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    Why the Cheapest Home Can Cost More Over Time.
    May 29, 2026

    The cheapest home may cost more over time when the lower purchase price hides repairs, poor layout, location compromises, or resale challenges. For many buyers, especially in a high-cost market like Greater Victoria, the lowest price can feel like the safest choice. But the true cost of a home is not only what you pay on completion day. It is what you spend, fix, tolerate, and potentially lose when it is time to sell. A good purchase is not always the cheapest option. It is the home that fits your budget today while protecting your flexibility tomorrow. The Lowest Price Can Hide Bigger Repairs Some homes are priced lower for a reason. They may need a roof, perimeter drain work, windows, electrical updates, plumbing repairs, or heating system improvements. These costs can arrive quickly after possession, especially if the home has been under-maintained. A lower purchase price may still make sense if the buyer understands the work required. The risk comes when buyers stretch to purchase the home, then discover they do not have enough room left in the budget for repairs. Before choosing the cheaper option, buyers should ask: What repairs are urgent? What can wait? What might affect insurance or financing? What will this home likely need over the next five years? A home inspection is not just about finding problems. It helps buyers understand the cost of ownership. Location Trade-Offs Can Add Up A cheaper home may be farther from work, schools, transit, shops, or daily routines. At first, that trade-off can feel manageable. Over time, extra commuting, fuel, parking, and time can change the value equation. In Greater Victoria, small location differences can have a major effect on lifestyle. A home that saves money upfront may cost more if it adds stress to your daily schedule or makes future resale harder. This does not mean every buyer needs to live in a central neighbourhood. It means location should be measured beyond price. Convenience, commute, school catchments, walkability, and access to services all shape long-term value. Layout Problems Are Harder to Fix Than Paint Cosmetic issues are often easier to solve than functional ones. Paint, flooring, lighting, and hardware can change how a home feels. A poor layout is different. A home may be cheaper because it has awkward bedrooms, limited storage, poor natural light, low ceilings, too many stairs, or a kitchen that does not work well for daily life. These issues can affect enjoyment and resale. Buyers sometimes focus on what they can change and overlook what they cannot change easily. Before buying the cheapest home, consider whether the home’s layout supports how people actually live. Monthly Costs Matter More Than Purchase Price Alone The cheapest home may cost more if the ongoing expenses are higher. Older homes can come with higher heating bills, more maintenance, and larger repair needs. Some strata properties may have lower prices but higher monthly fees, upcoming special levies, or deferred maintenance. A smart comparison looks at the full monthly picture: Mortgage payment Property taxes Insurance Strata fees, if applicable Utilities Repairs and maintenance Commuting and parking costs Short-term and long-term improvement needs A slightly more expensive home with better condition, stronger efficiency, and fewer surprise costs may be more affordable over time. Resale Value Should Be Part of the Decision Most buyers do not want to think about selling before they have even moved in. But resale matters. Life changes. Jobs change. Families grow. Timelines shift. A home with limited buyer appeal may be harder to sell later. This can include unusual layouts, difficult access, poor parking, high noise exposure, major deferred maintenance, or a location with a smaller buyer pool. The goal is not to buy only for the next owner. The goal is to avoid buying something that solves today’s budget problem while creating tomorrow’s exit problem. When the Cheapest Home Does Make Sense Sometimes the cheapest home is the right choice. It may be a strong opportunity if the location is good, the inspection is reasonable, the layout works, and the buyer has budget room for improvements. The key is clarity. A lower price should come with a clear plan, not wishful thinking. The cheapest home may cost more when buyers overlook the real reason it is cheaper. But when the risks are understood, priced properly, and matched to the buyer’s goals, a lower-priced home can still be a smart move. The Bottom Line Price is only one part of value. The better question is not “What is the cheapest home I can buy?” It is “Which home gives me the best balance of affordability, condition, location, lifestyle, and resale confidence?” In Greater Victoria, where every neighbourhood and property type can behave differently, that kind of decision deserves careful advice. Before choosing the lowest-priced option, take time to understand the full cost of owning it. For guidance on comparing homes, reviewing trade-offs, or understanding long-term value in the Greater Victoria market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice or information.   Carmel S., 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal Faber was our realtor for buying our house in Brentwood Bay. Subsequently he was our realtor for buying a business property for us as well along with help from his son Scott Faber. I have had more interaction with Cal and Scott and so I will say with enthusiasm that Cal was excellent in addressing our concerns, finding out details about our properties, he went beyond the call of duty to support us as new owners, both Cal and his son are conscientious, quick to respond with concerns, very kind and thoughtful and wonderful to work with. It would be hard to find more knowledgable and helpful 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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