, it is a bigger life transition that includes timing, finances, lifestyle changes, and a lot of emotion. That is why downsizing in Victoria works best when it is planned strategically, not rushed at the last minute. In Greater Victoria, this conversation matters for a growing share of homeowners. The region has an older population profile, and that makes downsizing a practical next step for many households who want less maintenance, more flexibility, and a home that fits the next season of life more comfortably. Why downsizing feels bigger than people expect On paper, downsizing can sound simple. Sell the current home, buy something smaller, and move on. In real life, it often includes questions like: Should we sell first or buy first? Are we moving to a condo, townhome, or smaller detached home? What happens to all the things we have collected over the years? How much equity will we actually free up? Will the new home make life easier, or just different? That is why downsizing decisions are rarely only financial. They are practical and emotional at the same time. Start with the reason behind the move Before looking at listings, get clear on why you want to downsize now. For some homeowners, the reason is maintenance. A large yard, stairs, or ongoing repairs no longer feel worth it. For others, it is financial clarity, a desire to travel more, or a plan to simplify daily life. Your reason matters because it shapes the type of home you should buy next. For example: If you want less work, a well-run strata may make sense. If you want privacy and flexibility, a smaller detached home may still be the better fit. If you want walkability, your location may matter more than square footage. If you want to unlock equity, budget and monthly costs need closer attention than style. A smart downsizing plan starts with the lifestyle goal, not just the floor plan. Understand what you are giving up and what you are gaining A lot of people focus only on what they are losing when they downsize. Less space. Less storage. Less yard. Fewer rooms. That is only half the story. Strategic downsizing can also mean: less cleaning and upkeep lower utility and maintenance costs fewer physical demands more lock-and-leave freedom a better location for the way you live now more accessible day-to-day living The move feels much more positive when you measure what improves, not just what shrinks. Know your numbers before you make decisions This is where strategy matters most. Before you commit to a move, understand: what your current home could realistically sell for what type of property fits your next stage what your total closing and moving costs will be whether monthly strata fees change the equation how much equity you want to keep available after the move In Victoria, affordability pressure remains high, even when market conditions become more balanced. That means downsizers still need clear, realistic numbers rather than broad assumptions. More inventory may create more choice, but it does not remove the need for disciplined planning. Decide whether to sell first or buy first This is one of the biggest choices in the downsizing process. Selling first may make more sense if: you want certainty on budget you do not want to carry two homes you are comfortable with temporary housing if needed you want less financial pressure while shopping Buying first may make more sense if: you need a very specific type of home you have enough flexibility to manage overlap you want to avoid feeling rushed after selling you have financing options that support the transition There is no one-size-fits-all answer. The right order depends on your finances, your flexibility, and how quickly suitable replacement properties come up in your preferred areas. Choose the next home based on future fit A common downsizing mistake is choosing a smaller version of the current home instead of choosing a home that better fits the next chapter. That means asking better questions: Will this home still work in five to ten years? How many stairs are involved? Is the layout comfortable for everyday living? How close are groceries, health care, and daily errands? If it is a strata, how healthy is the building and council? Does the home support convenience, not just appearance? The best downsizing move is not always the prettiest one. It is the one that feels easier to live in. Give yourself more time than you think you need Downsizing almost always takes longer than homeowners expect. That is not because the real estate side must move slowly. It is because sorting possessions, making decisions, and adjusting emotionally takes time. Build room for: decluttering donations and disposal conversations with family repair decisions before listing viewing homes without pressure legal and financial planning move logistics The people who feel most in control during a downsizing move are usually the ones who started earlier than they thought necessary. Be realistic about what to keep One of the hardest parts of downsizing is not selling the home. It is deciding what comes with you. A strategic way to handle that is to sort items into four groups: essential for the next home meaningful and worth keeping useful but replaceable ready to donate, gift, or discard This helps turn an emotional process into a practical one. It also makes home preparation easier. A decluttered home usually shows better, feels larger, and creates a smoother move later. Pay attention to strata and monthly lifestyle costs For many downsizers in Victoria, the next move involves a condo or townhome. That can be a smart shift, but it changes the cost structure. Instead of just looking at purchase price, review: strata fees insurance differences parking and storage special assessment risk pet rules rental restrictions if flexibility matters depreciation reports and meeting minutes A lower-maintenance home is only truly lower stress if the building itself is well managed. Think of downsizing as a transition plan, not a transaction This is where many moves either feel smooth or feel chaotic. A good downsizing plan coordinates: sale timing purchase timing financial planning move support decluttering timeline possession dates backup plans if one side moves faster than the other When these pieces are handled separately, the move feels heavy. When they are built into one clear plan, the process feels much more manageable. A simple strategic downsizing framework Step 1: Define the goal Know why you are moving and what you want life to feel like afterward. Step 2: Review the financial picture Understand sale value, purchase range, carrying costs, and net proceeds. Step 3: Choose the next-home criteria Focus on lifestyle fit, location, layout, and long-term ease. Step 4: Prepare the current home early Declutter, simplify, and decide what improvements are actually worth doing. Step 5: Build the timing plan Map out sell-first versus buy-first, possession dates, and fallback options. Step 6: Move with margin Give yourself enough time so decisions stay thoughtful, not reactive. Final thoughts Downsizing in Victoria should not feel like a forced step backward. Done well, it is a strategic move toward a home that fits your life better, lowers your stress, and gives you more control over what comes next. If you are thinking about downsizing and want a plan built around timing, lifestyle, and the realities of the Victoria market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear advice on your next move.   Laura T., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott has been a pleasure. He is informative, kind, friendly and he has been there to answer all my questions, even when I had to bother him on the weekend. If you're looking for a Realtor, I would highly recommend Scott. He's the best out there!” 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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    Why Buyers and Sellers Often Read the Same Market Differently
    April 29, 2026

    Buyers and sellers market perspective can be completely different, even when both are looking at the same listings, the same sales, and the same local conditions. A buyer may feel prices are still too high. A seller may feel they are already being realistic. A buyer may see more choice and expect negotiation. A seller may remember what homes sold for last year and expect a similar result. Both sides can be partly right. That is what makes real estate emotional. The market is the same, but the experience is different depending on which side of the transaction you are on. In Greater Victoria, where micro-markets can shift by property type, neighbourhood, price range, and condition, understanding this difference can help buyers and sellers make better decisions. Buyers Focus on What They Can Choose Today Buyers usually judge the market based on what is available right now. They compare active listings, price reductions, days on market, condition, location, and value. If they have more homes to choose from, they often feel more patient. They may book several showings, compare options closely, and wait to see if sellers adjust. Buyers tend to ask: What else can I buy for this price? Has this home been sitting? Are there better options nearby? Can I negotiate? Will another listing come up soon? Is this worth the monthly payment? What repairs or upgrades will I need to pay for? A buyer’s view is shaped by choice. If they see multiple homes that feel similar, urgency drops. If they see one rare property that fits their needs perfectly, urgency rises. Sellers Focus on What They Own Sellers see the market through a different lens. They know the work they have put into the home. They remember the renovations, repairs, family milestones, neighbourhood improvements, and the price they were told the home might be worth. Sellers often ask: What did nearby homes sell for? What have we invested into the property? How much do we need for our next move? Why is our home not getting more attention? Why are buyers being so cautious? Are buyers undervaluing the property? Should we wait for a better offer? A seller’s view is shaped by attachment, timing, and financial goals. That does not mean sellers are unrealistic. It means they are emotionally and financially connected to the property in a way buyers are not. Buyers Compare Options. Sellers Compare Outcomes. This is one of the biggest differences. Buyers compare available options. Sellers compare expected outcomes. A buyer may look at three similar homes and choose the one that feels like the best value. A seller may look at a recent sale nearby and believe their home should sell for the same amount. Both comparisons matter, but they are not the same. Sold data shows what buyers were willing to pay in the recent past. Active competition shows what buyers are considering today. If the market has changed, relying only on past sales can create pricing problems. If buyers ignore recent sales completely, they may underestimate fair market value. The best strategy looks at both. Sellers Remember the Peak. Buyers Feel the Payment. Sellers often remember the highest values they heard about during stronger market periods. Buyers often focus on current affordability. This creates tension. A seller may think, “Homes like mine were selling for more before.” A buyer may think, “With today’s mortgage payment, this price does not feel affordable.” Neither side is necessarily wrong. They are just measuring value differently. Sellers often think in terms of price. Buyers often think in terms of monthly cost, repairs, risk, and future flexibility. That is why a home can seem reasonably priced to a seller and still feel expensive to a buyer. More Inventory Changes Buyer Behaviour When buyers have more options, they usually become more selective. They may expect: Better presentation Sharper pricing More complete information Cleaner homes Flexible showing access Stronger negotiation room More time to make decisions For sellers, this can feel frustrating. A seller may think the home should sell because it is good enough. But buyers may compare it against several other homes that are also good enough. In a market with more choice, average homes can get overlooked unless they are clearly priced, presented, and marketed well. Sellers Feel Time Differently Than Buyers Time feels different depending on which side of the transaction you are on. For buyers, time can feel helpful. More time means more listings, more comparison, and less pressure. For sellers, time can feel stressful. More days on market can create doubt, reduce momentum, and make buyers wonder whether something is wrong. This difference affects negotiation. A buyer may think, “The longer it sits, the more leverage we have.” A seller may think, “We just need the right buyer.” Sometimes both are true. But the longer a listing sits without meaningful activity, the more important it becomes to re-evaluate pricing, presentation, and competition. Condition Looks Different to Each Side Sellers often see improvements. Buyers often see future costs. A seller may think about the renovated bathroom, newer flooring, or updated appliances. A buyer may notice the older roof, aging windows, dated electrical panel, or drainage concerns. This is not because buyers are trying to be difficult. Buyers are calculating what ownership will cost after completion. They may be thinking about: Immediate repairs Insurance Renovation costs Maintenance Strata fees Future resale Monthly affordability Emergency savings A seller may see pride of ownership. A buyer may see a list of upcoming expenses. Good marketing and preparation help close that gap by showing buyers what has been done, what is in good condition, and what value the home offers. Buyers Price in Risk Buyers often reduce what they are willing to pay when they sense uncertainty. That uncertainty may come from: Limited property information Deferred maintenance Unclear permits Weak strata documents High strata fees Poor inspection results Awkward layout Busy road exposure Future development nearby Longer days on market Sellers may see these as small issues. Buyers may see them as reasons to negotiate. This is why transparency matters. When buyers understand a property clearly, they can make stronger decisions. When they feel uncertain, they usually either discount the price or walk away. Sellers Price in Emotion Sellers naturally attach meaning to their home. They remember what the home has meant to them, not just what it offers to the next buyer. That emotional connection can make it harder to accept market feedback. A buyer’s lower offer may feel insulting. A showing with no feedback may feel personal. A price reduction may feel like losing value. But the market is not judging the seller’s memories. It is judging the property’s current appeal compared with other options. That distinction is important. A home can be loved and still need a price adjustment. Negotiation Feels Different on Each Side Buyers often see negotiation as risk management. Sellers often see negotiation as value protection. A buyer may ask for a lower price because they see repairs, uncertainty, or competing options. A seller may resist because they feel the home is worth more or because they need a certain number for their next step. This can create a gap. The best negotiations focus on facts: Comparable sales Active competition Property condition Inspection results Days on market Buyer demand Seller timing Terms beyond price When both sides move away from emotion and toward evidence, the conversation becomes more productive. A Balanced Market Can Feel Different to Everyone A balanced market does not mean every buyer and seller feels balanced. A seller with a highly desirable home in a low-supply neighbourhood may still experience strong demand. A buyer shopping in a competitive price range may still face pressure. A seller with a dated home competing against newer options may feel the market is slow. A buyer shopping a higher price point with more inventory may feel they have leverage. This is why broad market labels can be misleading. There is no single Greater Victoria market experience. There are many smaller markets happening at the same time. Why Expectations Matter Many real estate problems begin with mismatched expectations. Sellers may expect: More showings Faster offers Less negotiation Higher prices Buyers to overlook minor issues Buyers may expect: Big discounts Perfect condition Sellers to negotiate quickly More leverage than they actually have Every listing to be overpriced Both sides can misread the market when they rely on assumptions instead of evidence. The better approach is to ask, “What is the current market telling us?” What Sellers Can Do Sellers can improve their position by focusing on what they can control. That includes: Pricing based on current competition Preparing the home properly Making showings easy Using strong photography and marketing Reviewing feedback honestly Responding quickly when activity slows Understanding buyer affordability Separating personal attachment from market value A seller does not need to give the home away. But they do need to compete with the homes buyers can choose today. What Buyers Can Do Buyers can improve their position by staying realistic. That includes: Understanding recent comparable sales Watching active competition Knowing when a home is truly well priced Avoiding low offers without a strategy Getting financing ready early Considering resale value Understanding repair costs Acting decisively when the right home appears More choice does not mean every seller is desperate. A buyer still needs to recognize quality when it appears. The Market Does Not Care Who Is Right Real estate decisions get better when buyers and sellers stop trying to prove who is right and start looking at what the market is actually doing. If a listing is getting strong showings and offers, the market is responding. If buyers are not booking showings, the market is hesitating. If similar homes are selling and yours is not, the market is making a comparison. If a buyer keeps losing homes, the market may be stronger than they think. The market gives feedback. The best decisions come from listening to it. Final Thoughts Buyers and sellers see the same market differently because they are experiencing different pressures. Buyers are trying to protect affordability, avoid risk, and choose wisely. Sellers are trying to protect value, manage timing, and move forward with confidence. Neither side is wrong for seeing the market through their own lens. But the best results happen when both sides understand the other perspective and make decisions based on evidence, not emotion. If you are buying or selling in Greater Victoria and want a clearer view of what the market is really saying, contact Faber Real Estate Group for practical advice tailored to your next move.   Scott L., 5-Star Review, via Google “I had the pleasure of working with the Faber Group to sell my house, and I couldn't be more pleased with the experience. Cal and Scott from the Faber Group provided exceptional service from start to finish. Their expertise and guidance were instrumental in preparing my home for sale, ensuring it was presented in the best possible light for maximum return on investment. They demonstrated a deep understanding of the market, strategically timing the listing to attract the right buyers." 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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    Why Custom Homes Do Not Always Match the Comparables
    April 28, 2026

    Custom homes can be harder to price because they do not always fit neatly into the market around them. Unlike a standard subdivision home, a custom-built property may have a unique layout, higher-end materials, unusual design choices, special views, extra land value, or features that only appeal to a smaller group of buyers. That does not mean custom homes are worth less. In many cases, they can command a premium. However, pricing them requires more judgement because the value is not always obvious from recent sales alone. Comparable Sales Are Not Always Perfect Most home pricing starts with comparable sales. A REALTOR® looks at similar properties that recently sold in the same area and compares size, condition, location, lot, age, and features. With custom homes, this process gets harder. Two homes may look similar on paper but feel completely different in person. For example: One may have a high-end kitchen, custom millwork, and premium windows. Another may have the same square footage but a dated layout. One may sit on a private, usable lot. Another may have steep land, limited parking, or awkward outdoor space. Because of this, the value of a custom home often comes from the full package, not just the number of bedrooms, bathrooms, or square feet. Design Choices Can Help or Hurt Value Custom homes often reflect the taste and lifestyle of the original owner. That can be a strength, but it can also narrow the buyer pool. A home with timeless design, thoughtful storage, natural light, and strong indoor-outdoor flow may attract broad interest. However, a home with highly specific finishes, unusual room layouts, or bold architectural choices may appeal to fewer buyers. This is where sellers need to be careful. The cost to build something is not always the same as the resale value. A feature may have been expensive, but buyers may not assign the same value to it if it does not fit how they want to live. Replacement Cost Does Not Equal Market Value Many sellers look at what it would cost to rebuild their home today and assume that should set the price. Replacement cost matters, especially with rising construction costs, but buyers still compare the property to other options available on the market. A buyer may ask: What else can I buy in this price range? Is this home move-in ready? Does the layout work for my family? Is the land usable? Are the finishes current? Will this be easy to resell later? A custom home may be expensive to recreate, but market value depends on what buyers are willing to pay now. Location Still Carries the Most Weight Custom features can add value, but location remains one of the biggest pricing factors. A beautifully built home in a less convenient location may not attract the same demand as a simpler home in a highly desirable neighbourhood. In Greater Victoria, buyers often weigh: Proximity to schools, parks, beaches, and trails Commute times to Victoria, UVic, CFB Esquimalt, or the Westshore Walkability and access to amenities Privacy, outlook, and sun exposure Neighbourhood consistency and resale confidence The best custom home pricing strategy considers both the home and the setting around it. Buyers May Need More Education A standard home is easier for buyers to understand quickly. A custom home often needs more explanation. For example, buyers may not immediately recognize the value of: Structural upgrades Energy-efficient systems Custom cabinetry High-quality windows and doors Radiant heating Superior insulation Site preparation Drainage work Architectural planning Landscaping and outdoor living spaces This is why marketing matters. A custom home should not be listed with generic descriptions and basic photos. The listing needs to explain what makes the home different and why those differences matter. Appraisals Can Be More Complicated Custom homes can also create challenges during financing. If there are limited comparable sales nearby, an appraiser may need to make larger adjustments. That can create a gap between the seller’s expected value, the buyer’s offer price, and the lender’s appraised value. This is another reason pricing should be grounded in evidence. A strong pricing strategy should include comparable sales, current competition, replacement-cost context, buyer demand, and a clear explanation of the home’s unique features. Overpricing a Custom Home Can Be Risky Because custom homes are unique, some sellers assume they should “test the market” at a higher price. That can work in rare cases, but it can also backfire. If the price is too high, buyers may not engage. The home can sit, showings may slow, and the listing can start to feel stale. Once that happens, even strong properties can lose momentum. A better approach is to price within a realistic range, then let the marketing tell the story. The goal is not just to prove the home is special. The goal is to create enough buyer confidence to generate action. How to Price a Custom Home Strategically A strong pricing process should look at more than the last few sales. It should include: Recent comparable sales, even if imperfect Active competition Buyer behaviour in the current market Lot quality and privacy Build quality and finish level Layout and functionality Replacement-cost context Resale appeal Neighbourhood demand Current inventory levels Custom homes are harder to price because they require both data and judgement. The numbers matter, but so does understanding how buyers will experience the home. Final Thoughts When pricing a custom home, the question is not only, “What did it cost to build?” The better question is, “How will today’s buyers compare this home to every other option they have?” That is where strategy matters. A custom home needs the right price, the right positioning, and the right explanation. When those pieces work together, buyers can better understand the value and sellers can make more confident decisions. For guidance on pricing a custom-built or unique property in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for a thoughtful, market-informed strategy. Faber Real Estate GroupRoyal LePage Coast Capital Realty📞 250-244-3430📧 [email protected]ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporationℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate CorporationVanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor“Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    How to Evaluate Homes With Rental Income Potential
    April 28, 2026

    A home with rental income potential can be one of the smartest ways to improve affordability and build long-term wealth. For many buyers in Greater Victoria, a suite, carriage home, or rentable space can help offset mortgage costs while creating future flexibility. However, not every property advertised as a “mortgage helper” is equal. Some generate strong income. Others create headaches, vacancy risk, or renovation costs. Before buying, it helps to evaluate the property like both a homeowner and an investor. 1. Start With the Real Rental Income Do not rely only on optimistic listing comments. Instead, ask: What similar suites are actually renting for nearby? Is the rental market stronger for one-bedroom, two-bedroom, or furnished units? What utilities are included? Is there parking? Is the area attractive to students, professionals, or families? In areas near University of Victoria or Camosun College, rental demand may differ from suburban family-focused areas. 2. Confirm If the Suite Is Legal or Existing Non-Conforming This is one of the biggest issues buyers miss. A suite may be: Fully permitted and legal Existing but not currently compliant Unauthorized Added without permits Missing fire separation or safety requirements That matters for insurance, financing, resale, and future renovations. Always review municipal zoning, permits, and disclosures carefully. 3. Look at Separate Access and Privacy The best rental setups work well for both owner and tenant. Strong layouts often include: Private entrance Separate laundry or clear laundry access Sound separation Dedicated parking Outdoor space separation Good bedroom window placement If the owner and tenant feel like they live on top of each other, turnover can be higher. 4. Understand Monthly Carrying Costs A home with rental income potential should be measured by net benefit, not gross rent. Review: Mortgage payment difference Property taxes Insurance premiums Utilities Maintenance reserves Vacancy allowance Property management if needed Sometimes an extra $2,000 in rent feels strong until real carrying costs are included. 5. Evaluate Tenant Demand by Location Not every area rents equally. Generally stronger rental demand can come from proximity to: Transit routes Employment centres Schools and universities Shopping and services Hospitals Downtown access A beautiful suite in an inconvenient location may underperform. 6. Think About Future Flexibility Rental income is useful, but life changes. Ask: Could parents use the suite later? Could adult children live there? Could it become a home office? Would the next buyer value the same setup? The best income properties often have multiple future uses. 7. Review Noise, Construction Quality, and Livability Tenants pay rent monthly. They also leave monthly if the space feels poor. Watch for: Low ceilings Poor natural light No storage Weak soundproofing Moisture issues Limited heating or cooling Good tenant experience often equals better long-term income. Smart Buyer Question to Ask Instead of asking: “How much rent can I get?” Also ask: “How stable, legal, and sustainable is this income?” That question protects buyers. Final Thought A home with rental income potential can reduce ownership costs and improve buying power, but only if the numbers, layout, legality, and location make sense. The best mortgage helper is not just extra income. It is income that remains dependable and adds resale value later. If you are considering a suite property or investment-focused purchase in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for strategic local guidance. Hendri E., 5-Star Review, via Google “We had a fantastic experience working with Cal and Scott. They provided a truly personalized service, taking the time to understand exactly what our needs were and guiding us through every step of the process. What really stood out was how they went above and beyond—we felt fully supported from start to finish. Highly recommended!” Faber Real Estate GroupRoyal LePage Coast Capital Realty📞 250-244-3430📧 [email protected]ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporationℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate CorporationVanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor“Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Bigger Home or Better Location? The Outside-of-Town Debate
    April 28, 2026

    For many buyers, living outside of town can feel like the practical answer. Prices may be lower, homes may be larger, and the pace can feel calmer. However, the pros and cons of living outside of town deserve a closer look before making the move. A home is not only a purchase price. It is also a daily lifestyle choice. The Pros of Living Outside of Town 1. More Space for the Money Buyers often look farther from the core because they can find more home, more yard, or a newer property within the same budget. This can be especially appealing for families, pet owners, remote workers, or anyone who wants extra room to grow. 2. A Quieter Lifestyle Outside-town living can offer more privacy, less traffic noise, and a slower pace. For some buyers, that peace is worth more than being close to downtown. 3. Better Access to Nature Many communities outside the urban core offer easier access to trails, lakes, beaches, parks, and outdoor recreation. That lifestyle can be a major reason people choose areas like the Westshore, Sooke, Metchosin, or the Peninsula. 4. Strong Long-Term Appeal As Greater Victoria grows, some outside-town areas continue to attract buyers who want space and relative affordability. If infrastructure, amenities, and transportation improve, long-term demand can strengthen. The Cons of Living Outside of Town 1. Longer Commutes The biggest trade-off is usually time. A longer drive can affect mornings, evenings, childcare, school routines, and overall flexibility. Even if the commute seems manageable during showings, it may feel different after several months. 2. Higher Transportation Costs Living farther out can increase fuel costs, vehicle wear and tear, insurance use, parking needs, or the need for a second vehicle. A lower mortgage payment may not feel as low once transportation costs are included. 3. Fewer Nearby Amenities Some areas have fewer restaurants, shops, medical services, recreation options, or transit routes nearby. That does not matter to every buyer, but it can affect day-to-day convenience. 4. Resale Can Depend on Market Conditions When the market is active, buyers may stretch farther for space. When the market slows, some buyers refocus on convenience, walkability, and commute time. That means resale demand can vary more by location, property type, and local amenities. The Smart Way to Decide Before buying outside of town, compare the full lifestyle cost, not just the purchase price. Ask yourself: How often will I commute? Will we need another vehicle? How close are schools, parks, stores, and services? Will this location still work in five years? How broad will the resale buyer pool be? Final Thought The pros and cons of living outside of town come down to trade-offs. You may gain space, privacy, and value, but you may give up time, convenience, and some resale flexibility. The right choice is not about town versus outside town. It is about which location supports your life, budget, and long-term plans best. If you are comparing neighbourhoods across Greater Victoria and want help weighing lifestyle, commute, and resale value, contact Faber Real Estate Group for local guidance. Doug F., 5-Star Review, via Google “The way the sale/transaction/personal service of this Firm is 100%. They returned calls promptly, got me information when asked and even helped me move heavy furniture with a smile.” Faber Real Estate GroupRoyal LePage Coast Capital Realty📞 250-244-3430📧 [email protected]ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporationℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate CorporationVanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor“Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Why Buyers Should Think About Resale Before They Buy
    April 25, 2026

    Resale value when buying a home matters because life can change faster than expected. Even if you plan to stay for years, your future needs may look different. Jobs change. Families grow. Interest rates move. Renovation plans shift. A home that works today should also give you options later. Thinking about resale does not mean you are planning to leave. It means you are buying with your future in mind. In Greater Victoria, where affordability is tight and every purchase needs careful thought, resale value when buying a home should be part of the decision from the beginning. Resale Is About Flexibility Many buyers focus on whether a home works for their current life. That matters. However, the strongest purchase decisions also consider how the home may appeal to future buyers. A home with strong resale value may be easier to: Sell Rent Refinance Renovate strategically Hold long-term Adapt as life changes A home with limited resale appeal may still be worth buying. However, the price should reflect that risk. The goal is not to find a perfect property. The goal is to understand how easy or difficult the property may be to move on from later. Most Buyers Do Not Know Their Exact Timeline It is common for buyers to say, “We will be here for at least ten years.” Sometimes that happens. Sometimes it does not. Plans can change because of: Job relocation Growing family needs Downsizing Health changes School priorities Relationship changes Financial pressure Renovation fatigue A better opportunity elsewhere This is why resale matters, even when your intentions are long-term. A home should work for today, but it should not limit your options tomorrow. Location Still Carries the Most Weight Location is one of the biggest drivers of resale value. You can update paint, flooring, appliances, lighting, and landscaping. You cannot change where the property sits. Strong resale locations often have: Good access to amenities Reasonable commute options Nearby schools Parks and trails Transit access Walkability Lower noise exposure Consistent buyer demand In Greater Victoria, location can change block by block. A few minutes can affect walkability, views, traffic noise, school access, and long-term appeal. That is why buyers should avoid choosing a home based only on price, square footage, or bedroom count. Layout Matters More Than Buyers Realize A home’s layout can have a major impact on resale. Some homes look great online but feel awkward in person. Others may not photograph perfectly, yet they live very well. Future buyers usually respond well to: Functional main living areas Good natural light Practical bedroom placement Useful storage Clear entry space Indoor-outdoor flow A workable kitchen layout Enough bathrooms for the home size Flexible space for work, guests, or hobbies Choppy layouts, small bedrooms, steep stairs, low ceilings, and awkward additions can shrink the buyer pool later. A strange layout is not always a deal-breaker. Still, it should be reflected in the price. Avoid Buying Only for Your Current Lifestyle It is easy to fall in love with a home that fits one specific season of life. That could be: A downtown condo with no parking A rural property with a long commute A home with too many stairs A steep driveway A tiny yard A layout that only works for one lifestyle These homes can still be the right choice. However, buyers should understand how future buyers may view the same features. Before buying, ask: Who else would want this home? Would a young family consider it? Would downsizers consider it? Would first-time buyers consider it? Would investors consider it? Would future buyers see the same benefits I see? A broader buyer pool usually supports stronger resale. Condition Affects Future Value A home does not need to be fully renovated to have good resale appeal. In fact, a dated home can be a great purchase if the fundamentals are strong. However, buyers should be careful with major condition concerns. Pay attention to: Roof age Drainage Foundation concerns Windows Heating system Electrical updates Plumbing Moisture concerns Exterior maintenance Decks and retaining walls Signs of unpermitted work Cosmetic issues may create opportunity. Major unresolved problems can make the home harder to sell later. Condos and Townhomes Need Resale Review Too Condo and townhome buyers should think about resale just as carefully as detached home buyers. Future value depends on more than the unit itself. Buyers should review: Building reputation Strata fee levels Contingency reserve fund health Depreciation report planning Insurance history Special levy risk Pet bylaws Rental bylaws Parking Storage Noise transfer Natural light Unit layout A cheaper condo may not be the better long-term purchase if the building has weak planning, high fees, or poor resale demand. On the other hand, a well-run building with a practical layout can hold strong appeal, even if the finishes are not brand new. Future Supply Can Affect Resale Buyers should also think about what may be built nearby. This matters in growing areas such as Langford, Colwood, Saanich, and parts of Victoria. New supply can be positive. It can bring more amenities, better services, and more neighbourhood energy. However, it can also create competition if many similar homes come to market at the same time. For condos, ask: How many similar units are nearby? Are more buildings planned? Is this unit meaningfully different? Does it have better parking, views, layout, or outdoor space? Would future buyers choose this resale unit over new construction? When future supply is high, uniqueness matters more. Resale Should Influence What You Pay A property with weaker resale appeal may still be worth buying at the right price. The problem happens when buyers pay a premium for a home with limited future demand. Resale concerns may include: Busy road exposure Poor layout Limited parking Weak natural light High strata fees Special levy concerns Awkward access Too many stairs Unusual design choices Over-improvement for the neighbourhood A limited buyer pool None of these issues automatically make a home a bad purchase. They simply mean the buyer should price the risk properly. The Best Homes Give You Options A strong purchase gives you choices. It may allow you to: Stay long-term Sell without major difficulty Rent the property if needed Renovate over time Refinance with confidence Appeal to multiple future buyer groups That is the real reason resale matters. You are not just buying a place to live. You are buying flexibility. Questions to Ask Before Writing an Offer Before committing to a home, ask: Who is the likely future buyer for this property? What features will help it stand out later? What features may limit demand? Is the location likely to remain desirable? Is the layout broadly functional? Are there future repairs that may affect resale? Is the price fair given the resale strengths and weaknesses? Is there too much similar supply nearby? Could this home still work if my plans change? These questions do not remove emotion from the process. Instead, they help balance emotion with strategy. Final Thoughts Thinking about resale before you buy is not negative. It is responsible. The right home should work for your life today while still giving you options in the future. In Greater Victoria, where pricing, neighbourhoods, inventory, and buyer demand can vary widely, resale should be part of every serious purchase decision. A home does not need to be perfect to be a good buy. However, buyers should understand what will help or hurt future demand before they write an offer. If you are trying to decide whether a property is a strong long-term fit, contact Faber Real Estate Group for local advice before you make your next move.   Ana V., 5-Star Review, via Google “Working with Scott to find a home has been a positive experience. He took the time to understand what I was looking for and was always patient and responsive navigating through the process. He was always available to answer questions, provide honest insights, and guide me through every step. I highly recommend Scott to anyone looking for a dedicated and reliable 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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    When Showings Slow Down: What Sellers Should Do Next
    April 25, 2026

    Showings slowing down can feel discouraging, especially if your home launched with strong activity and then suddenly went quiet. For sellers, fewer showings often raise the same question: is something wrong with the listing, the price, the market, or the home itself? The answer depends on timing. A slow week does not always mean your listing is failing. But if showing activity drops and stays low, it is usually a signal that buyers are hesitating. The key is to understand why before making the wrong adjustment. In Greater Victoria, where buyers can be selective when inventory gives them more choice, sellers need to respond with strategy, not panic. First, Do Not Overreact to One Quiet Week Every listing has a natural rhythm. The first week or two often brings the most attention because the property is new. Active buyers, agents, and saved searches notice it right away. After that first wave, activity may slow. That does not automatically mean the home is overpriced. Showings can be affected by: Weather Long weekends School schedules Interest rate news Competing new listings Buyer fatigue Seasonal timing Local events Poor showing availability A sudden increase in similar inventory Before making a major change, look at the pattern. One quiet stretch is different from three weeks of steady decline. Understand What Slower Showings Usually Mean When showings slow down, the market may be sending one of several messages. It may mean: Buyers think the price is high The listing photos are not creating enough interest The home is competing against stronger options The property is not easy to show The location or layout narrows the buyer pool The home needs better presentation Buyers are waiting for a price adjustment The listing has lost new-listing momentum The mistake is assuming every slowdown has the same cause. Sometimes the price needs to change. Sometimes the marketing needs to improve. Sometimes the home needs better preparation. Sometimes the listing simply needs a fresh strategy to reach the right buyers. Review the Price Against Today’s Competition Pricing is not only about what your home is worth in theory. It is also about what else buyers can choose right now. If showings slow down, review your active competition. Ask: What else is available in the same price range? Are similar homes offering more space, better updates, or stronger locations? Have competing listings reduced their price? Are buyers choosing newer homes, better layouts, or better condition? Is your home priced against sold data from a stronger market? Are you competing with homes that have sat and already adjusted? Sellers often focus on what recently sold. Buyers focus on what they can buy today. That difference matters. Look at the Listing Through a Buyer’s Eyes When you live in a home, you see its memories, improvements, and potential. Buyers see comparison. They ask: Is this worth the price? What work does it need? How does it compare to the next home? Can I move in comfortably? Will I need to spend money right away? Does the home feel better in person than online? Is there a reason this has not sold yet? If showings are slowing down, step back and look at the listing the way a buyer would. Not emotionally. Practically. The goal is not to criticize the home. The goal is to understand the buyer’s hesitation. Study Online Engagement Before buyers book a showing, they usually interact with the listing online. If online views are strong but showings are low, buyers may be interested but not convinced enough to visit. If online views are weak, the issue may be exposure, presentation, price positioning, or the listing’s ability to stand out. Review: Listing views Saves or favourites Click-through activity Showing requests Open house traffic Agent inquiries Time on market compared with similar listings A listing can fail quietly online before it ever fails in person. If the photos, headline, description, or price do not create enough urgency, buyers may simply move on. Pay Close Attention to Showing Feedback Showing feedback is not perfect, but patterns matter. One buyer’s opinion may not mean much. Five buyers saying the same thing should get your attention. Look for repeated comments about: Price Condition Layout Odour Lighting Privacy Noise Parking Stairs Yard usability Needed updates Strata fees Competing options Feedback can be uncomfortable, but it is useful. Buyers are not always right, but they are the market. If the same concern keeps coming up, your strategy should respond to it. Make the Home Easier to Show Sometimes showings slow down because the home is difficult to access. Buyers may skip a property if showing windows are too limited, notice requirements are too long, tenants are difficult to coordinate with, or the home is not available during peak times. If your home is on the market, convenience matters. Consider: Allowing more flexible showing times Reducing unnecessary notice requirements Keeping the home showing-ready Making open houses easier to host Avoiding too many blocked-out times Ensuring pets are managed during showings Making access instructions simple The easier a home is to show, the more chances it has to sell. A great listing can lose momentum if buyers cannot get in when they are ready. Refresh the Presentation If activity slows, small presentation changes can help. This does not always mean major staging or expensive renovations. Often, the goal is to remove friction and make the home feel easier to imagine. Consider: Decluttering key rooms Improving lighting Cleaning windows Touching up paint Removing worn mats or tired decor Improving curb appeal Rearranging furniture Adding simple staging pieces Reducing personal items Making storage areas feel organized Buyers do not need perfection. They need confidence. A home that feels clean, cared for, and easy to move into can regain attention. Revisit the Photos and Listing Description Sometimes the home is better than the listing makes it look. If showings slow down and feedback from visitors is positive, the issue may be the online presentation. Ask: Do the photos show the strongest features first? Is the floor plan easy to understand? Is the lighting flattering? Are outdoor spaces shown clearly? Does the description explain the lifestyle and value? Are important upgrades mentioned? Does the listing sound generic? Are the best features buried too low? A listing needs to create a reason for buyers to book a showing. If the home has strong features but they are not obvious online, refresh the marketing before assuming the market is rejecting the property. Consider a New Marketing Angle Not every property should be marketed the same way. If the first wave of buyers does not respond, your listing may need a sharper message. For example: A family home should highlight layout, schools, storage, yard, and daily function A condo should highlight building strength, strata health, parking, storage, and lifestyle A downsizer-friendly home should highlight main-level living, low maintenance, and convenience An investor-friendly property should highlight rental potential, flexibility, and location A renovation opportunity should highlight lot, layout, location, and upside Sometimes the issue is not the home. It is that the wrong buyer story is being told. Know When a Price Adjustment Is the Right Move Price reductions can work when they are strategic. They should not be treated as a failure. In a market where buyers have options, price adjustments are often part of aligning with current demand. A price change may be worth considering if: Showings have dropped significantly Feedback repeatedly mentions price Similar homes are selling while yours sits Competing listings offer more value Online views are high but showing requests are low The home has been passed over by active buyers There are no serious second showings or offers The original price was based on optimistic expectations The goal of a price adjustment is not just to lower the price. The goal is to reposition the listing where buyers take action. A small reduction may not be enough if it does not change how buyers see the home. Do Not Chase the Market Down Slowly One of the biggest seller mistakes is making small, hesitant adjustments after the market has already moved. If a home sits too long, buyers may start to assume there is a problem. The listing can become stale. A late reduction may not create the same excitement it would have created earlier. If a price adjustment is needed, it should be meaningful enough to create renewed attention. The question should be: “What price will make buyers reconsider this property?” Not: “What is the smallest reduction we can tolerate?” Compare Against Sold Listings and Active Listings A strong pricing review should look at both sides of the market. Sold listings show what buyers recently accepted. Active listings show what buyers are comparing you against now. Pending listings, when available, can also help reveal where demand is actually moving. Your pricing strategy should consider: Similar homes that sold Similar homes that did not sell Current active competition Recent price reductions Days on market Condition differences Location differences Buyer feedback Showing trends Pricing is not static. It must respond to what buyers are doing now. Avoid Blaming Buyers When showings slow down, it is easy to say buyers are unrealistic. Sometimes buyers do have high expectations. But if multiple buyers are choosing other homes or not booking showings, the listing needs to adjust to the market. That adjustment may be price, presentation, access, marketing, or expectations. The seller’s job is not to convince every buyer. It is to position the property so the right buyer sees the value. What Not to Do When Showings Slow Down Avoid these common mistakes: Ignoring feedback Waiting too long to adjust Making tiny price reductions with no strategy Refusing to improve presentation Assuming more time will solve everything Comparing only to the highest recent sale Blaming the market without studying the competition Making showings difficult Changing marketing without reviewing price Reducing price without improving presentation A slow listing needs diagnosis, not guesswork. A Simple Seller Checklist If showings slow down, review the following: Has the market changed since launch? What new competition has appeared? Are similar homes selling? What feedback keeps repeating? Are showings easy to book? Does the home show well in person? Does the online listing create enough interest? Is the price aligned with today’s options? Is the marketing speaking to the right buyer? Would a buyer choose this home over the competition? This checklist helps sellers move from emotion to action. Final Thoughts When showings slow down, the worst response is to do nothing and hope the market changes. The best response is to diagnose the issue clearly. Sometimes the solution is a price adjustment. Sometimes it is better presentation, improved access, stronger marketing, or a clearer buyer story. In many cases, it is a combination of several small changes that help the listing regain momentum. A slower showing pattern is not always bad news. It is information. Used properly, that information can help sellers make smarter decisions and improve their chances of a successful sale. If your home is listed and showings have slowed down, contact Faber Real Estate Group for a practical review of your pricing, presentation, and marketing strategy.   David M., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott was a fantastic realtor—hardworking, knowledgeable, and truly dedicated to his clients. His expertise and great connections made the entire process smooth and stress-free. He went above and beyond to ensure everything was taken care of, and I couldn’t be happier with the results. I highly recommend Scott to anyone looking for a 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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    Langford’s Growth Boom: Smart Planning or Too Much Too Soon?
    April 24, 2026

    Langford density has become one of the biggest real estate conversations on the Westshore. For some people, the growth feels exciting. More housing, more restaurants, more services, and more energy. For others, it feels like the city is changing faster than the roads, schools, parks, and infrastructure can keep up. The real answer is not simply yes or no. Langford is becoming denser. The better question is whether that density is being added in the right places, with enough planning to protect livability. That is the part buyers, sellers, and long-term homeowners should pay attention to. Langford Has Been Growing Quickly Langford has been one of the fastest-growing communities in British Columbia. Statistics Canada reported that Langford’s population reached 46,584 in the 2021 Census, up 31.8% from 2016. That made Langford the fastest-growing municipality in BC and one of the fastest-growing communities in Canada at the time. That level of growth changes a city. It affects traffic, schools, parks, parking, neighbourhood feel, housing types, and buyer expectations. A city that was once viewed mainly as a more affordable alternative to Victoria is now becoming a major urban centre in its own right. That shift creates opportunity, but it also creates tension. Why Density Is Happening Density is not happening by accident. Langford is responding to the same pressures seen across Greater Victoria: housing affordability, population growth, limited land, infrastructure costs, climate planning, and changing provincial housing policy. The City’s Official Community Plan refresh was designed around planning for a future population of 100,000 residents, while addressing affordability, housing, climate change, social equity, rising infrastructure costs, and transportation options. In simple terms, Langford is trying to grow up rather than only grow out. That means more condos, townhomes, mixed-use buildings, urban centres, and housing near services and transit routes. For buyers, this creates more options. For existing homeowners, it can feel like the character of certain areas is changing quickly. Both reactions are valid. Is More Density Automatically Bad? No. Good density can make a community stronger. It can support: More housing choice Better restaurants and local businesses More walkable areas Improved transit demand More efficient land use Greater housing affordability compared with large-lot-only development More options for first-time buyers, downsizers, and investors A city made only of detached homes can become difficult for many people to afford. It can also spread growth over a wider area, which often increases car dependence and infrastructure costs. Density, when planned well, can help create a more complete community. The issue is not density itself. The issue is poorly planned density. What Residents Are Worried About Many concerns around Langford density are practical, not political. People are asking fair questions: Can the roads handle more residents? Are schools keeping up? Is there enough parking? Are parks and public spaces growing with the population? Will traffic continue to get worse? Are neighbourhoods losing their character? Is new construction adding affordability or just more expensive units? Will infrastructure costs show up in property taxes? The City’s OCP engagement process acknowledged that some residents raised concerns about overcrowding, traffic congestion, limited green space, affordability, and financial impacts such as potential property tax increases. The City says those concerns were considered alongside technical analysis and expert recommendations. That is important because the debate should not be framed as growth versus no growth. The real issue is whether growth feels supported. Where Density Makes the Most Sense Density usually works best when it is placed near services, transit, shopping, employment areas, and existing infrastructure. Langford’s updated planning direction focuses growth toward the City Centre, Corridors, and Urban Centres, where infrastructure, transit, walking, rolling, and cycling options are considered more viable. That approach makes sense in theory. Higher density is easier to justify near: Downtown Langford Transit routes Shopping areas Schools and recreation Employment centres Areas already planned for mixed-use growth It becomes more controversial when density feels disconnected from infrastructure, parking, road capacity, or neighbourhood context. A six-storey building may make sense in one location and feel completely out of place in another. What the New Official Community Plan Signals Langford adopted a new Official Community Plan in June 2025, marking the first major update since 2008. The City described the new plan as a more predictable approach to growth, building height, and density. It also noted that while tall buildings remain possible in select strategic locations, the plan emphasizes more mid-rise and ground-oriented housing choices. That is a meaningful shift. It suggests Langford is trying to move away from a more reactive growth model and toward clearer rules about where density belongs. For homeowners and buyers, this matters because future value will depend partly on how well each neighbourhood absorbs growth. Some areas may benefit from new amenities and services. Others may feel pressure if growth arrives before infrastructure improves. How Density Affects Buyers For buyers, Langford density creates more choice. A buyer who may not be able to afford a detached home in Victoria or Saanich may find more options in Langford through condos, townhomes, duplexes, and newer communities. That can be positive. But buyers should still think carefully about location within Langford. Not all density is equal, and not every building or neighbourhood will perform the same over time. Buyers should ask: Is the home close to services or still car-dependent? Is the surrounding area still changing? Are there future development sites nearby? How much construction is planned around the property? Is parking adequate? Is the building well managed? Is the area becoming more walkable or simply busier? Will future supply compete with this property at resale? The right Langford property can be a smart purchase. But buyers should not assume all growth automatically means all properties benefit equally. How Density Affects Sellers For sellers, density can be both a benefit and a challenge. On one hand, growth can bring more buyer attention, more amenities, and stronger long-term demand. If your property is in a well-located area, increased density may support future value. On the other hand, more supply can create more competition. If a seller owns a condo or townhome in an area with many similar new units coming to market, buyers may have more choice. That means presentation, pricing, strata health, parking, layout, and building quality become even more important. For detached homeowners, density may create different questions: Is there redevelopment potential? Could zoning changes affect future value? Is the lot more valuable because of location? Are buyers paying for the home, the land, or future flexibility? Will nearby development affect privacy, traffic, or appeal? Sellers should not rely on broad Langford growth headlines. They need neighbourhood-specific pricing advice. The Difference Between Density and Livability A dense community can still be very livable. The best examples usually include: Good sidewalks Safe crossings Parks and trails Useful transit Local shops Schools and childcare Public gathering spaces Thoughtful building design Enough parking where needed A mix of housing types Density becomes frustrating when people experience more buildings without better daily life. If residents see more traffic but not better transit, more people but not more parks, or more construction but not more affordability, they understandably question the direction of growth. That is why Langford’s next chapter will be judged less by how many homes are built and more by whether the city feels easier or harder to live in. Is Langford Losing Its Character? This depends on the neighbourhood. Langford is not one single market. Bear Mountain, Happy Valley, Westhills, downtown Langford, Florence Lake, Thetis Heights, and South Langford all feel different. Some areas are designed around newer, denser growth. Others still have a more suburban or semi-rural feel. As density increases, buyers will become more selective about which version of Langford they want. Some will want walkability and newer buildings close to amenities. Others will want space, privacy, trails, and a quieter residential feel. That split may actually make Langford more segmented over time, with different neighbourhoods appealing to different lifestyles. What This Means for Long-Term Value Density can support long-term value when it creates a stronger, more convenient community. It can hurt perceived value when it creates congestion, uncertainty, or too much similar supply at once. For real estate, the strongest areas are often those that balance growth with livability. That means: Good access Strong amenities Thoughtful planning Housing variety Parks and recreation Reliable infrastructure A clear sense of neighbourhood identity Langford has many of these ingredients. The question is execution. If growth is well managed, Langford can continue to mature into a more complete urban centre. If growth feels faster than infrastructure, some buyers may become more cautious. So, Is Langford Becoming Too Dense? Langford is becoming denser, but that does not automatically mean it is becoming too dense. A better answer is this: some parts of Langford are absorbing density better than others. Density near services, transit, shops, schools, and recreation can make sense. Density that feels disconnected from infrastructure can create frustration. For buyers, the opportunity is to choose carefully. For sellers, the priority is to understand how your specific property fits into Langford’s changing market. The future of Langford will not be defined only by how many homes are built. It will be defined by whether those homes help create a community that still feels practical, connected, and livable. Final Thoughts Langford’s growth is not slowing down in the bigger picture. The city is planning for more people, more housing, and a more urban future. That creates real opportunity, especially for buyers who want newer homes, Westshore amenities, and relative value compared with Victoria’s core. But it also requires more thoughtful decision-making. If you are buying or selling in Langford, do not look at density as simply good or bad. Look at where it is happening, what infrastructure supports it, and how it affects the specific property you are considering. For advice on buying, selling, or understanding how Langford’s growth may affect your property value, contact Faber Real Estate Group for local guidance tailored to your goals. Thiago D., 5-Star Review, via Google “Their ready availability, communication, and support were key to getting our new place. I cannot recommend Scott and his team more.” Faber Real Estate GroupRoyal LePage Coast Capital Realty📞 250-244-3430📧 [email protected]ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporationℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate CorporationVanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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