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    Your Guide to Upsizing in Victoria’s Real Estate Market
    April 1, 2026

    For many homeowners, upsizing in Victoria BC is not really about buying “more house.” It is about buying a better fit for the life you are living now. Maybe the family has grown. Maybe you need a better layout, more privacy, a yard, a home office, or a suite option for long-term flexibility. The best strategy for upsizing in Victoria BC is usually not to rush into the next purchase first. It is to build a plan that protects your equity, keeps your financing realistic, and gives you enough flexibility to move when the right home appears. In today’s Greater Victoria market, where inventory has improved and benchmark pricing has been relatively stable, disciplined sequencing matters more than guesswork. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported the Victoria Core single-family benchmark at $1,307,400 in February 2026, up from $1,265,500 in January 2026 and only 0.9 percent below February 2025, which points to a market with movement but not extreme volatility. Start With the Real Constraint, Not the Dream Home Most homeowners begin by browsing listings. That is understandable, but it is usually the wrong first move. The real starting point is this question: What can you comfortably carry after you sell, close, move, and reset your monthly costs? That means reviewing: your estimated sale proceeds mortgage payout penalties, if any property transfer tax on the purchase legal fees, moving costs, and immediate improvement costs the payment range that still feels comfortable in real life This matters even more in 2026 because borrowing conditions are better than they were at the peak of the rate cycle, but affordability still needs to be handled carefully. The Bank of Canada’s policy rate has been 2.25% since January 28, 2026, and CMHC says variable mortgage rates have fallen over the last two years while fixed rates are more exposed to higher bond yields. In Most Cases, Sell First or Prepare to Sell First For most move-up buyers in Victoria, the safest strategy is one of these two paths: sell first, then buy prepare the home for sale first, then buy only when the sale path is clear Why? Because upsizing magnifies risk. If you buy first without a firm plan, you can end up dealing with: pressure to accept less for your current home carrying two properties at once rushed financing decisions emotional overbidding because you feel committed to the next purchase That does not mean buying first is always wrong. It can work for homeowners with significant equity, strong income, or access to bridge financing and a comfortable financial cushion. But for many households, selling first creates clarity and negotiating discipline. The Best Upsizing Strategy Is Usually a Three-Part Plan 1. Prepare your current home to sell like a product, not just a possession Before you even seriously shop, get your current home market-ready. That means: tackling obvious maintenance items decluttering and depersonalizing improving lighting and flow getting staging advice where appropriate understanding where your home sits against current competition This step matters because your current home is the engine that powers the next move. The cleaner and clearer your sale, the easier your upgrade becomes. 2. Get financing fully reviewed before writing offers Do not rely on a rough online estimate. A proper financing review should cover: your likely sale proceeds maximum purchase price payment comfort zone down payment structure bridge financing options what happens if your sale takes longer than expected The goal is not just to know your ceiling. It is to know your safe range. 3. Shop with strict priorities When people upsize, they can accidentally overpay for the wrong kind of “more.” More square footage is not always better if the location worsens, the lot is awkward, or the layout still does not solve the real problem. Focus on the upgrades that materially change daily life, such as: one more true bedroom a more functional family layout a usable yard better school or commute positioning suite potential less deferred maintenance a neighbourhood that fits the next five to ten years In Victoria, Timing Matters, But Sequence Matters More Many homeowners worry about “the perfect time” to upsize. In reality, sequence is usually more important than trying to outguess the market by a month or two. That said, current Victoria conditions do support a more strategic move-up approach. VREB reported balanced market conditions in February 2026, with 465 sales and 2,823 active listings at month-end. That was a 10.6 percent increase in active listings from January, giving buyers more choice than a tighter market would. For upsizers, that balance can help in two ways: you may have more selection on the purchase side you may face less frenzy than in a fully overheated market But balance does not remove the need for sharp pricing. If your current home is overpriced, the entire plan can stall. Avoid the Trap of Over-Improving Before You Sell A common mistake is spending too much getting the current home “perfect” before listing. Most of the time, upsizers do not need perfection. They need traction. That means focusing on improvements that help buyers feel confidence quickly: paint touch-ups repairs buyers will notice immediately cleaner presentation curb appeal better furniture layout pre-listing organization Expensive renovations with weak payback can delay your next move and reduce flexibility. The question is not “How do we maximize every dollar of value?” It is often “How do we improve saleability without overcapitalizing?” Have a Backup Plan Before You Need One The strongest move-up strategies include a backup plan early. That might include: temporary rent-back after your sale bridge financing if purchase and sale dates do not line up a short list of acceptable interim housing options a smaller geographic search expansion if inventory is thin in your top neighbourhood This is what reduces panic decisions. The move-up buyer who has a backup plan usually negotiates better than the buyer who feels cornered. What Homeowners in Victoria Should Do Right Now If you are thinking about upsizing this year, the best next move is usually: determine your likely sale range with current comparables review mortgage and equity numbers in detail prepare your current home before actively shopping define your non-negotiables for the next home be ready to act when the right property appears, not just any larger property That is the difference between moving up strategically and simply moving sideways at a higher cost. Final Thoughts The best strategy for homeowners in Victoria who want to upsize is to treat the move as a coordinated two-property decision, not just a home search. Your sale, your financing, your timing, and your purchase criteria all need to support each other. In a market with more choice and relatively steady benchmark pricing, the real advantage comes from preparation, not prediction. If you are thinking about upsizing in Greater Victoria and want help building a move-up plan that fits your equity, timing, and next-home goals, contact Faber Real Estate Group for tailored advice on your best next step.   Brett Hayward, 5-Star Review, via Google “I can’t suggest how to make Fabers better at being good realtors. They’re already congenial, trustworthy, informed, experienced, and thorough. Cal listened and advised, and somewhere in the middle he said what the condo would sell for and he was right on. Thanks!” 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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    Should You Sell Before You Buy in Victoria BC?
    March 18, 2026

    Deciding whether to sell before you buy Victoria BC is one of the biggest strategy questions homeowners face. It sounds simple on the surface, but the right answer depends on your equity, risk tolerance, financing options, and the type of market you are moving through. In Greater Victoria, that decision matters even more right now because inventory has been stronger while sales activity has been more measured, creating conditions that are closer to balanced, and in some segments near the threshold of a buyer’s market. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 465 sales in February 2026, down 11.9 per cent from February 2025, while benchmark prices in the Victoria Core were relatively steady year-over-year, with single family homes at $1,307,400 and condos at $545,600. Why this decision matters so much Many sellers assume the only goal is to avoid being homeless or carrying two homes at once. That is part of it, but there is a bigger issue underneath: sequence creates leverage or pressure. When you sell first, you usually gain clarity. You know your sale price, your equity position, and your financing range. When you buy first, you may gain convenience, but you also take on more uncertainty if your current home does not sell as quickly or as strongly as expected. That is why this is not just a timing question. It is really a risk-management question. When selling before buying makes sense For many homeowners, selling first is the safer and more strategic move. It often makes sense when: you need the equity from your current home for the next down payment your finances do not comfortably support owning two properties at once you are moving up in price and want a firm budget before shopping your current property may take time to sell you want stronger negotiating clarity on your next purchase In a market with more choice for buyers, selling first can reduce the chance of being forced into a rushed price reduction later. VREB noted that January 2026 sat near the threshold between balanced and a buyer’s market due to stronger inventory and fewer sales, which is exactly the kind of environment where overconfidence can cost sellers leverage. The biggest advantage of selling first The biggest benefit is control. Once your home is sold firm, you are no longer guessing: how much equity you will walk away with whether your buyer will complete what mortgage amount you can comfortably carry how aggressively you need to negotiate on your next purchase That clarity often leads to better decision-making. Sellers who know their numbers tend to shop more confidently and avoid stretching just because a property feels emotionally right. When selling before buying may not make sense Selling first is not always the best option. It may not make sense when: you are in a very tight segment with limited replacement inventory you have strong finances and flexibility you are highly specific about location, school catchment, or property type you would rather secure the right home first and manage the overlap temporary housing would create too much disruption This is especially true for downsizers or buyers looking for a very specific product, such as a one-level townhome, a certain condo building, or a rare neighbourhood fit. In those cases, finding the next home can be harder than selling the current one. So while selling first reduces financial risk, it can increase lifestyle uncertainty if the replacement options are limited. When buying first can make sense Buying first can work well when the next home is harder to find than the current home is to sell. It may make sense when: you have substantial equity and strong financing you can qualify without relying fully on your current home sale the home you want is uncommon and worth locking in you have access to bridge financing or other short-term liquidity your current home is in a highly marketable price range and condition This strategy can also reduce pressure on your move. Instead of racing to line up dates, you may have time to renovate, pack gradually, and prepare your existing home properly for market. The trade-off is obvious: convenience can come with cost and risk. The role of subject to sale offers Some buyers try to split the difference by writing an offer that is conditional on the sale of their current home. In BC, this is commonly handled through a subject to sale clause. BCFSA’s clause guidance explains that a buyer can make their purchase conditional on entering into a sale contract for their existing property, or on that contract becoming unconditional by a certain date. BCFSA also notes that sellers often protect themselves by continuing to market the property and using time-clause language where appropriate. This approach can make sense, but it is not always competitive. In practical terms: it can protect the buyer from owning two homes it can help a seller buy without fully selling first it is usually less attractive to the seller on the other side it can be harder to win in a desirable or competitive segment So yes, subject to sale can be useful, but it should not be treated like a magic solution. It is simply one tool, and it works best when the property you are pursuing has less competition or has been on the market longer. Risks sellers often underestimate The real problem is not choosing one sequence or the other. The real problem is underestimating the downside of the wrong fit. If you sell first, the risks are: feeling rushed to buy settling for a home that is only “good enough” needing temporary housing or storage facing rising prices in the segment you want next If you buy first, the risks are: carrying two homes longer than expected accepting a weaker offer on your current property due to time pressure increasing debt and stress during the transition discovering your lender or budget is tighter than expected This is why generic advice rarely helps. The right strategy depends on what kind of move you are making, not just what the market is doing overall. A better way to think about the decision Instead of asking, “Should I sell first or buy first?” ask these questions: Is my current home easier to sell than my next home is to find? Do I need my sale proceeds to complete the next purchase? Could I comfortably carry overlap if my home took longer to sell? Am I moving because I want a better fit, or because I need a strict timeline? How much stress am I willing to absorb to gain flexibility? Those questions usually lead to a better answer than broad market opinions. What this often looks like in real life A move-up buyer with limited cash flexibility usually benefits from selling first. A downsizer targeting one specific building may prefer to buy first. A family relocating within the Westshore may choose whichever option creates the least disruption to school, work, and childcare. An investor or highly liquid homeowner may be able to be more opportunistic. The strategy should match the household, not just the headlines. The bottom line Selling before buying makes sense when financial clarity matters more than convenience. Buying before selling can make sense when securing the right replacement property is the harder part of the move. Neither path is automatically right. The best choice is the one that protects your downside while still giving you enough flexibility to make a smart move. If you are weighing whether to sell first or buy first in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice tailored to your property, your price range, and the kind of move you want to make next. Helen M., 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal and Scott are the best. They made it happen and made the entire process of securing my condo smooth and stress free. They were always supportive, responsive, and clearly committed to getting the right result. I am very grateful for their hard work and would highly recommend them to anyone looking for reliable, dedicated realtors.” 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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