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    What This Spring Market Is Teaching Sellers About Pricing and Presentation
    May 22, 2026

    The Spring 2026 Greater Victoria real estate market is teaching buyers and sellers the same lesson from different angles: more choice does not remove the need for strategy. Buyers have more room to compare. Sellers have more competition. But the market has not become simple. Good homes still attract attention, overpriced listings still struggle, and broad headlines still miss the details that matter most. In April 2026, the Victoria Real Estate Board reported 643 property sales, almost unchanged from 642 sales in April 2025, and up 11.1% from March 2026. Active listings reached 3,710 at month-end, up 13.8% from March and 8.3% from April 2025. More Listings Are Giving Buyers Breathing Room The biggest shift this spring is choice. Buyers are seeing more homes come to market, which can reduce some of the pressure that comes with rushed decisions. Instead of feeling forced to act on every suitable listing, buyers can compare more carefully. That extra choice can help buyers: Review condition more thoughtfully Compare neighbourhoods more clearly Ask better questions Include appropriate conditions Think through long-term costs Avoid panic-based decisions This does not mean every buyer has strong negotiating power. It means buyers have more room to make informed decisions, especially in property segments with more available inventory. Stable Demand Still Matters More listings do not automatically mean prices fall quickly. Spring 2026 has shown that buyer demand is still present. Sales increased from March to April, and April sales were almost identical to the same month last year. That suggests buyers have not disappeared. They are simply being more selective. This is important for both sides. Buyers should not assume every seller will accept a major discount. Sellers should not assume that demand alone will carry an overpriced listing. The market is active, but more careful. Prices Are Moving Differently by Segment The Spring 2026 Greater Victoria real estate market also shows why local details matter. In the Victoria Core, the single-family benchmark price was $1,339,100 in April 2026, down 1.2% from April 2025 but up from March 2026. The condo benchmark was $558,300, down 0.8% year-over-year. Those are not dramatic year-over-year changes. They point to a market where pricing has softened in some areas, but not collapsed. This is why buyers and sellers should be careful with broad statements like “prices are dropping” or “the market is strong.” Both can be true in different pockets. Buyers Are Learning to Be Patient, Not Passive Spring 2026 is teaching buyers that patience can be useful, but passivity can be costly. A buyer who waits thoughtfully may avoid overpaying or choosing the wrong home. But a buyer who assumes better options will always appear may miss a property that fits their budget, lifestyle, and long-term needs. The better approach is to be prepared. Buyers should know: Their financing range Their ideal neighbourhoods Their non-negotiables Their flexible items Their comfort level with repairs Their monthly carrying costs Their offer strategy before the right home appears More choice helps most when buyers already know what they are looking for. Sellers Are Learning That Presentation Matters When buyers have more options, listing presentation becomes more important. A home that is clean, well-prepared, properly priced, and easy to understand has a better chance of standing out. A home with poor photos, unclear value, deferred maintenance, or an ambitious price may sit longer. Spring 2026 is reminding sellers that the launch matters. Before listing, sellers should think carefully about: Pricing strategy Competing listings Showing condition Repairs and touch-ups Professional photography Listing copy Floor plans Storage and decluttering Curb appeal Buyer objections Presentation is not about pretending a home is perfect. It is about reducing buyer hesitation. Sellers Are Also Learning to Listen Faster In a market with more listings, feedback becomes more valuable. If showings are low, the market may be rejecting the price, presentation, or marketing. If showings are strong but offers are not coming, buyers may like the home but see risk, condition issues, or better value elsewhere. Sellers do not need to react emotionally to every comment. But they should look for patterns. Useful questions include: Are buyers comparing this home to stronger options? Is the price aligned with current competition? Are the photos creating enough interest? Are showings producing consistent objections? Is the home easy to access? Does the property feel move-in ready for the price? The faster sellers understand the feedback, the easier it is to adjust strategically. Micro-Markets Still Matter Most Greater Victoria is not one market. A condo in downtown Victoria, a family home in Saanich, a townhouse in Langford, a downsizer property in Sidney, and a character home near Cook Street Village can all behave differently in the same season. Spring 2026 is reinforcing that buyers and sellers need property-specific advice, not just market headlines. The right strategy depends on: Municipality Neighbourhood Property type Price range Condition Strata health Lot size Walkability School catchment Buyer pool This is where broad statistics become a starting point, not the final answer. What Buyers Should Take From Spring 2026 For buyers, the lesson is simple: use the extra choice well. That means slowing down enough to compare, but staying ready enough to act when the right home appears. A strong buyer strategy includes: Reviewing new listings regularly Understanding fair market value Comparing total monthly costs Reading strata and title details carefully Keeping financing up to date Avoiding emotional overreaction Writing offers that match the property and market The best buyers this spring are not necessarily the most aggressive. They are the most prepared. What Sellers Should Take From Spring 2026 For sellers, the lesson is equally clear: the market will reward clarity. A listing needs to make sense from the first online impression through the showing and negotiation process. A strong seller strategy includes: Pricing with current competition in mind Preparing the home before launch Removing unnecessary buyer objections Marketing the property clearly Tracking showing activity Responding to feedback Adjusting before the listing feels stale Sellers can still do well in this market. But strategy matters more when buyers have options. The Bottom Line The Spring 2026 Greater Victoria real estate market is balanced, active, and more selective. Buyers have more choice, but not unlimited leverage. Sellers still have opportunity, but they need stronger pricing, preparation, and presentation. This spring is not teaching buyers and sellers to wait on the sidelines. It is teaching them to make better decisions. For advice on buying or selling in Greater Victoria’s current market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear, local guidance before making your next move.   Gigi S., 5-Star Review, via Google Scott and his team are a highly professional group . Scott is a very friendly person , cares for needs and requirements of his client . He makes sure that the property you are buying is your dream place and where you would like to see yourself staying forever. I'm glad that we found such a great 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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    What Value Really Means to Today’s Buyers
    May 20, 2026

    Sellers need to compete on value when buyers have more options. Price matters, but it is not the only thing buyers compare. They also look at condition, presentation, location, maintenance, layout, documents, flexibility, and how confident the home makes them feel. A lower price can attract attention, but it does not always solve buyer hesitation. In many cases, sellers get better results by making the home easier to understand, easier to trust, and easier to choose. Buyers Do Not Only Ask, “Is It Cheap?” Most buyers are not looking for the lowest-priced home at any cost. They are looking for the best fit within their budget. That means they are often asking: Does this home feel well cared for? Does the price match the condition? Will this home need expensive repairs? Is the layout practical? Are the documents clear? Are there future costs I should worry about? Does this home feel better than the alternatives? When buyers have more listings to compare, value becomes more important than price alone. Price Gets Attention, But Value Builds Confidence A price reduction may bring more eyes to a listing. But once buyers are inside the home, they still need to feel confident. Value comes from the full picture. That can include: A realistic asking price Clean presentation Good photography Strong maintenance records Clear disclosure Practical improvements Organized documents Flexible possession options Strong curb appeal A home that feels easy to live in The best listing strategy is not simply “price lower.” It is to help buyers see why the home makes sense. Presentation Is Part of Value Presentation has a direct effect on perceived value. A clean, bright, well-organized home often feels more cared for. Buyers may not consciously assign a dollar amount to fresh paint, clean windows, tidy landscaping, or thoughtful staging, but those details affect how they feel. Poor presentation can make buyers question the price, even if the price is fair. Sellers should focus on: Decluttering Deep cleaning Improving lighting Touching up paint Fixing small repairs Making storage areas look functional Tidying outdoor spaces Creating clear room purpose These steps do not change the legal size of the home, but they can change how buyers experience it. Condition Can Matter More Than a Small Discount Some buyers would rather pay a fair price for a well-maintained home than chase a cheaper listing with uncertainty. If a home has deferred maintenance, buyers may mentally subtract more than the actual repair cost. They may also worry about the time, stress, and risk involved. This is why condition matters. A seller may create more value by addressing obvious concerns before listing, such as: Minor leaks Damaged trim Burnt-out lights Loose handles Dirty carpets Overgrown landscaping Peeling paint Poor odours Missing documentation Unclear repair history Small issues can create larger doubt. Reducing doubt can protect value. Buyers Compare the Total Cost of Ownership The purchase price is only one part of the decision. Buyers also think about: Mortgage payment Property taxes Insurance Strata fees Utilities Repairs Renovations Maintenance Commuting costs Future resale A home may be priced lower but still feel expensive if it needs work or has unclear future costs. A slightly higher-priced home may feel like better value if it is clean, efficient, well-maintained, and easy to move into. For sellers, the goal is to show why the property is worth choosing, not just why it is worth viewing. Documents and Transparency Add Value Buyers become more confident when they can understand the property clearly. For detached homes, this may include permits, receipts, maintenance records, renovation details, surveys, title information, or inspection history. For strata properties, buyers may review meeting minutes, depreciation reports, Form B, budgets, bylaws, insurance summaries, and contingency reserve fund details. Organized information helps reduce uncertainty. It can also make the transaction feel smoother. A seller who is prepared often feels more credible than a seller who is reactive. Flexibility Can Create Value Value is not always physical. Sometimes it comes from terms. Depending on the buyer, flexibility around possession dates, inclusions, subjects, or access for due diligence can make the home more attractive. For example, a buyer may value: A possession date that matches their move Clear communication Easy showing access A reasonable subject timeline Included appliances or fixtures Early access for measurements or trades A seller who responds quickly Terms do not replace price, but they can make an offer easier to write. Competing on Value Helps Avoid a Race to the Bottom If sellers focus only on price, the strategy can become reactive. One nearby listing reduces, then another follows, and suddenly sellers are competing mainly by discount. That may be necessary in some cases, especially if the original price was too high. But it should not be the only strategy. A better question is: How can this home become the most compelling option in its category? That may involve price, but it may also involve better preparation, better marketing, clearer information, stronger presentation, and fewer buyer objections. The Bottom Line for Sellers Sellers need to compete on value because buyers are comparing more than asking prices. They are comparing confidence, condition, presentation, total cost, risk, and lifestyle fit. A strong listing does not rely on one lever. It brings pricing, preparation, marketing, and negotiation together so buyers understand why the home is worth serious consideration. In Greater Victoria, where every neighbourhood and property type can behave differently, the best strategy is not simply to be cheaper. It is to be clearer, stronger, and easier to choose. For advice on preparing, pricing, and positioning your home for sale in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear, local guidance before making your next move.   Dom L., 5-Star Review, via Google “After months of searching and giving us their honest advice, we finally bought a place while out of town. We only had a virtual tour of the site, but we felt very comfortable making an offer because they understood what we were looking for. I would recommend going to Faber group as they are knowledgeable, professional and resourceful.” 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 a Well-Documented Home Feels Safer to Buyers
    May 15, 2026

    Maintenance records for home buyers can make a major difference during the decision-making process. When buyers review a home, they are not only looking at the layout, finishes, and location. They are also trying to understand how well the property has been cared for and what costs may be coming next. A home can show beautifully, but buyers still want proof. Receipts, invoices, warranties, permits, service records, and upgrade timelines help turn a seller’s word into something more concrete. In a market where buyers have more choice, that level of clarity can help a property stand out. Buyers Want Confidence, Not Guesswork Most buyers understand that every home requires maintenance. What creates concern is uncertainty. If a roof looks older, buyers want to know when it was replaced. If there is a heat pump, they want to know whether it has been serviced. If windows, plumbing, drainage, appliances, or electrical work have been updated, they want to see what was done and when. Good records help answer important questions: Has the home been cared for consistently? Were repairs done professionally? Are warranties still available? What major expenses may be coming soon? Has the seller kept track of important work? The more information a buyer has, the easier it becomes for them to make a confident decision. Records Can Reduce Buyer Anxiety Buying a home is a large financial commitment. Even experienced buyers can feel nervous about hidden issues, future repairs, or surprises after possession. Maintenance records help reduce that anxiety because they show a history of care. They tell the buyer that the seller paid attention, addressed issues, and understood the responsibility of ownership. This can be especially helpful for: Older character homes Rural properties Homes with septic systems or wells Condos and townhomes with mechanical upgrades Properties with major renovations Homes with newer systems that may still be under warranty A buyer may still order an inspection, but strong records can make the inspection process feel less uncertain. Maintenance Records Can Support Value Buyers often compare homes quickly. Two homes may have similar size, location, and finishes, but the one with clearer documentation may feel like the safer choice. For example, a seller may say the roof is newer. However, an invoice showing the date, contractor, materials, and warranty gives that claim more weight. The same applies to heat pumps, perimeter drains, hot water tanks, decks, electrical work, and window replacements. That documentation can help buyers understand why one home may be priced higher than another. It does not guarantee a higher sale price. However, it can support the value story and reduce friction during negotiations. Buyers Notice When Records Are Missing Missing records do not always mean something is wrong. Many homeowners simply do not keep organized files. However, from a buyer’s perspective, missing information can create doubt. When buyers cannot verify work, they may: Build in a larger risk cushion Ask more questions Request further inspections Negotiate more aggressively Choose another home with clearer documentation In other words, poor record-keeping can make a well-maintained home feel less certain than it actually is. Records Matter More in a Balanced Market When inventory is tight, buyers may accept more unknowns because they have fewer choices. In a more balanced market, buyers often compare properties more carefully. That means maintenance records for home buyers can become part of the seller’s marketing advantage. They help answer questions before they become objections. Clear records can also help keep a transaction moving after an offer is accepted. If buyers ask for documentation during subject removal, the seller can respond quickly instead of scrambling to find receipts or confirm details. What Sellers Should Keep Sellers do not need a perfect binder, but they should gather the most important records before listing. Useful documents may include: Roof replacement invoices Heating and cooling service records Hot water tank installation details Appliance warranties and manuals Renovation invoices Electrical or plumbing permits Window and door receipts Septic or well records, if applicable Strata documents, depreciation reports, and meeting minutes for strata properties Contractor information for major work Even a simple digital folder can help. The goal is not to overwhelm buyers. The goal is to make the home easier to understand. Presentation Matters A pile of random receipts is better than nothing, but organized records are much more useful. Before listing, sellers can sort documents by category: Exterior and roof Heating and cooling Plumbing and electrical Appliances Renovations Strata or property systems Warranties and manuals This makes it easier for the listing agent, buyer’s agent, inspector, and buyer to find relevant information quickly. It also sends a subtle message: this home has been managed with care. A Well-Documented Home Feels Safer Buyers are not only buying the visible parts of a property. They are also buying its history. Maintenance records help tell that history in a way buyers can trust. They show care, reduce uncertainty, and support the overall value of the home. For sellers, they can make the property feel more transparent and easier to buy. For buyers, they can turn hesitation into confidence. In real estate, trust often comes from clarity. Maintenance records are one of the simplest ways to create it. For help preparing your home for market and organizing the details buyers care about most, contact Faber Real Estate Group for practical, local guidance before you list. Yen-Shang W., 5-Star Review, via Google “As a first-time homebuyer, I honestly had no idea what to expect. But Zach walked me through everything with patience and clarity. He took care of all the little things I wouldn’t have thought of and made what could have been a stressful process feel surprisingly smooth and easy. I’m really grateful for his guidance and professionalism—and most of all, for helping me find a place I can now call home. Thank you so much, Zach!” 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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    When Showings Slow Down: What Sellers Should Do Next
    April 25, 2026

    Showings slowing down can feel discouraging, especially if your home launched with strong activity and then suddenly went quiet. For sellers, fewer showings often raise the same question: is something wrong with the listing, the price, the market, or the home itself? The answer depends on timing. A slow week does not always mean your listing is failing. But if showing activity drops and stays low, it is usually a signal that buyers are hesitating. The key is to understand why before making the wrong adjustment. In Greater Victoria, where buyers can be selective when inventory gives them more choice, sellers need to respond with strategy, not panic. First, Do Not Overreact to One Quiet Week Every listing has a natural rhythm. The first week or two often brings the most attention because the property is new. Active buyers, agents, and saved searches notice it right away. After that first wave, activity may slow. That does not automatically mean the home is overpriced. Showings can be affected by: Weather Long weekends School schedules Interest rate news Competing new listings Buyer fatigue Seasonal timing Local events Poor showing availability A sudden increase in similar inventory Before making a major change, look at the pattern. One quiet stretch is different from three weeks of steady decline. Understand What Slower Showings Usually Mean When showings slow down, the market may be sending one of several messages. It may mean: Buyers think the price is high The listing photos are not creating enough interest The home is competing against stronger options The property is not easy to show The location or layout narrows the buyer pool The home needs better presentation Buyers are waiting for a price adjustment The listing has lost new-listing momentum The mistake is assuming every slowdown has the same cause. Sometimes the price needs to change. Sometimes the marketing needs to improve. Sometimes the home needs better preparation. Sometimes the listing simply needs a fresh strategy to reach the right buyers. Review the Price Against Today’s Competition Pricing is not only about what your home is worth in theory. It is also about what else buyers can choose right now. If showings slow down, review your active competition. Ask: What else is available in the same price range? Are similar homes offering more space, better updates, or stronger locations? Have competing listings reduced their price? Are buyers choosing newer homes, better layouts, or better condition? Is your home priced against sold data from a stronger market? Are you competing with homes that have sat and already adjusted? Sellers often focus on what recently sold. Buyers focus on what they can buy today. That difference matters. Look at the Listing Through a Buyer’s Eyes When you live in a home, you see its memories, improvements, and potential. Buyers see comparison. They ask: Is this worth the price? What work does it need? How does it compare to the next home? Can I move in comfortably? Will I need to spend money right away? Does the home feel better in person than online? Is there a reason this has not sold yet? If showings are slowing down, step back and look at the listing the way a buyer would. Not emotionally. Practically. The goal is not to criticize the home. The goal is to understand the buyer’s hesitation. Study Online Engagement Before buyers book a showing, they usually interact with the listing online. If online views are strong but showings are low, buyers may be interested but not convinced enough to visit. If online views are weak, the issue may be exposure, presentation, price positioning, or the listing’s ability to stand out. Review: Listing views Saves or favourites Click-through activity Showing requests Open house traffic Agent inquiries Time on market compared with similar listings A listing can fail quietly online before it ever fails in person. If the photos, headline, description, or price do not create enough urgency, buyers may simply move on. Pay Close Attention to Showing Feedback Showing feedback is not perfect, but patterns matter. One buyer’s opinion may not mean much. Five buyers saying the same thing should get your attention. Look for repeated comments about: Price Condition Layout Odour Lighting Privacy Noise Parking Stairs Yard usability Needed updates Strata fees Competing options Feedback can be uncomfortable, but it is useful. Buyers are not always right, but they are the market. If the same concern keeps coming up, your strategy should respond to it. Make the Home Easier to Show Sometimes showings slow down because the home is difficult to access. Buyers may skip a property if showing windows are too limited, notice requirements are too long, tenants are difficult to coordinate with, or the home is not available during peak times. If your home is on the market, convenience matters. Consider: Allowing more flexible showing times Reducing unnecessary notice requirements Keeping the home showing-ready Making open houses easier to host Avoiding too many blocked-out times Ensuring pets are managed during showings Making access instructions simple The easier a home is to show, the more chances it has to sell. A great listing can lose momentum if buyers cannot get in when they are ready. Refresh the Presentation If activity slows, small presentation changes can help. This does not always mean major staging or expensive renovations. Often, the goal is to remove friction and make the home feel easier to imagine. Consider: Decluttering key rooms Improving lighting Cleaning windows Touching up paint Removing worn mats or tired decor Improving curb appeal Rearranging furniture Adding simple staging pieces Reducing personal items Making storage areas feel organized Buyers do not need perfection. They need confidence. A home that feels clean, cared for, and easy to move into can regain attention. Revisit the Photos and Listing Description Sometimes the home is better than the listing makes it look. If showings slow down and feedback from visitors is positive, the issue may be the online presentation. Ask: Do the photos show the strongest features first? Is the floor plan easy to understand? Is the lighting flattering? Are outdoor spaces shown clearly? Does the description explain the lifestyle and value? Are important upgrades mentioned? Does the listing sound generic? Are the best features buried too low? A listing needs to create a reason for buyers to book a showing. If the home has strong features but they are not obvious online, refresh the marketing before assuming the market is rejecting the property. Consider a New Marketing Angle Not every property should be marketed the same way. If the first wave of buyers does not respond, your listing may need a sharper message. For example: A family home should highlight layout, schools, storage, yard, and daily function A condo should highlight building strength, strata health, parking, storage, and lifestyle A downsizer-friendly home should highlight main-level living, low maintenance, and convenience An investor-friendly property should highlight rental potential, flexibility, and location A renovation opportunity should highlight lot, layout, location, and upside Sometimes the issue is not the home. It is that the wrong buyer story is being told. Know When a Price Adjustment Is the Right Move Price reductions can work when they are strategic. They should not be treated as a failure. In a market where buyers have options, price adjustments are often part of aligning with current demand. A price change may be worth considering if: Showings have dropped significantly Feedback repeatedly mentions price Similar homes are selling while yours sits Competing listings offer more value Online views are high but showing requests are low The home has been passed over by active buyers There are no serious second showings or offers The original price was based on optimistic expectations The goal of a price adjustment is not just to lower the price. The goal is to reposition the listing where buyers take action. A small reduction may not be enough if it does not change how buyers see the home. Do Not Chase the Market Down Slowly One of the biggest seller mistakes is making small, hesitant adjustments after the market has already moved. If a home sits too long, buyers may start to assume there is a problem. The listing can become stale. A late reduction may not create the same excitement it would have created earlier. If a price adjustment is needed, it should be meaningful enough to create renewed attention. The question should be: “What price will make buyers reconsider this property?” Not: “What is the smallest reduction we can tolerate?” Compare Against Sold Listings and Active Listings A strong pricing review should look at both sides of the market. Sold listings show what buyers recently accepted. Active listings show what buyers are comparing you against now. Pending listings, when available, can also help reveal where demand is actually moving. Your pricing strategy should consider: Similar homes that sold Similar homes that did not sell Current active competition Recent price reductions Days on market Condition differences Location differences Buyer feedback Showing trends Pricing is not static. It must respond to what buyers are doing now. Avoid Blaming Buyers When showings slow down, it is easy to say buyers are unrealistic. Sometimes buyers do have high expectations. But if multiple buyers are choosing other homes or not booking showings, the listing needs to adjust to the market. That adjustment may be price, presentation, access, marketing, or expectations. The seller’s job is not to convince every buyer. It is to position the property so the right buyer sees the value. What Not to Do When Showings Slow Down Avoid these common mistakes: Ignoring feedback Waiting too long to adjust Making tiny price reductions with no strategy Refusing to improve presentation Assuming more time will solve everything Comparing only to the highest recent sale Blaming the market without studying the competition Making showings difficult Changing marketing without reviewing price Reducing price without improving presentation A slow listing needs diagnosis, not guesswork. A Simple Seller Checklist If showings slow down, review the following: Has the market changed since launch? What new competition has appeared? Are similar homes selling? What feedback keeps repeating? Are showings easy to book? Does the home show well in person? Does the online listing create enough interest? Is the price aligned with today’s options? Is the marketing speaking to the right buyer? Would a buyer choose this home over the competition? This checklist helps sellers move from emotion to action. Final Thoughts When showings slow down, the worst response is to do nothing and hope the market changes. The best response is to diagnose the issue clearly. Sometimes the solution is a price adjustment. Sometimes it is better presentation, improved access, stronger marketing, or a clearer buyer story. In many cases, it is a combination of several small changes that help the listing regain momentum. A slower showing pattern is not always bad news. It is information. Used properly, that information can help sellers make smarter decisions and improve their chances of a successful sale. If your home is listed and showings have slowed down, contact Faber Real Estate Group for a practical review of your pricing, presentation, and marketing strategy.   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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    Relist or Wait? How Sellers Should Respond When a Home Sits
    April 22, 2026

    If you are wondering whether to relist or wait if your home is not selling, you are not alone. In today’s Greater Victoria market, many sellers are asking whether they should relist or wait if your home is not selling after showings slow down, feedback turns vague, or the listing simply sits. The real answer is that neither option fixes the problem on its own. In most cases, the issue is not the listing date. It is the strategy behind the listing. That matters even more in the current market. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales in March 2026, down 5.5% from March 2025, while active listings rose to 3,261, up 7.9% year over year. VREB also described current conditions as a market with good supply and reasonable demand, which means buyers have options and sellers face more competition. The Real Problem Usually Is Not Time When a home does not sell, sellers often blame the clock. They think: maybe we need to take it off the market maybe buyers are ignoring it because it has been listed too long maybe a fresh MLS number will solve it Sometimes a relist can help at the margins. Most of the time, though, it does not change the reason buyers passed in the first place. A home usually sits for one of five reasons: the price does not match current buyer expectations the presentation is not strong enough online the property is reaching the wrong audience the condition or showing experience creates hesitation the seller’s expectations have not adjusted to current competition In a market with more inventory, buyers compare harder, hesitate longer, and negotiate more confidently. VREB’s March 2026 update said both sales and listings increased from the previous month in a typical spring pattern, but inventory remains elevated. That means a listing has to feel well-positioned, not just available. When Relisting Can Make Sense Relisting can be the right move, but only when something meaningful has changed. That could include: a clear price correction new photos or much better marketing repairs, staging, or decluttering that change buyer perception a different launch strategy a shift in market timing after a quieter period In other words, relisting works best when it reflects a new offer to the market, not just a new start date. A relist without a real change often backfires. Buyers may still recognize the property, especially in neighbourhoods where they are watching closely. If the same home comes back with the same price, same presentation, and same issues, the market usually reads that as a seller trying to reset the optics rather than improve the value. When Waiting Might Make Sense Waiting can make sense too, but only for the right reason. It may be worth pausing if: you know you are entering a better seasonal window for your property type you need time to improve condition or presentation there is a personal timing reason that makes selling now too rushed your next move depends on better preparation, not blind patience What usually does not work is waiting in the hope that buyers will suddenly become less selective. Right now, Greater Victoria is not suffering from a lack of choice. Active listings were up 12.3% from February to March 2026 and up 7.9% year over year, giving buyers more selection. In that kind of environment, a seller who waits without improving strategy can come back to the market facing the same challenge again. What a Sitting Listing Is Actually Telling You A listing that is sitting is feedback. Not emotional feedback. Market feedback. Here is how to read it: No showings This often points to price, photos, headline appeal, or early online presentation. Buyers are screening you out before they ever visit. Showings but no offers This usually means the home is creating interest but not confidence. The issue may be layout, condition, odour, light, deferred maintenance, or value relative to competing homes. Offers far below expectations This often means the market sees the home differently than the seller does. It can also mean buyers are building in room for updates, risk, or soft demand. Positive comments but no action This is one of the clearest signs the home is not winning the comparison test. Buyers may like it, but they do not like it enough at that price. A Better Question Than “Relist or Wait?” The smarter question is this: What needs to change for the next buyer to say yes? That shift matters. Because once you ask that, the plan becomes more practical: review competing active listings, not just past solds assess whether the current price still makes sense evaluate photos, copy, floor plan flow, and first impression study buyer feedback for patterns decide whether the home needs repositioning, not just more time This is especially important in a market where benchmark values have been relatively soft. In March 2026, the Victoria Core benchmark for a single-family home was $1,330,200, down 1.1% from March 2025, while the benchmark for a Victoria Core condominium was down 0.8% year over year. What We Usually Recommend Instead In many cases, the best strategy is neither “just relist” nor “just wait.” It is to reposition. That can mean: adjusting price to where today’s buyers see value improving staging, light, and photo quality rewriting the listing to match the real buyer profile tightening showing readiness relaunching with a clearer plan once the product is stronger The market rarely rewards stubbornness. It usually rewards clarity. A stale listing is not always a bad home. Often, it is simply a good home that met the market with the wrong strategy. Final Thought If your home is sitting, do not assume a relist will save it, and do not assume waiting will fix it. The better move is to find out why buyers are passing, then make a strategic decision based on price, presentation, competition, and timing. If you are trying to decide whether to relist, wait, or reposition your sale, contact Faber Real Estate Group for honest advice on what your listing is really telling the market and what to do next. Shandy B., 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal and Scott are exceptional realtors. We sold our beloved home with their help. They helped us price competitively and fairly, leading to a fast house sale in a slower market, as well as receiving more than we had hoped for the sale of our home. They were accommodating and respectful of our family needs, and helped us show our home in the best way possible. We felt like a priority every step of the way. The are honest and trustworthy! All the stars for the Faber group” 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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    How Sellers Can Stand Out When Buyers Have More Options
    April 21, 2026

    What buyers expect from sellers when they have more choice has changed in Victoria’s current market. Buyers are no longer making decisions under the same pressure they faced in tighter conditions. With 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, up 7.9 per cent from a year earlier, and with VREB noting that current conditions allow more time for due diligence, buyers are expecting better pricing, better presentation, and fewer question marks before they commit. (vreb.org) In other words, more choice does not mean homes are not selling. It means buyers can compare more carefully. CREA’s Victoria market conditions data shows that homes are taking longer to sell than they were a year ago, with median days on market in Q1 2026 rising to 26 days for single-family homes, 31 days for townhouses, and 30 days for condominiums. When buyers have more time, their standards rise. (creastats.crea.ca) Buyers Expect Realistic Pricing The first thing buyers expect is pricing that reflects the current market, not last year’s peak expectations. When inventory rises and sales slow year over year, buyers become much more sensitive to value. In March 2026, VREB reported 579 sales, down 5.5 per cent from March 2025, even as inventory increased. That means buyers have more alternatives, so an overpriced listing is easier to skip. (vreb.org) Today, buyers are asking themselves: how does this home compare to the other options I have seen? does the asking price match the condition, location, and layout? if this home needs work, has that been reflected in the price? Sellers who price strategically tend to attract stronger interest early. Sellers who price for negotiation alone often end up inviting hesitation instead. Buyers Expect the Home to Feel Market-Ready When buyers have more choice, they notice presentation faster. That does not mean every home needs a major renovation. It does mean buyers expect the property to feel cared for, clean, and easy to understand. If they walk into a home with deferred maintenance, clutter, poor lighting, or obvious unfinished projects, they start calculating cost, effort, and inconvenience. In a market with more listings, buyers often lean toward the property that feels simpler and safer, even if it is not perfect. That is why sellers should focus on: decluttering and cleaning thoroughly completing small repairs improving lighting and flow making the home photograph well online reducing distractions during showings A buyer who has five similar listings to compare will often choose the one that feels easiest to step into. Buyers Expect Transparency More choice also gives buyers more confidence to walk away when something feels unclear. VREB has said buyers are using the extra time in today’s market to undertake due diligence. That means sellers should expect buyers to pay closer attention to disclosures, strata documents, depreciation reports, maintenance history, permits, and overall condition. (vreb.org) This is especially important for: condos and townhomes with strata documentation older homes with past renovations properties with tenancies or suite income homes with known issues that could come up in inspection Buyers do not expect perfection. They do expect honesty. Clear information builds trust. Unanswered questions create resistance. Buyers Expect Flexibility, Not Friction In a competitive seller’s market, buyers often accepted the seller’s timing, terms, and conditions without much pushback. That is less common when they have options. Today’s buyers may expect: flexible possession dates reasonable time for financing and inspection access to documents early a smoother showing process thoughtful communication when they have questions That does not mean sellers need to agree to everything. It does mean rigid sellers can lose otherwise solid buyers over issues that could have been handled more smoothly. Buyers Expect to See Value Clearly This is where many listings fall short. Sellers know what they have spent on the home. Buyers care more about what the home offers them now. If the value story is unclear, they move on. That is why sellers need to make the value visible. Instead of assuming buyers will notice, the listing and showing experience should help them understand: what has been updated what makes the layout work what makes the location desirable what costs or concerns have already been addressed why this home stands out from nearby competition More choice makes comparison easier. Therefore, sellers need to do a better job showing why their home deserves to be shortlisted. Buyers Expect Better Online First Impressions Before a showing happens, buyers have already judged the listing online. That matters even more when inventory is up. Buyers sorting through more listings often decide within seconds whether a home feels worth seeing in person. Poor photos, weak descriptions, missing room details, or unclear value positioning can cost a seller showings before the conversation even begins. The online presentation should answer three things quickly: what kind of buyer is this home best for? what are the best features? why should someone book a showing instead of scrolling past? When buyers have more choice, average marketing blends in. Buyers Expect Sellers to Understand the Market Shift One of the biggest disconnects right now is that some sellers still act like the market owes them urgency. It does not. Victoria’s market is not frozen, but it is more balanced than it was in more aggressive seller-driven periods. CREA’s Victoria data shows higher months of inventory across single-family, townhouse, and condominium segments in Q1 2026, while VREB says buyers and sellers alike now have more time to make decisions. (creastats.crea.ca; vreb.org) That shift changes expectations. Buyers now expect sellers to meet the market with a clear strategy instead of assuming demand will do the work for them. What Sellers Should Take Away From This If buyers have more choice, sellers need to reduce reasons to say no. That means: price with discipline prepare the home properly disclose clearly market the value well stay flexible where it matters The homes that perform best in this kind of market are usually not the ones with the highest asking price. They are the ones that feel the most credible, best prepared, and easiest to buy. Final Thought What buyers expect from sellers when they have more choice is not complicated, but it is more demanding. They want value, clarity, presentation, and confidence that the home is worth their time. If you are thinking of selling and want to position your home the right way in today’s Victoria market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for practical advice and a strategy built for current buyer behaviour.   Lorraine P., 5-Star Review, via Google “I would not dream of ever using a realtor other than Cal. Apart from the fact that he is was exceptionally knowledgable and resourceful, he was also honest, truthful and always acted in my best interest while at the same time treating all parties with dignity and respect.” 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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    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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