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    Victoria’s 2026 Market May Be Giving Buyers a Better Window Than They Think
    April 11, 2026

    If you have been waiting for the right time to buy, the current Victoria real estate market deserves a closer look. The opportunity right now is not really about chasing a dramatic price drop. It is about something more practical: more choice, more negotiating room, and more time to make careful decisions than buyers have had in years. In Greater Victoria, 579 properties sold in March 2026 while active listings climbed to 3,261, creating a sales-to-active-listings ratio of about 17.8 per cent. That sits at the low end of the Victoria Real Estate Board’s balanced-market range and points to a market that feels far more manageable for buyers than the high-pressure conditions many remember. That matters because the best buying opportunities do not always show up when prices are falling sharply. In Victoria, benchmark prices have stayed relatively steady. The Victoria Core benchmark for a single-family home was $1,330,200 in March 2026, down 1.1 per cent from a year earlier, while the benchmark condo value was $553,800, down 0.8 per cent year over year. Prices have softened only modestly, but the bigger shift is that buyers now have more room to think, compare, and negotiate. More Inventory Changes the Conversation For a long time, many buyers in Greater Victoria felt pushed into fast decisions. Low inventory, tight timelines, and heavy competition created an environment where hesitation could mean missing out. That is not what this market looks like today. Active listings were up 7.9 per cent year over year at the end of March, and the Victoria Real Estate Board described current conditions as offering plentiful opportunity for both buyers and sellers, with fewer high-pressure transactions and more time for due diligence. That shift matters. More inventory does not guarantee a deal on every property, and it does not mean sellers have lost all leverage. What it does mean is that buyers can be more selective about location, layout, condition, and long-term fit. They can compare several options instead of forcing one property to work simply because there are no alternatives. In practical terms, that often leads to better decisions. A Better Buying Setup Does Not Mean an Easy Market Balanced conditions are different from a distressed market. Buyers still need to be realistic about pricing, financing, and the fact that well-positioned homes can attract strong interest. But balanced conditions do create a healthier process. The market is still active, with March sales up 24.5 per cent from February, yet the supply side remains strong enough to reduce some of the urgency that defined earlier years. That combination gives prepared buyers a better chance to move strategically instead of emotionally. This is where many people misread the market. They assume a good time to buy only happens when prices are falling hard or headlines sound negative. In reality, some of the strongest buying windows happen when prices are relatively stable but buyers gain better access to inventory and better negotiating conditions. That is much closer to what Victoria looks like right now. Why Breathing Room Matters So Much The real advantage in today’s market is not that every home is cheap. It is that buyers can act with more discipline. They can book an inspection without feeling rushed. They can review strata documents or title details more carefully. They can negotiate on price, dates, or conditions with more confidence. And they can walk away from the wrong property without feeling like they have lost their only chance. VREB has explicitly noted that current supply and demand levels are allowing both sides of the sale to make decisions and undertake due diligence with less pressure. That breathing room can be especially valuable for first-time buyers, upsizers, downsizers, and anyone trying to buy with a plan rather than from fear of missing out. A more workable market does not remove risk, but it does improve the quality of decision-making. Prepared Buyers Still Have the Advantage A better market for buyers still rewards preparation. The strongest buyers in this environment are the ones who understand their financing, know their comfort level, and have clarity around what matters most in a home. When the right property comes up, they can act decisively. When a property is overpriced or not the right fit, they can step back without panic. That is one of the biggest changes from the urgency-driven market many buyers still have in mind. This market is less about reacting fast and more about recognizing value clearly. Buyers who are organized and informed can use these conditions to make smarter, more confident decisions. A Smart Way to Think About Buying in 2026 Instead of asking whether everything feels perfect right now, a better question is whether conditions are more favourable for buyers than they have been in recent years. In Greater Victoria, the answer is increasingly yes. Inventory remains healthy, prices have been relatively steady, and the market is giving buyers more space to compare options and negotiate thoughtfully. Provincially, BCREA said inventory is running near its highest level in over a decade, with just over 40,000 homes for sale across BC, which should help keep broader market conditions balanced through 2026. That does not mean every buyer should rush into the market. But for people who are financially ready and planning for the long term, this may be one of the more practical buying windows Victoria has offered in a while. Not because the market is weak, but because it is more balanced, more navigable, and less driven by pressure. Final Thoughts The current market will not be the right fit for every buyer. But for those who are prepared, patient, and focused on long-term goals, today’s Victoria market may offer something that has been missing for a long time: more selection, less frenzy, and a better chance to buy with clarity. If you want help building a smart buying plan in today’s market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice on where the real opportunities are in Greater Victoria. Wilson, 5-Star Review, via Google “Amazing people there! They will help you through the entire process and will always make you feel like family. For those first time home buyers, don't be intimidated entering the market because they will explain every process and guide you through.” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    How to Compete as a Buyer Without Overpaying
    April 8, 2026

    Trying to compete as a buyer without overpaying can feel difficult, especially when a well-presented home attracts fast attention. But in Greater Victoria right now, buyers are not operating in the same kind of extreme panic market seen in past years. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales in March 2026 and 3,261 active listings at month end, with active listings up 12.3 per cent from February and 7.9 per cent from March 2025. VREB described current conditions as offering plentiful opportunity for both buyers and sellers, with fewer high-pressure transactions and more time for due diligence. That matters because it gives buyers more room to think, compare, and negotiate. That is the first mindset shift: being competitive does not mean being reckless. In a market with healthier supply and more balanced conditions, the strongest buyers are usually the ones who are prepared, clear, and disciplined. Start by Understanding What “Overpaying” Actually Means A lot of buyers think overpaying means offering above asking price. That is not always true. Sometimes a buyer offers over asking and still makes a sound decision because: the asking price was intentionally low the property is rare for the area recent comparable sales support the number the home solves a long-term need better than alternatives On the other hand, a buyer can also overpay below asking if the property was overpriced to begin with. The real question is not, “Am I over list price?” It is, “Am I paying more than this home is worth to me and more than the market reasonably supports?” Preparation Is What Makes Buyers Competitive The strongest buyers usually win before the offer is written. That means having: mortgage approval in place down payment fully organized deposit funds ready a lawyer or notary identified a clear maximum purchase range a short list of non-negotiables versus preferences This matters because speed without preparation often leads to emotional decisions. Speed with preparation creates confidence. There is also a financing reason to be disciplined. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25 per cent on March 18, 2026, maintaining improved borrowing conditions compared with peak-rate periods, but affordability still needs to be tested against your real monthly comfort zone, not just the maximum a lender will approve. Focus on Value, Not Hype In a competitive situation, buyers can get distracted by presentation, staging, or the fear that someone else will grab the home first. A better approach is to evaluate each property through three lenses: 1. Market value What do recent comparable sales suggest? 2. Personal value How well does the home fit your actual lifestyle, location needs, and long-term plans? 3. Risk value What repairs, strata issues, layout compromises, or resale limitations could affect the decision later? A home that scores well in all three categories is usually worth competing for. A home that only wins on emotion is where buyers often drift into overpaying. Strong Offer Structure Beats Blind Aggression Many buyers assume the strongest offer is simply the highest price. In reality, sellers usually look at the full package. A competitive offer can be strengthened by: a clean deposit structure fewer unnecessary complications flexible dates that suit the seller strong financing preparation concise and professional paperwork confidence in decision-making before the offer goes in That means you do not always need to win with price alone. Sometimes the better move is to make your offer easier to accept rather than just more expensive. Do Your Due Diligence Before the Pressure Peaks One of the best ways to avoid overpaying is to do as much homework as possible before offer night. That may include: reviewing comparable sales reading strata documents early, where applicable checking zoning or future land-use factors understanding insurability or financing concerns identifying major maintenance items in advance The buyer who learns these things early is much less likely to make a panic offer later. This is especially important in a market like Greater Victoria today, where buyers have more inventory to choose from. VREB reported 3,261 active listings at the end of March 2026, while the Victoria Core single-family benchmark rose to $1,330,200 from $1,307,400 in February, though it remained 1.1 per cent below March 2025. That points to a market with some spring momentum, but not runaway pricing. The Victoria Core condominium benchmark was $553,800 in March 2026, up from $545,600 in February and down 0.8 per cent year over year. Set a Walk-Away Number Before You Fall in Love This is one of the most important rules. Before you write, decide: your ideal number your competitive number your absolute walk-away number Then stick to it. Why? Because buyers rarely make poor decisions from lack of information alone. They make poor decisions when emotion changes the rules mid-process. A home can be a great fit and still not be worth chasing past your limit. Missing one property is frustrating. Overcommitting to the wrong one can affect your finances and flexibility for years. Look for Opportunity Where Others Are Hesitating The most competitive buyers are not always the ones chasing the most obvious listing. Sometimes the better strategy is to target homes that: have been on the market a bit longer were initially overpriced and may now be more negotiable show less perfectly but have strong fundamentals need cosmetic updates rather than structural work are overshadowed by more polished competing listings This is where value often lives. In a market with stronger inventory and less pressure, patience can be a real advantage. Buyers who look beyond the most emotionally crowded listings often find better negotiating conditions and less pressure to stretch. Do Not Confuse Urgency With Scarcity A listing can feel urgent without actually being scarce. That distinction matters. Scarcity means the property is genuinely rare for the location, price point, or feature set. Urgency often just means the marketing is strong, the home shows well, or the first weekend is busy. Those are not the same thing. VREB’s March 2026 report said the current environment is giving both buyers and sellers time to make decisions and complete due diligence, which is very different from a true panic market. Work With a Strategy, Not Just a Search The buyers who avoid overpaying usually have a plan for how they will compete, not just a list of homes to see. That strategy often includes: identifying target neighbourhoods and backup areas knowing which compromises are acceptable understanding where they can move quickly and where they should slow down recognizing when a listing is priced for attention versus priced for sale being willing to walk away from the wrong fit That is what keeps a buyer both competitive and protected. Final Thoughts To compete as a buyer without overpaying, you need more than enthusiasm. You need preparation, market context, and a clear ceiling before emotions take over. In Greater Victoria’s current market, buyers often have more choice, more time, and more negotiating room than they assume, which means strong decisions come from discipline, not desperation. If you want help building a buying strategy that keeps you competitive without stretching beyond what makes sense, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear guidance tailored to your goals and price range. Leanne D, 5-Star Review, via Google “I would highly recommend the Faber Group this is the second time we have used them and have been over the top happy with their service. They are an honest group of men who all go above and beyond to make your experience perfect!” Faber Real Estate Group Royal LePage Coast Capital Realty 📞 250-244-3430 📧[email protected] ℹ️ Scott Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation ℹ️ Cal Faber Personal Real Estate Corporation Vanessa Wood, Zachary Parsons, and Sophie Taylor “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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    Your Guide to Upsizing in Victoria’s Real Estate Market
    April 1, 2026

    For many homeowners, upsizing in Victoria BC is not really about buying “more house.” It is about buying a better fit for the life you are living now. Maybe the family has grown. Maybe you need a better layout, more privacy, a yard, a home office, or a suite option for long-term flexibility. The best strategy for upsizing in Victoria BC is usually not to rush into the next purchase first. It is to build a plan that protects your equity, keeps your financing realistic, and gives you enough flexibility to move when the right home appears. In today’s Greater Victoria market, where inventory has improved and benchmark pricing has been relatively stable, disciplined sequencing matters more than guesswork. The Victoria Real Estate Board reported the Victoria Core single-family benchmark at $1,307,400 in February 2026, up from $1,265,500 in January 2026 and only 0.9 percent below February 2025, which points to a market with movement but not extreme volatility. Start With the Real Constraint, Not the Dream Home Most homeowners begin by browsing listings. That is understandable, but it is usually the wrong first move. The real starting point is this question: What can you comfortably carry after you sell, close, move, and reset your monthly costs? That means reviewing: your estimated sale proceeds mortgage payout penalties, if any property transfer tax on the purchase legal fees, moving costs, and immediate improvement costs the payment range that still feels comfortable in real life This matters even more in 2026 because borrowing conditions are better than they were at the peak of the rate cycle, but affordability still needs to be handled carefully. The Bank of Canada’s policy rate has been 2.25% since January 28, 2026, and CMHC says variable mortgage rates have fallen over the last two years while fixed rates are more exposed to higher bond yields. In Most Cases, Sell First or Prepare to Sell First For most move-up buyers in Victoria, the safest strategy is one of these two paths: sell first, then buy prepare the home for sale first, then buy only when the sale path is clear Why? Because upsizing magnifies risk. If you buy first without a firm plan, you can end up dealing with: pressure to accept less for your current home carrying two properties at once rushed financing decisions emotional overbidding because you feel committed to the next purchase That does not mean buying first is always wrong. It can work for homeowners with significant equity, strong income, or access to bridge financing and a comfortable financial cushion. But for many households, selling first creates clarity and negotiating discipline. The Best Upsizing Strategy Is Usually a Three-Part Plan 1. Prepare your current home to sell like a product, not just a possession Before you even seriously shop, get your current home market-ready. That means: tackling obvious maintenance items decluttering and depersonalizing improving lighting and flow getting staging advice where appropriate understanding where your home sits against current competition This step matters because your current home is the engine that powers the next move. The cleaner and clearer your sale, the easier your upgrade becomes. 2. Get financing fully reviewed before writing offers Do not rely on a rough online estimate. A proper financing review should cover: your likely sale proceeds maximum purchase price payment comfort zone down payment structure bridge financing options what happens if your sale takes longer than expected The goal is not just to know your ceiling. It is to know your safe range. 3. Shop with strict priorities When people upsize, they can accidentally overpay for the wrong kind of “more.” More square footage is not always better if the location worsens, the lot is awkward, or the layout still does not solve the real problem. Focus on the upgrades that materially change daily life, such as: one more true bedroom a more functional family layout a usable yard better school or commute positioning suite potential less deferred maintenance a neighbourhood that fits the next five to ten years In Victoria, Timing Matters, But Sequence Matters More Many homeowners worry about “the perfect time” to upsize. In reality, sequence is usually more important than trying to outguess the market by a month or two. That said, current Victoria conditions do support a more strategic move-up approach. VREB reported balanced market conditions in February 2026, with 465 sales and 2,823 active listings at month-end. That was a 10.6 percent increase in active listings from January, giving buyers more choice than a tighter market would. For upsizers, that balance can help in two ways: you may have more selection on the purchase side you may face less frenzy than in a fully overheated market But balance does not remove the need for sharp pricing. If your current home is overpriced, the entire plan can stall. Avoid the Trap of Over-Improving Before You Sell A common mistake is spending too much getting the current home “perfect” before listing. Most of the time, upsizers do not need perfection. They need traction. That means focusing on improvements that help buyers feel confidence quickly: paint touch-ups repairs buyers will notice immediately cleaner presentation curb appeal better furniture layout pre-listing organization Expensive renovations with weak payback can delay your next move and reduce flexibility. The question is not “How do we maximize every dollar of value?” It is often “How do we improve saleability without overcapitalizing?” Have a Backup Plan Before You Need One The strongest move-up strategies include a backup plan early. That might include: temporary rent-back after your sale bridge financing if purchase and sale dates do not line up a short list of acceptable interim housing options a smaller geographic search expansion if inventory is thin in your top neighbourhood This is what reduces panic decisions. The move-up buyer who has a backup plan usually negotiates better than the buyer who feels cornered. What Homeowners in Victoria Should Do Right Now If you are thinking about upsizing this year, the best next move is usually: determine your likely sale range with current comparables review mortgage and equity numbers in detail prepare your current home before actively shopping define your non-negotiables for the next home be ready to act when the right property appears, not just any larger property That is the difference between moving up strategically and simply moving sideways at a higher cost. Final Thoughts The best strategy for homeowners in Victoria who want to upsize is to treat the move as a coordinated two-property decision, not just a home search. Your sale, your financing, your timing, and your purchase criteria all need to support each other. In a market with more choice and relatively steady benchmark pricing, the real advantage comes from preparation, not prediction. If you are thinking about upsizing in Greater Victoria and want help building a move-up plan that fits your equity, timing, and next-home goals, contact Faber Real Estate Group for tailored advice on your best next step.   Brett Hayward, 5-Star Review, via Google “I can’t suggest how to make Fabers better at being good realtors. They’re already congenial, trustworthy, informed, experienced, and thorough. Cal listened and advised, and somewhere in the middle he said what the condo would sell for and he was right on. Thanks!” 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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