Posts Tagged ‘buyer strategy Victoria BC’
A budget is important, but it should never be the only filter guiding a home search. Many buyers start with a monthly payment or purchase price in mind, then assume the right home will naturally appear within that number. In reality, shopping by budget alone often leads buyers toward the wrong property type, the wrong location, or the wrong compromises. In Greater Victoria’s current market, buyers have more room to compare options and complete due diligence than they did in more competitive years, with 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, up 7.9% from March 2025. VREB also noted that today’s market is giving both buyers and sellers more time to make decisions and complete due diligence. The problem is not having a budget. The problem is treating that budget as the full strategy. Mistake 1: Assuming the Cheapest Option Is the Best Value Many buyers focus on finding the most home for the lowest price. On paper, that feels sensible. In practice, it can lead to buying a home that costs less upfront but more over time. A lower-priced property may come with higher strata fees, deferred maintenance, a weaker location, or renovation needs that stretch far beyond the original budget. What looks affordable at first can become more expensive once repairs, updates, insurance, commuting costs, or future resale challenges are factored in. The better question is not, “What is the cheapest home I can buy?” It is, “What gives me the best overall value for how I want to live?” Mistake 2: Ignoring Location to Max Out Square Footage This is one of the most common trade-offs buyers make without fully thinking it through. They chase more bedrooms, a larger yard, or a newer finish, but give up too much in location. That can mean a longer commute, less walkability, fewer nearby amenities, a less suitable school catchment, or a neighbourhood that does not fit their day-to-day life. The home may look better online, but it may feel less practical once real life sets in. In a region made up of many micro-markets, the same budget can buy very different lifestyles depending on whether you are looking in Victoria, Saanich, Langford, or elsewhere. VREB specifically notes that Greater Victoria is a relatively small area made up of many micro-markets with varying conditions and demand. Mistake 3: Shopping at the Top of the Budget With No Cushion Just because a lender approves a certain number does not mean that number is comfortable. Buyers who stretch to the top of their approval range often leave too little room for the rest of ownership. Closing costs, moving expenses, immediate repairs, furniture, utility changes, property taxes, and rising day-to-day expenses can quickly create pressure after possession. A home should support your life, not squeeze it. The strongest buying position is often a budget that still leaves room for flexibility after the keys are in your hand. Mistake 4: Looking Only at Price, Not Monthly Ownership Cost Two homes with the same purchase price can feel completely different financially. A condo may come with strata fees and special assessment risk. A detached home may come with higher utility bills and maintenance costs. An older property may require near-term upgrades. A newer one may reduce maintenance for a while but carry a premium upfront. Buyers who only compare purchase price often miss the real monthly cost of ownership. That is where budget-only shopping starts to break down. Mistake 5: Overlooking Future Resale Appeal When buyers are focused only on what they can afford today, they sometimes forget to ask whether the property will still be attractive when it is time to sell. A home with a challenging layout, limited parking, poor natural light, a busy location, or an unusual strata setup may fit the budget now, but could be harder to move later. Affordability matters, but marketability matters too. This is especially important in a market where buyers have more choice. More inventory means more comparison, which can make weaker listings stand out for the wrong reasons. March 2026 sales in the VREB region were 579, while active listings stood at 3,261, reflecting a market where buyers have selection and can be more selective. Mistake 6: Not Matching the Budget to the Right Property Type Some buyers start with a detached-home goal no matter what their price range supports. Others dismiss condos or townhomes too quickly because they are focused on the biggest possible purchase. That can create frustration and wasted time. In some price points, a well-located condo or townhouse may be the smarter first step than forcing a detached purchase that comes with too many compromises. The right property type depends on your stage of life, timeline, maintenance tolerance, and long-term plan. Budget should inform that decision, but not dominate it. Mistake 7: Treating the Search Like a Spreadsheet Problem Real estate decisions are financial, but they are not only financial. A purely budget-driven search can cause buyers to overlook lifestyle fit, stress level, future plans, and how the home actually functions on a daily basis. The cheapest option is not always the one that creates the most stability or the best next move. Sometimes the smarter buy is smaller, better located, easier to maintain, or more appealing for resale. Sometimes it is not the property that wins the spreadsheet. It is the one that fits your life best. What Buyers Should Do Instead A stronger approach is to build the search around five filters, not just one: budget location property type monthly carrying cost long-term fit When those five pieces are aligned, buyers make clearer decisions and avoid chasing homes that look affordable but are wrong in more important ways. Final Thoughts Budget matters, but it should be the starting point, not the entire plan. The biggest mistakes buyers make when shopping by budget alone usually come down to forgetting that a home is more than a price tag. It is a lifestyle decision, a financial commitment, and a future resale asset all at once. In a market like Greater Victoria, where current conditions are giving buyers more time and more choice, the best results usually come from comparing value more carefully, not just spending more aggressively. If you want help building a search strategy that looks beyond just price, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice tailored to your budget, lifestyle, and long-term goals. Lindsay R., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott has been an awesome help finding my condo. He always knew my needs and gave me the right advise every step of the way. Would 10/10 recommend !” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”
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Trying to compete as a buyer without overpaying can feel difficult, especially when a well-presented home attracts fast attention. But in Greater Victoria right now, buyers are not operating in the same kind of extreme panic market seen in past years. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales in March 2026 and 3,261 active listings at month end, with active listings up 12.3 per cent from February and 7.9 per cent from March 2025. VREB described current conditions as offering plentiful opportunity for both buyers and sellers, with fewer high-pressure transactions and more time for due diligence. That matters because it gives buyers more room to think, compare, and negotiate. That is the first mindset shift: being competitive does not mean being reckless. In a market with healthier supply and more balanced conditions, the strongest buyers are usually the ones who are prepared, clear, and disciplined. Start by Understanding What “Overpaying” Actually Means A lot of buyers think overpaying means offering above asking price. That is not always true. Sometimes a buyer offers over asking and still makes a sound decision because: the asking price was intentionally low the property is rare for the area recent comparable sales support the number the home solves a long-term need better than alternatives On the other hand, a buyer can also overpay below asking if the property was overpriced to begin with. The real question is not, “Am I over list price?” It is, “Am I paying more than this home is worth to me and more than the market reasonably supports?” Preparation Is What Makes Buyers Competitive The strongest buyers usually win before the offer is written. That means having: mortgage approval in place down payment fully organized deposit funds ready a lawyer or notary identified a clear maximum purchase range a short list of non-negotiables versus preferences This matters because speed without preparation often leads to emotional decisions. Speed with preparation creates confidence. There is also a financing reason to be disciplined. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25 per cent on March 18, 2026, maintaining improved borrowing conditions compared with peak-rate periods, but affordability still needs to be tested against your real monthly comfort zone, not just the maximum a lender will approve. Focus on Value, Not Hype In a competitive situation, buyers can get distracted by presentation, staging, or the fear that someone else will grab the home first. A better approach is to evaluate each property through three lenses: 1. Market value What do recent comparable sales suggest? 2. Personal value How well does the home fit your actual lifestyle, location needs, and long-term plans? 3. Risk value What repairs, strata issues, layout compromises, or resale limitations could affect the decision later? A home that scores well in all three categories is usually worth competing for. A home that only wins on emotion is where buyers often drift into overpaying. Strong Offer Structure Beats Blind Aggression Many buyers assume the strongest offer is simply the highest price. In reality, sellers usually look at the full package. A competitive offer can be strengthened by: a clean deposit structure fewer unnecessary complications flexible dates that suit the seller strong financing preparation concise and professional paperwork confidence in decision-making before the offer goes in That means you do not always need to win with price alone. Sometimes the better move is to make your offer easier to accept rather than just more expensive. Do Your Due Diligence Before the Pressure Peaks One of the best ways to avoid overpaying is to do as much homework as possible before offer night. That may include: reviewing comparable sales reading strata documents early, where applicable checking zoning or future land-use factors understanding insurability or financing concerns identifying major maintenance items in advance The buyer who learns these things early is much less likely to make a panic offer later. This is especially important in a market like Greater Victoria today, where buyers have more inventory to choose from. VREB reported 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, while the Victoria Core single-family benchmark rose to $1,330,200 from $1,307,400 in February, though it remained 1.1 per cent below March 2025. That points to a market with some spring momentum, but not runaway pricing. The Victoria Core condominium benchmark was $553,800 in March 2026, up from $545,600 in February and down 0.8 per cent year over year. Set a Walk-Away Number Before You Fall in Love This is one of the most important rules. Before you write, decide: your ideal number your competitive number your absolute walk-away number Then stick to it. Why? Because buyers rarely make poor decisions from lack of information alone. They make poor decisions when emotion changes the rules mid-process. A home can be a great fit and still not be worth chasing past your limit. Missing one property is frustrating. Overcommitting to the wrong one can affect your finances and flexibility for years. Look for Opportunity Where Others Are Hesitating The most competitive buyers are not always the ones chasing the most obvious listing. Sometimes the better strategy is to target homes that: have been on the market a bit longer were initially overpriced and may now be more negotiable show less perfectly but have strong fundamentals need cosmetic updates rather than structural work are overshadowed by more polished competing listings This is where value often lives. In a market with stronger inventory and less pressure, patience can be a real advantage. Buyers who look beyond the most emotionally crowded listings often find better negotiating conditions and less pressure to stretch. Do Not Confuse Urgency With Scarcity A listing can feel urgent without actually being scarce. That distinction matters. Scarcity means the property is genuinely rare for the location, price point, or feature set. Urgency often just means the marketing is strong, the home shows well, or the first weekend is busy. Those are not the same thing. VREB’s March 2026 report said the current environment is giving both buyers and sellers time to make decisions and complete due diligence, which is very different from a true panic market. Work With a Strategy, Not Just a Search The buyers who avoid overpaying usually have a plan for how they will compete, not just a list of homes to see. That strategy often includes: identifying target neighbourhoods and backup areas knowing which compromises are acceptable understanding where they can move quickly and where they should slow down recognizing when a listing is priced for attention versus priced for sale being willing to walk away from the wrong fit That is what keeps a buyer both competitive and protected. Final Thoughts To compete as a buyer without overpaying, you need more than enthusiasm. You need preparation, market context, and a clear ceiling before emotions take over. In Greater Victoria’s current market, buyers often have more choice, more time, and more negotiating room than they assume, which means strong decisions come from discipline, not desperation. If you want help building a buying strategy that keeps you competitive without stretching beyond what makes sense, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear guidance tailored to your goals and price range. Leanne D, 5-Star Review, via Google “I would highly recommend the Faber Group this is the second time we have used them and have been over the top happy with their service. They are an honest group of men who all go above and beyond to make your experience perfect!” 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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