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    Posts Tagged ‘buying in Greater Victoria’

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    Why Saanich Remains a Practical Choice for Many Buyers
    May 22, 2026

    For many Saanich real estate buyers, the appeal is not about one single feature. It is the combination of location, housing variety, amenities, schools, parks, and long-term livability. Saanich may not always feel as trendy as some smaller neighbourhood pockets in Greater Victoria, but that is part of its strength. It works for a wide range of buyers because it offers practical options for different stages of life. Saanich is one of those areas where buyers can often solve more than one problem at once. A family may want space, school access, and parks nearby. A downsizer may want a quieter setting without feeling cut off from services. A professional may want a reasonable commute to downtown Victoria, UVic, Camosun, Royal Oak, Uptown, or the hospital area. That flexibility is a major reason Saanich continues to hold buyer interest. Saanich Offers More Than One Type of Lifestyle One of the biggest advantages of Saanich is that it does not feel like one single market. Some areas feel suburban and family-oriented. Others feel more established, quiet, or semi-rural. In certain pockets, buyers can be close to beaches, trails, shopping, recreation, or major commuter routes. That variety gives Saanich real estate buyers more room to compare lifestyle, budget, and long-term needs. For example, Gordon Head may appeal to buyers who want schools, UVic access, and established residential streets. Broadmead often attracts buyers looking for larger homes, privacy, and a quieter setting. Royal Oak offers strong convenience with shopping, transit, and access to both the Peninsula and downtown Victoria. Cordova Bay brings a coastal feel, while Lakehill, Glanford, and the Quadra area can offer practical central access. The key is that Saanich gives buyers choices without forcing them into one narrow lifestyle category. Location Is a Major Practical Advantage Saanich sits in a useful position within Greater Victoria. Depending on the neighbourhood, buyers can be close to downtown Victoria, UVic, Camosun College, Royal Oak, Uptown, Mount Douglas, Cadboro Bay, Swan Lake, or the Pat Bay Highway. That matters because daily life often has more influence on satisfaction than square footage alone. A home may look great on paper, but buyers also need to think about: Commute patterns School and daycare access Grocery and pharmacy options Transit routes Recreation centres Trail and park access Future resale appeal Saanich performs well because many neighbourhoods balance residential comfort with daily convenience. That balance can make ownership feel easier over time. Parks and Outdoor Access Add Everyday Value Saanich has more than 170 parks, more than 100 kilometres of trails, over 8.25 square kilometres of parkland, 62 sports fields, 56 playgrounds, and 37 beach accesses, according to the District of Saanich. That is not just a lifestyle bonus. It affects how people live day to day. For families, parks and playgrounds can make a neighbourhood feel more usable. For pet owners, nearby trails can be a major factor. For downsizers, walkable green space can help support a more active, connected lifestyle. For long-term owners, proximity to parks and recreation can also support resale appeal. PKOLS, also known as Mount Douglas Park, is one of Saanich’s strongest examples. The District of Saanich notes that the park covers 188 hectares and includes more than 21 kilometres of trails. That kind of access is hard to recreate in newer, more densely built areas. Housing Variety Gives Buyers More Ways to Enter the Market Saanich includes detached homes, townhomes, condos, duplexes, older character homes, renovated family homes, larger lots, and strata options. This matters because not every buyer wants the same ownership experience. Some buyers are looking for a long-term family home. Others want lower maintenance. Some want suite potential. Others want a condo close to services. Saanich can often support several of those goals within the same municipality, although price points and availability vary significantly by neighbourhood. In the current Greater Victoria market, choice matters. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 3,710 active listings at the end of April 2026, up 8.3% from April 2025. More inventory gives buyers more room to compare options, but it also makes local guidance more important. Saanich is not one market. A detached home in Cordova Bay is not competing with the same buyer as a condo near Uptown or a family home in Glanford. Buyers need to understand the micro-market before deciding what value really means. Practical Does Not Mean Boring Sometimes buyers overlook practical areas because they are searching for a certain feeling. They may want charm, walkability, views, a larger yard, or a newer finish. Those things matter. However, practical value often shows up after move-in. It appears when the commute is manageable. It appears when errands are close. It appears when the home still works after a family grows, work changes, or retirement plans shift. It appears when a buyer realizes the location gives them options instead of limitations. That is where Saanich continues to stand out. It may not always be the flashiest choice, but it can be one of the most durable choices. What Buyers Should Watch Before Choosing a Saanich Home Saanich offers strong long-term appeal, but buyers still need to compare homes carefully. Neighbourhood, condition, zoning, strata rules, drainage, sun exposure, parking, suite potential, and future maintenance can all affect value. Before buying in Saanich, it is worth asking: Does this location fit your daily routine? Is the home priced fairly for its specific neighbourhood? Are there upcoming repairs or upgrades to consider? Does the floor plan support your next five to ten years? How does this property compare to similar homes nearby? Will the location still appeal to future buyers? A practical purchase is not just about buying in a strong municipality. It is about choosing the right home within the right pocket of that municipality. Final Thoughts Saanich remains a practical choice for many buyers because it offers a rare mix of convenience, outdoor access, housing variety, and long-term livability. It gives buyers options without pushing them too far from the core of Greater Victoria. For Saanich real estate buyers, the best decision is not always the biggest home, the newest finish, or the lowest price. The better question is whether the home supports real life over time. In many cases, Saanich continues to do exactly that. If you are thinking about buying in Saanich or comparing neighbourhoods across Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for local advice, current market insight, and a clear strategy before you make your next move.   Shannon R., 5-Star Review, via Google It was a pleasure to work with Scott Faber and Faber Real Estate Group. When I started looking for my first home in August 2021, I had some pretty specific requirements. Scott is a really knowledgeable Agent who also took the time to understand what I was looking for. I never felt pressured into making a decision that wasn't my own, but always valued his honest opinion and guidance when needed. It took close to 9 months, but we found a great place that checked all the boxes, that I'm excited to call home.  I appreciate the whole team's effort, support and patience throughout this journey and as a first time home buyer I could not be happier with my experience with Faber Real Estate Group.” 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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    The Big Shift Vancouver Buyers Feel When They Start Searching in Victoria
    May 2, 2026

    Moving from Vancouver to Victoria often starts as a lifestyle decision, but it quickly becomes a real estate decision. Buyers may come for the slower pace, ocean access, shorter commutes, and community feel, yet the first few home tours usually reveal a more practical truth: Victoria is not simply a smaller version of Vancouver. The housing stock feels different. The neighbourhoods behave differently. The pace is calmer in some ways, but the market still rewards buyers who understand value, location, and timing. The Pace Feels Different One of the first things Vancouver buyers notice is the pace of daily life. Victoria still has traffic, busy corridors, and competitive neighbourhoods, but the rhythm feels more manageable. For many buyers, this is the emotional draw. The idea of reclaiming time matters. A shorter commute, easier access to parks, and the ability to cross town without planning your entire day around traffic can change how a home feels. However, slower does not mean simple. Victoria has many small micro-markets. A home in Fairfield, Oak Bay, Saanich, Langford, Sidney, or View Royal may attract a very different buyer pool. That is why local context matters so much when comparing options. Detached Homes May Feel More Within Reach Many buyers moving from Vancouver to Victoria notice the price difference first. Victoria is still an expensive market, but compared with Metro Vancouver, some buyers find more realistic detached, townhome, or larger condo options. For example, Greater Vancouver REALTORS® reported a March 2026 detached benchmark price of $1,854,800, while the Victoria Real Estate Board reported an April 2026 Victoria Core single family benchmark value of $1,339,100. Condo values also differ, with Metro Vancouver apartments at $706,700 in March 2026 compared with Victoria Core condominiums at $558,300 in April 2026. That difference does not mean every Victoria home is a deal. Instead, it means buyers may have different tradeoffs. Some can shift from a condo search to a townhome search. Others can move from a busy urban setting to a quieter residential street. The key is understanding what the price difference actually buys. The Homes Often Have More Character Victoria’s housing stock can feel very different from Vancouver’s. Buyers often notice older homes, unique layouts, mature gardens, smaller character properties, and neighbourhoods with a less uniform feel. That can be a strength, but it also requires a careful eye. Character homes may come with older plumbing, electrical updates, oil tanks, perimeter drain considerations, or renovation history that needs proper review. For buyers used to newer condo towers or denser urban development, Victoria homes may feel warmer and more personal. They may also require more due diligence. Neighbourhood Choice Matters More Than Expected Vancouver buyers often arrive with a clear idea of price and property type. Then they start touring and realize lifestyle can matter just as much as square footage. A buyer looking for walkability may prefer Fairfield, James Bay, Fernwood, Oak Bay, or parts of Saanich. A buyer focused on space and newer construction may look closer at Langford, Colwood, View Royal, or Sooke. A buyer planning for retirement or a quieter coastal lifestyle may consider Sidney, North Saanich, or Central Saanich. Victoria rewards buyers who compare neighbourhoods by lifestyle, not just price. The right area depends on how you want to live day to day. Condos and Strata Documents Need Attention Many Vancouver buyers already understand strata living, but Victoria’s condo and townhome market still needs careful review. Strata fees, depreciation reports, insurance, bylaws, rental rules, pet rules, parking, storage, and upcoming projects can affect long-term value. This is especially important for buyers moving from a larger city who may assume all strata buildings operate in a similar way. They do not. A well-run strata can offer comfort and predictability. A poorly planned one can create stress, special levies, and resale challenges. The Market Can Feel Balanced, But Local Conditions Still Vary Victoria’s spring 2026 market has offered buyers more choice. VREB reported 3,710 active listings at the end of April 2026, up 8.3% from April 2025, while describing the overall market as balanced. That balance gives buyers room to think, compare, and complete due diligence. Still, strong properties in desirable areas can move quickly. Buyers should not assume more inventory means every seller will negotiate heavily. The better approach is to understand each listing on its own terms: price, condition, location, competition, days on market, and seller motivation. The Lifestyle Shift Is Real For many buyers, moving from Vancouver to Victoria is not just about the home. It is about weekends, work-life balance, outdoor access, and a different relationship with the city. Victoria offers oceanfront walks, established neighbourhoods, local shops, cycling routes, parks, beaches, marinas, schools, and community hubs within a relatively compact region. That can make daily life feel more connected. The tradeoff is that Victoria is still a smaller city. Buyers should think carefully about employment, ferry travel, airport access, specialized amenities, and family logistics before choosing a neighbourhood. What Buyers Should Do Before Making the Move Before moving from Vancouver to Victoria, buyers should spend time comparing areas in person. Online research helps, but it cannot replace walking the neighbourhood, driving the commute, visiting local shops, and seeing how different areas feel at different times of day. A smart plan includes: Comparing lifestyle first, then price Reviewing local market data by area and property type Understanding strata documents before removing conditions Budgeting for moving costs, property transfer tax, insurance, and maintenance Working with a local real estate team that understands Greater Victoria’s micro-markets Moving from Vancouver to Victoria can be an excellent step, but the best decisions come from clarity. When buyers understand the differences early, they can move with more confidence and fewer surprises. For guidance on neighbourhoods, property types, and what your Vancouver budget may look like in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice before you start your search. Darlene S., 5-Star Review, via Google “Great team! Scott and Cal were extremely helpful in navigating a difficult sale. Their knowledge and strategies brought a quick offer to the table. I truly appreciated their on-going communications and generosity. Have already recommended them to friends and neighbours.” 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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    What Are the Biggest Mistakes First-Time Buyers Make in Victoria?
    April 21, 2026

    The biggest mistakes first-time buyers make in Victoria usually do not come from one huge decision. They come from several small assumptions that add up. In today’s market, buyers have more room to think than they did in tighter years, but that does not mean mistakes disappear. In March 2026, the Victoria Real Estate Board reported 3,261 active listings, up 7.9 per cent from a year earlier, and noted that current conditions are giving buyers more time for due diligence. That is helpful, but only if buyers use that time well.  A lot of first-time buyers assume the hardest part is getting an accepted offer. In reality, many of the biggest mistakes happen before that stage, especially around budgeting, property type, strata review, and understanding the true cost of ownership. Mistake 1: Budgeting Only for the Down Payment This is one of the biggest first-time buyer mistakes in Victoria. Many buyers focus on saving for the down payment but forget about closing costs, adjustments, inspection costs, legal fees, property transfer tax, and moving expenses. In Canada, insured purchases can still start with as little as 5 per cent down, depending on price, but that does not mean the total cash needed is small. CMHC says the minimum down payment is 5 per cent up to $500,000, then 10 per cent on the portion above that, and homes at $1.5 million or more require at least 20 per cent down.  In BC, many first-time buyers also misunderstand the Property Transfer Tax exemption. The Province says qualifying first-time buyers may be exempt on the first $500,000 of the purchase price if the fair market value is $835,000 or less, with a partial exemption up to $860,000.  The lesson is simple: a purchase budget is not the same as a showing budget. Mistake 2: Shopping by Monthly Payment Alone A lot of buyers begin with, “What can I afford per month?” That is a useful starting point, but it is not enough. In Victoria, ownership costs can vary significantly depending on property type. A condo may have lower purchase price but higher strata fees. A detached home may offer more control but larger maintenance exposure. A townhouse may sit somewhere in between. Buyers who focus only on mortgage payment often miss the full carrying cost picture. The better question is: what is my all-in monthly cost? what level still feels comfortable if rates, insurance, or strata fees change? how much room do I have left after ownership costs? That is where smart first-time buyer planning starts. Mistake 3: Underestimating the Importance of Strata Documents This is a major one in Victoria because condos and townhomes make up such a meaningful part of the entry-level market. Many first-time buyers fall in love with the unit and ignore the corporation behind it. That is risky. Meeting minutes, bylaws, rules, financial statements, depreciation reports, and contingency reserves often reveal things the photos never will. Buyers should be asking: are there upcoming special assessments? are there ongoing building issues? are rentals and pets allowed? are the rules compatible with how I want to live? is the strata proactive or reactive? The wrong strata can turn an affordable purchase into an expensive lesson. Mistake 4: Assuming More Inventory Means Every Buyer Has Huge Leverage Victoria’s current market gives buyers more choice, but that does not mean every property is soft or every seller is desperate. CREA’s Victoria market conditions data for Q1 2026 shows median days on market at 26 for single-family homes, 31 for townhouses, and 30 for condominiums. That means buyers generally have more breathing room than in a frenzy market, but good listings can still attract strong interest.  First-time buyers make mistakes when they go too far in either direction: panicking and overpaying because they assume everything will get away from them lowballing every listing because they assume the market is weak across the board A smarter approach is to adjust offer strategy based on the property, the competition, the days on market, and the seller’s position. Mistake 5: Treating the Rescission Period Like a Planning Tool BC’s Home Buyer Rescission Period gives buyers the right to rescind an accepted residential offer within three business days, excluding weekends and holidays. However, BCFSA makes clear that if the buyer rescinds, they must pay a rescission fee of 0.25 per cent of the purchase price to the seller.  This is where first-time buyers get confused. The rescission period is not a replacement for preparation. It is a consumer protection tool. Buyers who write offers before understanding financing, reviewing available documents, or speaking with the right professionals are creating stress that often could have been avoided. Mistake 6: Buying for Today Only A first home does not need to be a forever home. However, it should still work for more than six months. Some buyers focus so heavily on “getting in” that they ignore how the property fits their likely next chapter. That can lead to buying a home that becomes too small, too restrictive, too expensive to keep, or too hard to resell. Before buying, first-time buyers should think about: likely time horizon commute and routine storage and parking needs pet or rental restrictions whether the layout will still work in a few years A first purchase should create options, not just solve urgency. Mistake 7: Not Building the Right Team Early This mistake is easy to overlook because it feels less urgent than browsing listings. Still, first-time buyers often wait too long to line up a mortgage broker, real estate lawyer or notary, home inspector, and trusted agent. That delay creates rushed decisions later. A better process is to get the support structure in place before you fall in love with a home. That way, when the right property appears, you can move with confidence instead of scrambling. Mistake 8: Letting Headlines Drive the Entire Decision Buyers often swing between two extremes: “I need to buy now before it gets worse” “I should wait because everything feels uncertain” Neither reaction is a strategy. Victoria’s current market is more balanced than it was in high-pressure periods, but it is not one uniform story. VREB’s March 2026 update showed lower year-over-year sales, higher inventory, and a more measured environment for buyers and sellers. That does not automatically mean “buy now” or “wait.” It means first-time buyers need to make decisions based on their budget, timeline, and property fit, not just emotion. (vreb.org) What First-Time Buyers Should Do Instead The strongest first-time buyers in Victoria usually do five things well: they understand their full budget they compare property types honestly they review strata or property documents carefully they tailor offer strategy to the listing they make decisions based on fit, not panic That does not eliminate uncertainty. It reduces avoidable mistakes. Final Thought The biggest mistakes first-time buyers make in Victoria are usually preventable. They happen when buyers rush the wrong parts, ignore the fine print, or confuse market noise with strategy. If you are planning your first purchase and want grounded advice on budget, property type, and offer strategy, contact Faber Real Estate Group for practical guidance built around the current Victoria market.   Wilson, 5-Star Review, via Google “Amazing people there! They will help you through the entire process and will always make you feel like family. For those first time home buyers, don't be intimidated entering the market because they will explain every process and guide you through.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Renting vs. Buying in Victoria: Pros, Cons, and Current Numbers
    March 3, 2026

    Deciding between renting vs buying in Victoria BC is a major choice for many residents. Victoria’s housing market is moving in two directions at once: rents have been easing, while ownership prices (especially for single family homes) have stayed relatively firm. Using current numbers can help you make a decision based on reality, not headlines. Current Rental Market: Prices and Trends Victoria remains one of the pricier rental markets in Canada, but recent data shows rents have been trending down. Average asking rent (Victoria): about $2,224 across unit types (January 2026). One-bedroom: about $1,942 (January 2026), down 6.7% year-over-year. Two-bedroom: about $2,605 (January 2026), down 5.1% year-over-year. On supply, Greater Victoria is seeing more breathing room than recent years: Greater Victoria vacancy rate: about 3.3% (CMHC 2025 Rental Market Report, cited by the Province). What this means in plain terms: more choice, a bit more leverage for renters, and fewer situations where tenants feel forced to accept the first available unit. Buying in Victoria: Prices and Ownership Landscape On the ownership side, a helpful “apples-to-apples” metric is the MLS HPI benchmark (it tracks a typical home over time, rather than averages that can swing with the mix of what sold). From the Victoria Real Estate Board’s February 2026 market report (Victoria Core): Single family home benchmark: $1,307,400 (February 2026). Condominium benchmark: $545,600 (February 2026). Inventory has been healthier than the tightest years, with 2,903 active listings across the VREB region at the end of February 2026. That usually translates into more selection and a less frantic pace, but affordability still matters because the entry point remains high. Pros and Cons of Renting in Victoria Pros of Renting Lower upfront cost (no down payment or closing costs) Flexibility to relocate without selling No responsibility for major repairs and maintenance Recent rent softening and higher vacancy can improve negotiating position Cons of Renting Monthly payments do not build equity Rent is still expensive relative to local incomes Less control over the home and potential future rent increases Pros and Cons of Buying in Victoria Pros of Buying Builds equity over time More stability and control over your space Predictable payments if you choose a fixed-rate mortgage Cons of Buying High upfront costs (down payment, closing costs, property transfer tax, legal fees) Ongoing costs (maintenance, insurance, property taxes, condo fees if applicable) Market conditions vary by segment, and pricing is not guaranteed to rise year-to-year Making the Decision: What to Consider Your choice between renting vs buying in Victoria BC should match three things: Time horizon: Are you staying put for 3+ years, or is life still in motion? Cash position: Down payment, closing costs, and an emergency fund for ownership surprises Monthly reality: Compare rent to the true cost of ownership (mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance, and strata fees) A useful takeaway from the 2026 data is this: renting has become slightly less punishing than it was, while buying still requires a clear financial plan because benchmarks remain high. Final Thoughts Rents are easing and vacancy is up, while benchmark ownership prices in the Victoria Core have stayed relatively steady. That combination can create a “pause-and-plan” moment where renters gain options and buyers gain breathing room. If you want, we can run a simple rent vs buy comparison using your target neighbourhood, down payment, and comfort level with monthly costs, so your decision is grounded in real numbers. 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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