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    Drainage, Crawlspaces, and Basements: What Buyers Should Watch
    May 22, 2026

    Drainage and moisture in Victoria homes should be part of every buyer’s due diligence. A home may look warm, updated, and well-kept during a showing, but water management tells a deeper story about how the property performs through the wet season. Victoria is known for a milder climate, but rain still matters. The City of Victoria explains that stormwater systems collect runoff from hard surfaces like roads and roofs and move it away from homes and businesses to help prevent flooding. That simple idea applies at the property level too: water needs somewhere reliable to go. (victoria.ca) Why Drainage Matters So Much Water is one of the most important things to understand before buying a home. Poor drainage can affect: Foundations Basements Crawlspaces Siding Decks and balconies Landscaping Retaining walls Driveways Interior air quality Long-term maintenance costs A home does not need to be perfect, but buyers should understand how water moves around the property. The goal is to know whether the home is managing moisture well or whether there are signs of future risk. Victoria Homes Can Have Unique Moisture Considerations Greater Victoria has a wide range of housing types and land conditions. Buyers may be comparing older character homes, hillside properties, strata complexes, rural homes, low-lying lots, newer builds, and homes with crawlspaces or basement suites. Each type can carry different drainage questions. For example: Older homes may have aging perimeter drains Homes on slopes may receive water from uphill properties Low-lying lots may hold water longer after rain Crawlspaces may show signs of dampness or poor ventilation Basement suites may be more vulnerable if drainage is weak Retaining walls may suggest grading or water-pressure issues Strata properties may rely on shared drainage systems and maintenance planning This is why two homes in the same price range can carry very different long-term risk. Start Outside the Home Good drainage usually begins outside. During a showing, buyers should look at how the land slopes, where downspouts discharge, and whether water appears to be directed away from the foundation. Practical things to look for include: Gutters that are clean and properly connected Downspouts that discharge away from the home Soil or hardscaping sloped away from the foundation Low spots where water may pool Moss or staining near exterior walls Cracks in walkways or patios Retaining walls that lean or show staining Soft or soggy areas in the yard Drain grates, catch basins, or sump systems Evidence of past drainage work A buyer does not need to diagnose the issue during the showing. They just need to notice what deserves further review. Check Basements and Crawlspaces Carefully Basements and crawlspaces often reveal moisture concerns before the main living areas do. Buyers should pay attention to: Musty smells Staining on concrete or framing Efflorescence on foundation walls Standing water Damp insulation Rust on metal components Soft subfloor areas Dehumidifiers running constantly Fresh paint that may be covering old staining Stored items lifted off the floor Some moisture signs may be minor or manageable. Others may point to larger drainage, ventilation, or foundation concerns. A home inspection is especially important when a property has a crawlspace, basement suite, below-grade living area, or signs of past water entry. Roofs, Gutters, and Downspouts Matter Drainage is not only about the ground. Roof water can create major problems if it is not managed properly. Buyers should look at: Roof age and condition Missing or damaged shingles Clogged gutters Leaking gutter joints Short downspout extensions Water dumping near the foundation Overflow marks on siding Fascia or soffit staining Moss buildup Poor roof drainage on flat or low-slope sections A functioning roof and gutter system helps move water away from the home before it becomes a foundation or interior moisture issue. Moisture Can Affect More Than Repairs Drainage and moisture problems are not just about repair bills. They can affect how a home feels and functions. Moisture may contribute to: Odours Mold concerns Poor indoor air quality Damage to finishes Rot in structural components Pest issues Insurance questions Resale hesitation Future renovation limits Even when a buyer is comfortable taking on some work, they should understand the size and urgency of the issue before removing conditions. Ask the Right Questions When drainage or moisture concerns appear, buyers should ask direct questions. Useful questions include: Have the perimeter drains been replaced or repaired? When were the gutters and roof last maintained? Has there ever been water entry? Are there receipts or records for drainage work? Is there a sump pump, and how often does it run? Has the basement or crawlspace been professionally assessed? Does water pool anywhere on the property after heavy rain? Are there known issues with neighbouring runoff? Have any insurance claims been made for water damage? Are there strata minutes discussing drainage, leaks, or building-envelope concerns? For strata properties, drainage and moisture concerns may appear in meeting minutes, engineering reports, depreciation reports, or insurance documentation. Use the Inspection Period Wisely A general home inspection can identify visible signs of moisture, but buyers may need further review if something raises concern. Depending on the property, that may include: Drainage contractor review Perimeter drain scope Roof inspection Foundation assessment Sewer or storm line inspection Building envelope review Mold or indoor air quality assessment Strata document review Engineering advice for retaining walls or slopes The right level of due diligence depends on the age, condition, and complexity of the property. Do Not Panic Over Every Moisture Sign Moisture concerns should be taken seriously, but they should not automatically end the purchase. Some issues are routine maintenance. Others are manageable with proper repairs. A clogged gutter is different from chronic basement water entry. Poor downspout placement is different from foundation movement. The key is to separate small maintenance items from larger risk. Buyers should focus on: Cause Cost Urgency Repair history Professional advice Impact on future resale Whether the issue fits their budget and comfort level Clarity matters more than fear. The Bottom Line for Buyers Drainage and moisture in Victoria homes matter because water issues can affect comfort, maintenance, insurance, resale, and long-term ownership costs. A home may look excellent on the surface, but buyers should understand how it handles rain, runoff, and seasonal moisture. Before buying, look outside, check lower levels carefully, ask about past water issues, review documents, and use the inspection period to get the right professional advice. For buyers in Greater Victoria, strong due diligence is not about finding a perfect home. It is about understanding the home clearly before making a long-term decision. For advice on buying a home in Greater Victoria and reviewing property condition before subject removal, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear, local guidance before making your next move.     Lou N., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott is a knowledgeable, professional, dedicated and thorough expert in his field. Excellent at what he does and we couldn't have found a better realtor to guide us through one of the most important decisions in our lives.” 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 Active Listings Are Only One Part of the Market Story
    May 22, 2026

    Active listings in Greater Victoria are an important number to watch, but they do not tell the whole story on their own. Active listings in Greater Victoria show how much choice buyers have at a specific point in time, but they do not explain how quickly homes are selling, which price ranges are moving, or how different neighbourhoods are behaving. That matters because real estate headlines often focus on one number. Inventory is up. Sales are down. Prices are steady. Buyers have more choice. Sellers have more competition. Each statement may be true, but none of them gives the full picture by itself. More Listings Do Not Always Mean a Weak Market At the end of April 2026, the Victoria Real Estate Board reported 3,710 active listings for sale on the MLS, up 13.8% from March and 8.3% from April 2025. VREB also reported 643 property sales in April 2026, almost unchanged from April 2025 and up 11.1% from March. That combination matters. More listings can mean buyers have more choice. It can also mean sellers feel more competition. However, if sales remain steady, the market may still be balanced rather than weak. This is why inventory needs context. A market with more listings and weak demand feels very different from a market with more listings and steady buyer activity. The Type of Inventory Matters Not all listings compete with each other. A downtown condo is not competing with a Saanich family home in the same way. A Langford townhome may attract a different buyer than a waterfront property in Cordova Bay. A renovated home priced well may receive strong interest, while a similar property with deferred maintenance may sit longer. Buyers and sellers need to look beyond the total inventory number and ask: What type of homes are available? Which price ranges have the most competition? How much of the inventory is well-priced? How much of it needs major updates? Are buyers active in this specific segment? Are similar homes selling, or just sitting? A higher number of listings does not automatically mean buyers have more good options. Sometimes it means they have more to sort through. Sales Activity Tells You Whether Buyers Are Responding Active listings show supply. Sales show demand. When inventory rises but sales also remain active, it often points to a more balanced market. Buyers have more time to compare, but strong properties can still sell. Sellers may need to be more careful with pricing and presentation, but they are not necessarily in a distressed position. VREB described the April 2026 Greater Victoria market as balanced, with strong inventory and a wide range of properties at different price points. VREB also noted that market experience can vary depending on location and property type because Greater Victoria is made up of many micro-markets. That last point is key. The overall market may be balanced, while one neighbourhood feels competitive and another feels slower. Price Does Not Move the Same Way Everywhere Inventory levels can influence prices, but they do not control prices on their own. In April 2026, the MLS Home Price Index benchmark value for a single-family home in the Victoria Core was $1,339,100, down 1.2% from April 2025 but up from March 2026. The condo benchmark value in the Victoria Core was $558,300, down 0.8% from April 2025 but also up from March. This shows why simple market narratives can mislead people. A buyer may hear that inventory is up and expect major discounts. A seller may hear that prices are stable and assume their home can be priced aggressively. Both can be wrong. Pricing depends on condition, location, property type, buyer demand, competing listings, and recent comparable sales. Days on Market and Price Reductions Add More Clarity Active listings tell you what is available today. They do not show the full behaviour behind the market. To understand what is really happening, buyers and sellers should also look at: Days on market Recent sale prices List-to-sale price ratios Price reductions New listings coming on Expired or cancelled listings Competing inventory by neighbourhood Showing activity Offer activity These details help explain whether listings are building because homes are overpriced, because more sellers are entering the market, or because buyers are taking longer to decide. That distinction matters. What This Means for Buyers For buyers, more active listings can create better choice and less pressure. It may also create more confusion. When there are more options, it becomes easier to compare homes but harder to decide. Buyers may hesitate, hoping something better will appear. That can be reasonable in some segments, but risky in others. A strong buyer strategy should focus on: Knowing which neighbourhoods fit your lifestyle Comparing property condition carefully Watching how long similar homes are taking to sell Understanding whether the list price reflects current market reality Staying ready when a well-priced home appears More inventory gives buyers breathing room, but it does not remove the need for preparation. What This Means for Sellers For sellers, more active listings usually means presentation and pricing matter more. When buyers have more choice, they compare more carefully. They notice condition, layout, updates, maintenance, location, and price. A listing that may have stood out in a lower-inventory market may need stronger positioning when similar homes are available. Sellers should pay close attention to: How their home compares to active competition Whether recent sales support the asking price How buyers are responding after showings Whether the first two weeks generate enough interest Which improvements may improve buyer confidence Whether the marketing clearly explains the home’s value In a balanced market, sellers can still do well. They just need to compete on value, not assumption. The Better Question Is Not Just “How Many Listings Are There?” The better question is: what do the listings mean? Active listings are useful, but they are only one part of the market story. The number becomes more meaningful when paired with sales activity, buyer demand, pricing trends, property type, condition, and neighbourhood-level competition. For buyers, the goal is not just to find more homes. It is to find the right home at the right value. For sellers, the goal is not just to list in a market with activity. It is to position the home clearly within the choices buyers already have. If you are trying to understand what today’s inventory means for your next move, contact Faber Real Estate Group for local advice, current market insight, and a strategy based on your specific neighbourhood, price range, and goals. Michael F., 5-Star Review, via Google “If you want the best in town, stop your search – you've found them here in Cal and Scott Faber. We couldn't be happier with the results and highly recommend them to anyone in need of top-notch real estate services. Professional, patient, and caring results guaranteed.” 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 the $800K to $1M Price Range Feels So Competitive in Greater Victoria
    May 22, 2026

    The $800K to $1M range feels competitive in Greater Victoria because it attracts several buyer groups at once. First-time buyers stretching their budget, move-up buyers looking for more space, downsizers wanting comfort, and investors watching long-term value can all end up looking at similar properties. That does not mean every home in this price range receives multiple offers. It means the best homes often attract focused attention quickly, especially when they are well priced, well located, and easy to move into. Why This Price Range Matters In Greater Victoria, the $800K to $1M range can represent very different options depending on the neighbourhood. In some areas, it may mean a larger condo or townhome. In others, it may open the door to an older detached home, a smaller family home, or a property that needs updates. This is why buyers in this price range often feel like they are comparing very different trade-offs. They may be asking: Do we choose location or more space? Do we buy newer and smaller, or older with more potential? Should we stay closer to Victoria, or look further into the Westshore? Is it better to accept renovation work, or pay more for move-in-ready condition? Those questions create competition because many buyers are trying to solve the same affordability problem in different ways. More Inventory Does Not Mean Every Home Is Easy to Buy Greater Victoria has offered buyers more choice recently, but that does not remove competition from every segment. A balanced market can still feel competitive when many buyers focus on the same price band. This is especially true for homes that check the most common boxes. Buyers tend to respond quickly when a home offers a good layout, practical parking, manageable maintenance, strong location, outdoor space, and a price that feels fair compared to recent sales. That type of property is easier to understand. It also feels easier to justify. The Best Homes Still Stand Out Buyers today are more selective, but they are not inactive. When a home feels fairly priced and does not require a long list of compromises, it can still move quickly. In the $800K to $1M range, competition often comes down to quality. A home with good presentation, a functional floor plan, and fewer obvious future costs can stand out against properties that feel dated, awkward, or overpriced. This explains why some listings sit while others receive strong interest right away. The market is not treating every property the same. Detached Homes Create Extra Pressure For many buyers, this price range is where detached home ownership may still feel possible in parts of Greater Victoria. That makes the segment more emotional and more competitive. A buyer may not be comparing one detached home to another. They may be comparing several different lifestyles at once. Common options include: A detached home farther from town A townhome in a more central location A larger condo with lower maintenance An older home with renovation potential A newer home with less outdoor space When detached inventory appears in this price range, buyers often look closely. There may not be many options that fit both their budget and lifestyle goals. Townhomes Can Be Just as Competitive Townhomes in this range often appeal to a wide group of buyers. They can offer more space than a condo, less upkeep than a detached home, and a layout that works for families, downsizers, and professionals. That broad appeal creates demand. A well-located townhome with parking, storage, outdoor space, and reasonable strata fees can attract buyers from several directions. Some may be priced out of detached homes. Others may prefer lower maintenance without giving up too much space. This overlap is one reason the $800K to $1M range can feel tighter than the overall market suggests. Buyers Are Competing on Certainty, Not Just Price In a competitive segment, the highest offer does not always win by price alone. Sellers also look at confidence, timing, conditions, deposit strength, and how clean the offer is. That does not mean buyers should waive important protections without understanding the risk. It means preparation matters. Before writing an offer, buyers should be clear on: Financing comfort Deposit availability Inspection strategy Subject removal timeline Recent comparable sales The property’s likely resale appeal What they are willing to compromise on Strong preparation helps buyers move with confidence instead of reacting under pressure. Sellers Still Need to Be Careful For sellers, the $800K to $1M range can be a strong segment, but success is not automatic. Buyers have more information, more listings to compare, and less patience for ambitious pricing. A seller who assumes competition will solve everything can miss the mark. Presentation, pricing, and condition still matter. The strongest results often come from making the home easy to understand, easy to view, and easy to compare against recent sales. When buyers can quickly see the value, they are more likely to act. The Bottom Line The $800K to $1M range feels competitive because it captures many of the most practical buyer needs in Greater Victoria. It is where lifestyle, affordability, space, and long-term value often meet. For buyers, the key is preparation. For sellers, the key is positioning. In both cases, success comes from understanding the micro-market, not relying on broad headlines. If you are buying or selling in this price range, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice on pricing, strategy, and how to make confident decisions in the Greater Victoria market.   Justine D., 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal and Scott treated us like family. We had only 5 days to find a home and Cal cleared his schedule to make himself available to us. Cal guided us in the purchase of our home, as if we were a member of his family asking for advice. I knew we could trust Cal. His service to us did not stop with the purchase of our home…he helped us find trades people and provided information about rental incomes in the area. We were new to the Island and I honestly felt that Cal adopted us and has made sure we had everything we needed. We did not just gain a realtor, but a friend. If you are looking for a realtor you can TRUST, and will look out for YOUR interests— then Cal and Scott are IT!!! I would recommend them to anyone looking to buy a home on the Island. I should also mention that Cal negotiated an amazing price on the purchase of our home and made sure if something was not right when we took possession that it would be taken care of. Cal and Scott and realtors with integrity and kindness..” 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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    What to Expect in the May 2026 Victoria Real Estate Market
    May 1, 2026

    The May 2026 Victoria real estate market is likely to feel active, balanced, and competitive in selective pockets. April gave us a useful preview: sales improved from March, inventory continued to rise, and prices remained relatively steady. That combination usually creates a market where buyers have more choice, but sellers still have opportunity if they are priced properly from day one. According to the Victoria Real Estate Board, 643 properties sold in April 2026, which was 0.2% higher than April 2025 and 11.1% higher than March 2026. Active listings reached 3,710 at the end of April, up 13.8% from March and 8.3% from April 2025. In plain terms, more homes are available, but buyers are still participating. May Should Continue to Give Buyers More Choice May is typically one of the more active months of the spring market. Based on April’s increase in active listings, buyers should expect more selection across many property types and price points. That does not mean every listing will be a deal. It means buyers may have more room to compare homes, review options, and make decisions with less pressure than they would in a tight seller’s market. For buyers, May may bring: More new listings coming to market More ability to compare similar homes Less urgency on some properties Continued competition for well-priced homes in desirable locations More negotiating room on listings that are overpriced, dated, or sitting longer The key is not simply finding the lowest price. The better strategy is finding the right combination of location, condition, price, and long-term fit. Sellers Should Expect More Competition For sellers, May will likely be less forgiving than past spring markets where limited inventory did much of the work. With more active listings available, buyers have options. That means sellers need to be realistic about pricing, presentation, and timing. A home can still sell well in this type of market, but it needs a clear strategy. In May, sellers should pay close attention to: How many competing listings are active nearby How quickly similar homes are selling Whether buyers are booking showings early Feedback after the first week on market Price adjustments from competing sellers The first two weeks matter. If a listing launches too high, buyers may wait, compare, or move on to a better-positioned property. Prices Are Likely to Stay Relatively Stable The April benchmark numbers suggest stability rather than a sharp move in either direction. The Victoria Core single family benchmark price was $1,339,100 in April 2026, down 1.2% from April 2025 but up from March. The Victoria Core condo benchmark was $558,300, down 0.8% year over year but also up from March. That pattern matters. Prices are not surging, but they are also not falling dramatically across the board. May will likely continue that trend, with stronger pricing for homes that show well and more pressure on listings that feel overpriced compared with the rest of the market. The Market Will Feel Different by Neighbourhood May will not feel the same everywhere in Greater Victoria. A well-priced family home in Saanich may attract strong attention, while a dated condo with high strata fees may move more slowly. A townhome in the Westshore may compete differently than a character home in Fairfield or a new construction condo in Langford. This is why broad market headlines can be misleading. The real story in May will come down to micro-markets. Buyers and sellers should look closely at: Property type Neighbourhood Price range Days on market Condition Strata health, if applicable Recent comparable sales The overall market may be balanced, but each segment can behave differently. What Buyers Should Do in May Buyers should use May’s inventory carefully. More choice is helpful, but it can also create second-guessing. A practical approach is to separate homes into three categories: Strong fit: good location, fair price, solid condition Possible fit: good potential, but with tradeoffs Poor fit: too much compromise for the price This helps buyers stay focused. It also makes it easier to act when the right home appears. Buyers should also be ready before viewing homes. That means having financing reviewed, understanding closing costs, and knowing which conditions matter most before writing an offer. What Sellers Should Do in May Sellers should treat May as a strategy market, not a guessing market. The best results will likely come from homes that are: Priced against current competition Clean, prepared, and easy to show Marketed with strong photos and clear positioning Adjusted quickly if feedback shows resistance Presented with confidence, but not overconfidence In a market with more inventory, buyers notice the details. Small issues can create hesitation, especially when they have other homes to compare. The Bottom Line The May 2026 Victoria real estate market should remain balanced, active, and choice-driven. Buyers may have more room to think, but strong properties will still move. Sellers may still achieve good results, but only if their pricing and presentation match current market conditions. May will reward preparation on both sides. Buyers should be ready to act when value appears. Sellers should be ready to compete from the first day on market. If you are planning to buy or sell in Greater Victoria this spring, reach out to Faber Real Estate Group for advice based on your neighbourhood, property type, and timing.   Debbie N., 5-Star Review, via Google “From start to finish, Scott and Cal were amazing to work with. I hadn't moved in nearly 22 years and going from a house to a condo was a very difficult decision, but they were amazingly patient and responsive to my needs. This team doesn't just say that they care, they actually do. I couldn't have done this without them. I would recommend them to anyone. You will be in the best hands. Thank you Faber 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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    How Long Is It Taking to Sell in Victoria Right Now?
    April 18, 2026

    If you are wondering how long is it taking to sell in Victoria right now, the short answer is that homes are still selling, but most are not moving at the speed sellers saw in hotter markets. In the Victoria Real Estate Board area, the median time on market in the first quarter of 2026 was 26 days for single-family homes, 31 days for townhouses, and 30 days for condominiums. At the same time, inventory has grown, which means buyers have more choice and sellers need a sharper strategy. That does not mean every property takes a full month to sell. It means the market is more measured. Some homes still move quickly when they are priced well, presented properly, and listed in a segment with strong demand. Others sit longer because buyers now have more room to compare options, ask questions, and negotiate. VREB reported 579 sales in March 2026, up 24.5 per cent from February but down 5.5 per cent from March 2025, while active listings rose to 3,261, up 7.9 per cent from a year earlier. What the Current Selling Timelines Look Like Here is the clearest snapshot from CREA’s Victoria market conditions data for Q1 2026: Single-family homes: 26 median days on market Townhouses and row homes: 31 median days on market Condominiums: 30 median days on market In plain English, that tells us most well-positioned listings are not sitting for months, but sellers should also not expect a first weekend bidding war just because the property hit the market. Why Homes Are Taking Longer Than Last Year The biggest reason is choice. Compared with the first quarter of 2025, the median days on market increased across all three major property types. Single-family homes rose from 22 days to 26, townhouses rose from 22.5 to 31, and condominiums rose from 26 to 30. CREA also reported higher months of inventory for each category, which lines up with a more balanced market where buyers can take more time before committing. VREB said current conditions are creating fewer high-pressure transactions and allowing more time for due diligence. That is an important shift. Buyers are still active, but they are less likely to rush and more likely to compare value, review documents carefully, and negotiate when something feels overpriced. What This Means for Sellers A realistic expectation today is not simply, “How fast will my home sell?” A better question is, “How well does my home fit what buyers want at this price point?” Homes tend to sell faster when they offer: strong pricing from day one clean presentation and good photography a property type and location with steady demand fewer obvious objections around condition, strata documents, or layout Homes tend to take longer when they have: optimistic pricing based on old market expectations too much competition nearby dated presentation issues buyers think will cost them money after closing This is why two homes in the same neighbourhood can have very different timelines. Detached, Condo, and Townhouse Sellers Are Not Facing the Same Market Detached homes are moving a bit faster than condos and townhouses based on Q1 median days on market, but the gap is not huge. Detached homes came in at 26 days, compared with 30 for condos and 31 for townhouses. That said, property type is only part of the story. Price range, neighbourhood, strata health, parking, updates, and monthly carrying costs all affect how buyers respond. In a market with more inventory, buyers become more selective about compromises. The Mistake Sellers Make Right Now The most common mistake is assuming “average” means their home will sell quickly no matter what. Today’s Victoria market is more forgiving for buyers, not sellers. VREB’s March 2026 numbers show more listings and slower year-over-year sales, which means pricing and preparation matter more than they did in tighter conditions. A listing that starts too high can lose momentum, sit longer, and end up chasing the market down. So, How Long Is It Taking to Sell in Victoria Right Now? If you want the simple answer, the current median timeline is about four weeks, depending on property type: detached homes: about 26 days condos: about 30 days townhouses: about 31 days That is the broad market view. Your home could sell faster or slower depending on price, presentation, location, and competition. Final Thought The Victoria market is still active, but it is no longer a market where sellers can rely on urgency alone. If you want the best result, the goal is not just to list. It is to launch with the right price, the right presentation, and the right expectations from the start. If you want to know how your home would likely perform in today’s market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for a tailored pricing and selling strategy.   Lou N., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott is a knowledgeable, professional, dedicated and thorough expert in his field. Excellent at what he does and we couldn't have found a better realtor to guide us through one of the most important decisions in our lives.” 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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    What Your Budget Buys in Langford vs Saanich vs Victoria
    April 17, 2026

    For buyers in Greater Victoria, budget matters, but where you shop matters just as much. The same number can buy a newer condo in one area, an older townhouse in another, or a detached home in a completely different part of the region. That is especially true when comparing Langford, Saanich, and Victoria, where housing stock, neighbourhood feel, and price points can shift quickly from one municipality to the next. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, up 7.9% from March 2025, while also noting that Greater Victoria is made up of many micro-markets with different conditions and demand. This is why buyers who only search by price can miss the bigger picture. A $750,000 budget does not mean the same lifestyle in Langford as it does in Saanich or Victoria. In practical terms, your budget is really buying a mix of location, home type, age, condition, and future resale appeal. Langford’s planning direction continues to support a wider range of housing choices, including more mid-rise and ground-oriented homes, while Saanich is actively working to expand housing diversity in established neighbourhoods. Victoria, meanwhile, is made up of 12 distinct neighbourhoods, which helps explain why value can look very different from one pocket to another. Why These Three Areas Feel So Different Langford Langford often gives buyers more square footage and newer construction for the money. Many buyers looking here are trading a longer commute or a different neighbourhood feel for a more modern home, newer strata, or a better chance at ground-oriented living. The city’s current planning framework emphasizes mid-rise and ground-oriented housing choices, which supports that broader range of product. Saanich Saanich tends to sit in the middle. It offers a wide mix of housing, from condos and townhomes to established detached neighbourhoods, but pricing can move up quickly depending on school catchments, lot size, and proximity to key amenities. Its updated planning direction also points toward more housing diversity within existing neighbourhoods. Victoria Victoria usually commands a premium for location, walkability, and lifestyle. Buyers are often paying more for proximity to downtown, the Inner Harbour, Cook Street Village, Fernwood, Fairfield, or other well-known urban neighbourhoods. The City’s neighbourhood structure and evolving housing policy help explain why Victoria often offers less space for the same budget, but stronger lifestyle appeal for buyers who want to be close to the core. What Different Budgets May Buy You Around $500,000 to $650,000 At this level, most buyers are usually focused on condo living. In Langford, this budget can often put you in a newer one-bedroom or two-bedroom condo, sometimes in a more modern building with updated finishes, parking, and better overall building age. In Saanich, this same budget may still work for a condo, but buyers are often choosing between size and age. You may find a larger older suite or a smaller unit in a more desirable pocket. In Victoria, this range often means a condo as well, but the trade-off is usually space. You may buy into a more central and walkable lifestyle, but with less square footage or an older building than you would see in Langford. That lines up with broader market data. In March 2026, the Victoria Core MLS HPI benchmark for a condo was $553,800, while the region-wide average sale price for condo apartments was $634,393. Around $650,000 to $900,000 This is where the comparison starts to get more interesting. In Langford, buyers in this range may start stretching into larger condos, newer townhomes, or older small detached options depending on exact location and condition. In Saanich, this is often townhouse territory, larger condos, or entry-level detached opportunities in select pockets, though detached choices can still be limited. In Victoria, buyers may still be mostly looking at condos, townhomes, or half-duplex style options rather than detached homes, especially if staying close to the urban core is important. Region-wide in March 2026, the average sale price for a row or townhouse was $837,192, which makes this budget range one of the most competitive for buyers trying to move beyond condo living without jumping fully into higher detached-home pricing. Around $900,000 to $1.2 million This is often the transition zone where buyers start deciding between location and home type. In Langford, this budget may open the door to detached homes, including newer or more updated properties, especially when buyers are flexible on exact neighbourhood or lot size. In Saanich, this budget may buy an older detached home, a smaller lot, a home needing updates, or a strong townhouse alternative in a well-established area. In Victoria, this range often still requires compromise for detached housing. Buyers may need to consider smaller homes, more renovation work, duplex options, or moving slightly away from the most sought-after central pockets. That context matters because the Victoria Core single-family benchmark was $1,330,200 in March 2026, while the region-wide average sale price for single-family homes was just over $1.35 million. In other words, a budget around $1 million can still be powerful, but it does not stretch evenly across all three municipalities. Around $1.2 million to $1.6 million Now buyers start seeing a bigger difference in what their money can do. In Langford, this range can often buy a newer detached home with more interior space, a garage, and a family-oriented layout. In Saanich, this may put buyers into an established detached home in a desirable neighbourhood, though age, updates, and lot characteristics still matter a great deal. In Victoria, this budget may buy a detached home in select areas, but many buyers are still choosing between character, condition, parking, and walkability rather than getting all of them at once. This is where buyer strategy becomes more important than headline price. A family focused on space and newer finishings may lean Langford. A buyer focused on long-term neighbourhood stability and central access may prioritize Saanich. A buyer focused on walkability and city lifestyle may still prefer Victoria even if the home itself is smaller or older. Above $1.6 million At this level, all three areas offer more choice, but the type of value still differs. Langford may offer larger and newer detached homes with more modern layouts. Saanich may offer stronger lot value, established streets, and family-oriented neighbourhood appeal. Victoria may offer premium location, character homes, or higher-demand central properties where land and proximity carry more of the value story. For many buyers, this is the budget range where the decision stops being about “Can I buy?” and starts becoming “What kind of life do I want this home to support?” The Real Trade-Off Is Not Just Price The biggest mistake buyers make is assuming that more house always means better value. Sometimes the better move is buying less space in the right location. Sometimes it is buying a newer home with fewer maintenance surprises. Sometimes it is choosing an older home in a strong neighbourhood because the long-term livability is better for your family. The best budget is not the highest one. It is the one that aligns with how you want to live, how long you plan to stay, and how much compromise you are actually comfortable making. Final Thoughts If you are comparing Langford, Saanich, and Victoria, the smarter question is not just what your budget can buy. It is what kind of home, lifestyle, and future flexibility that budget can buy in each area. In today’s market, buyers have more room to compare options and do proper due diligence than they did in more competitive years, but the differences between micro-markets still matter. The right strategy is to compare the same budget across multiple municipalities before committing too early to one path. VREB says current supply and consumer demand have created conditions with less pressure and more time for decision-making, which makes this kind of side-by-side comparison especially worthwhile right now. If you want help comparing what your budget could realistically buy in Langford, Saanich, and Victoria right now, contact Faber Real Estate Group for tailored advice and a clear plan based on your goals. Nilo M., 5-Star Review, via Google “This group have a high level of commitment to help and to put thier client’s need ahead of their personal gain. They deal and engage with integrity and wisdom on how it will work for both the seller and the clients. I experienced it first hand in this crazy and difficult season. We just bought a home at Glanford area, and they are always there for us, every step of the way. They are real and can be trusted.” 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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