Posts Tagged ‘balanced real estate market Victoria’
If you want to sell your home faster in a balanced Victoria market, the key is not luck. It is strategy. Sellers are no longer operating in a market where almost every listing gets immediate attention. In March 2026, the Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales and 3,261 active listings. That works out to a sales-to-active listings ratio of about 17.8 per cent, which sits in Victoria’s balanced-market range of 17 to 28 per cent. That matters because balanced markets reward homes that are priced right, presented well, and marketed clearly. VREB also noted that current conditions offer good supply and reasonable demand, with fewer high-pressure transactions and more time for buyers to make decisions and do their due diligence. What a Balanced Market Really Means for Sellers A balanced market is often misunderstood. Some sellers hear “balanced” and assume that means stable, easy, and predictable. What it really means is that buyers have options, and your home is being compared against more listings than it would be in a tighter market. In March 2026, active listings in the VREB region were up 12.3 per cent from February and 7.9 per cent year over year. Sales were up from February, but still 5.5 per cent lower than March 2025. In plain terms, buyers are looking carefully. They are taking more time. They are comparing value. If your home feels overpriced, poorly presented, or confusing, they often move on before booking a showing. Price for the Market You Are In, Not the Market You Remember The fastest way to slow down a sale is to price based on past peak conditions instead of current buyer behaviour. In a balanced market, buyers tend to notice value quickly. They also notice when a listing is reaching. When that happens, the home often sits, accumulates days on market, and ends up needing a price adjustment that could have been avoided with a stronger launch strategy from the beginning. Selling faster usually means pricing close to where the market sees the property today, not where the seller hoped it would be six months ago. The goal is not to “leave money on the table.” The goal is to avoid becoming the listing buyers watch while they buy something else. Make the First Week Count The first week on market carries more weight than many sellers realize. That is when your listing is freshest, most visible, and most likely to attract buyers who have been waiting for the right property. If the home goes live with weak photos, cluttered rooms, incomplete preparation, or a price that feels too ambitious, that early momentum fades quickly. Once buyers have mentally dismissed a listing, it is harder to bring them back. A faster sale usually starts before the listing goes live: complete repairs that buyers will notice declutter and depersonalize the space improve lighting and cleanliness sharpen curb appeal make sure the photography, floor plan, and remarks match the home’s strongest selling points In this market, presentation is not about being flashy. It is about removing hesitation. Stop Marketing Features and Start Selling Fit Many listings spend too much time describing countertops, flooring, and appliance brands without answering the buyer’s real question: “Is this the right home for me?” To sell faster, the marketing needs to connect the property to a buyer profile. A family buyer looks for layout, yard space, storage, and school access. A downsizer looks for ease, comfort, low maintenance, and main-level living. An investor looks for flexibility, rental appeal, and numbers. Homes often move faster when the positioning is clear. Buyers respond more quickly when they can see themselves in the home and understand why it fits their next move. Condition Still Shapes Speed In a balanced Victoria market, buyers are more willing to walk away from work they do not want to take on. That does not mean every seller needs a full renovation. It does mean sellers should pay attention to the details that create doubt. Old paint, worn flooring, dated fixtures, poor odours, and deferred maintenance do more than make a home feel tired. They raise questions about what else has not been looked after. If you want a faster sale, focus on improvements that make the home feel clean, cared for, and easy to step into. Buyers do not need perfection. They need confidence. Be Easy to Show Access matters more than many sellers think. A home that is hard to show usually takes longer to sell. Limited time windows, excessive notice requirements, or repeated declined appointments create friction at the exact point when a buyer is deciding whether your home deserves serious attention. Balanced markets reward convenience. The easier it is for qualified buyers to see the property, the better your chances of creating momentum early. Watch the Market While You Are Listed Launching well is important, but so is adjusting quickly if the market speaks. If showings are low, feedback is repetitive, or similar homes are moving while yours is not, that is useful information. In a balanced market, speed often comes from responding early rather than defending a strategy that is not producing results. This does not always mean a price cut. Sometimes it means better photos, stronger staging, improved remarks, or a more targeted marketing push. But if the issue is price, waiting too long usually costs more than acting decisively. Negotiate With the Goal of Keeping the Deal Together Selling faster is not only about getting an offer. It is also about getting to completion without unnecessary friction. Because buyers in this market often have more options and more time for due diligence, clean negotiation matters. Sellers who are realistic on inspections, timelines, and reasonable requests are often the ones who get deals across the finish line faster. A hardline approach can feel strong in the moment, but in a balanced market it can also send a ready buyer back into the pool of competing listings. The Real Advantage Comes From Preparation The sellers who do best in this kind of market are usually not the ones with the most expensive homes. They are the ones with the clearest strategy. That means: pricing from today’s evidence preparing the home before launch marketing to the right buyer making showings easy responding quickly to feedback negotiating with the goal of closing, not just countering Final Thoughts If you want to sell your home faster in a balanced Victoria market, the path is usually not dramatic. It is disciplined. The homes that sell first are often the ones that feel correctly priced, easy to understand, and easy to act on. Victoria’s market is giving buyers more choice right now, but that does not mean sellers cannot succeed. It means success comes from sharper execution. If you are thinking about selling and want a plan built for today’s Victoria market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for tailored advice on pricing, preparation, and launch strategy. Maryann G., 5-Star Review, via Google “We recently sold our home through the Faber Real Estate Group. We received excellent service as we navigated our way through the sale of the house. I would recommend Cal and his sons as the realtor for your sale as they are so professional and gave good advice leading to a quick sale.” 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 return of conditional offers is a sign of a more balanced market. In Greater Victoria, increased inventory, longer Days on Market, and more price-sensitive buyers have changed negotiation dynamics. Buyers are no longer feeling the same pressure to remove all conditions immediately. Instead, they are taking time to evaluate value, financing, and risk before committing. What Is a Conditional Offer A conditional offer is an offer to purchase that includes specific conditions the buyer must satisfy before the sale becomes firm. Common conditions include financing, home inspection, strata document review, or the sale of another property. During highly competitive markets, conditional offers often disappear as buyers compete to make firm offers. As the market shifts, conditions tend to return, giving buyers more room to perform due diligence. What This Means for Sellers For sellers, conditional offers do not mean the market is weak. They indicate a shift toward more thoughtful and structured negotiations. Sellers may notice: Fewer firm offers More inspection and financing conditions Longer conditional periods Understanding this shift helps sellers respond strategically rather than emotionally. How Conditional Offers Impact Negotiations Conditional offers create additional negotiation points beyond price. Terms and conditions now matter more than ever. Key areas of negotiation often include: Length of the condition period Deposit amount and timing Price adjustments based on inspections Flexibility around completion dates A clean offer with reasonable conditions can sometimes be stronger than a higher-priced offer with uncertainty. When a Conditional Offer Can Be a Strong Offer Not all conditional offers carry the same risk. Some are well structured and supported by strong buyer preparation. A strong conditional offer often includes: Short condition timelines Larger deposits Limited and specific conditions Evidence of financing preparation Evaluating the quality of the offer is just as important as evaluating the price. Seller Strategies in a Conditional Offer Market Sellers can protect their position while remaining competitive by setting clear expectations. Effective strategies include: Pricing accurately from the start Reviewing pre-listing inspection options Understanding which conditions are reasonable Negotiating backup offers when possible A proactive approach helps maintain leverage during negotiations. The Role of Your Agent in Conditional Negotiations Negotiating conditional offers requires market knowledge and experience. An agent who understands local trends can help assess risk, negotiate terms, and manage timelines. Strong representation ensures that conditions are properly structured, deadlines are enforced, and the seller’s interests remain protected throughout the process. The return of conditional offers reflects a healthier and more balanced real estate market in Greater Victoria. For sellers, success comes from understanding the shift and adapting negotiation strategies accordingly. With the right pricing, preparation, and guidance, sellers can still achieve strong results while navigating conditional offers with confidence.
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