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    What Sellers Need to Know About the Greater Victoria Summer Market
    June 18, 2026

    Selling in the Greater Victoria summer market can be a strong opportunity, but it requires the right strategy. The Greater Victoria summer market often brings motivated buyers, better curb appeal, longer days, and more flexibility for showings. However, it can also bring more competition and a slower decision cycle as buyers balance house hunting with travel, family plans, and summer schedules. For sellers, the key is not just listing because the weather is good. The key is understanding how buyers behave during this part of the year and positioning your home accordingly. Summer Buyers Can Be Motivated, But Selective Summer buyers are often serious. Many want to make a move before the fall, especially families hoping to settle before the next school year or buyers relocating for work. Longer days also make it easier for people to view homes after work and attend weekend open houses. However, today’s buyers are also more careful. With more inventory available across Greater Victoria, buyers have more options to compare. They may take longer to make decisions, revisit properties, review recent sales more closely, and pay attention to details that could affect value. This means sellers need to be realistic from the beginning. A strong first impression matters, but so does pricing, preparation, and market positioning. Pricing Needs to Match the Market One of the most important parts of selling in the summer is getting the price right. A home can show beautifully, have strong marketing, and attract plenty of online attention, but if the price feels too high compared with similar listings, buyers may wait. In a market with more choice, buyers are less likely to rush into an offer just because they like the home. Pricing should be based on: Recent comparable sales Current competing listings Property condition Location and neighbourhood demand Buyer activity in your specific price range A strong pricing strategy does not mean underpricing your home. It means entering the market at a number that feels supported, explainable, and competitive. This helps create confidence for buyers and gives your listing a better chance of building momentum early. Presentation Carries More Weight in the Summer Summer can make a home look its best. Gardens are fuller, natural light is stronger, patios feel more inviting, and outdoor spaces become a bigger part of the buyer experience. That also means expectations are higher. Before listing, sellers should focus on the details that help the home feel cared for and easy to imagine living in. Simple improvements can make a meaningful difference, especially when buyers are comparing several homes in the same price range. Focus on: Fresh landscaping and clean outdoor spaces Pressure washing patios, walkways, and siding Clean windows to maximize natural light Light seasonal staging Decluttering garages, sheds, and storage areas Highlighting patios, decks, yards, and garden areas Buyers do not need everything to be perfect, but they do need the home to feel well-maintained. In summer, outdoor spaces are part of the showing, not an afterthought. Showings May Need More Flexibility Summer schedules can be less predictable. Buyers may be away on weekends, working around travel, or trying to fit showings into evenings. Sellers who are flexible with access can have an advantage. This is especially important during the first two weeks on market. That early window is when the listing is fresh, buyer interest is highest, and online attention is strongest. If possible, make showings easy to book and avoid overly limited access. A serious buyer may only have one short window to view the property. If the home is difficult to see, they may move on to another option. The First Impression Starts Online Most buyers will see your home online before they ever step through the door. In the summer market, strong visuals are especially important because buyers are often scrolling through listings quickly and comparing multiple homes at once. Professional photography, clear descriptions, floor plans, video, and thoughtful marketing can help your home stand out. The goal is not just to show the home. The goal is to help buyers understand why it is worth viewing. Your listing should clearly communicate: The lifestyle the home offers Recent updates or improvements Outdoor space and seasonal features Neighbourhood benefits Walkability, schools, parks, transit, and nearby amenities Parking, storage, suites, strata details, or flexible spaces A good listing answers questions before buyers ask them. That can help reduce hesitation and encourage stronger showing activity. Competition Still Matters Even in a season with good buyer activity, your home does not sell in isolation. It competes against other listings nearby, similar properties in the same price range, and homes that may offer better condition, more updates, or stronger value. Before listing, sellers should look closely at what buyers will be comparing their home against. Ask: What else can a buyer purchase at this price? How does our home compare in condition? Are we priced ahead of the market, behind it, or in line with it? Does the listing clearly explain the value? What concerns might buyers notice during a showing? This type of thinking helps sellers make better decisions before going live. It can also prevent unnecessary price reductions later. Summer Timing Can Work Well With the Right Plan Summer can be a good time to sell in Greater Victoria, but timing alone is not the strategy. A successful sale depends on preparation, pricing, exposure, and how well the home meets current buyer expectations. Some homes will benefit from launching early in the season when buyer activity is strong. Others may need a little more preparation before hitting the market. In some cases, waiting a few weeks to improve presentation, complete small repairs, or build the right marketing package can create a stronger result. The best timing depends on the home, the neighbourhood, the price range, and the seller’s goals. Final Thoughts The Greater Victoria summer market can offer real opportunity for sellers, but it rewards preparation. Buyers are active, but they are also comparing carefully. They want homes that feel well-presented, properly priced, and aligned with current market value. For sellers, the best approach is simple: understand the competition, prepare the home properly, price with confidence, and make the listing easy for buyers to engage with. If you are thinking about selling this summer, start with a clear understanding of your home’s position in today’s market. The right strategy can help you attract stronger interest, reduce buyer hesitation, and move forward with more confidence.   Gemma Kemp, 5-Star Review, via Google “Super professional and will go out of his way to help! Not only the best realtor but also the sweetest! We felt so taken care of every step of the way! Thank you Scott for all you do and thank you Faber Group - I highly recommend!!!!” 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 Happened in the Greater Victoria Market in May 2026
    June 3, 2026

    The Greater Victoria real estate market May 2026 showed a clear shift toward more choice, more careful decision-making, and stronger competition between listings. After several years of tighter inventory, buyers now have more options across many parts of the region. That does not mean the market is slow. It means buyers are taking more time, comparing properties more closely, and paying attention to price, condition, location, and overall value. For sellers, the Greater Victoria real estate market May 2026 was still active, but it rewarded preparation. Homes that were priced well, presented clearly, and positioned properly continued to attract interest. Homes that missed the mark had more competition to work against. What Happened in the Greater Victoria Market in May 2026? According to the Victoria Real Estate Board, 713 properties sold across the region in May 2026. That was down 5.9% compared to May 2025, but up 10.9% from April 2026. This shows that the spring market was active, but not overheated. The larger story was inventory. At the end of May 2026, there were 4,029 active listings on the Victoria Real Estate Board MLS®. That was the highest inventory level the region had seen in 11 years. More inventory changes the feel of the market. Buyers have more room to compare. Sellers have more competition. Both sides need a stronger strategy. Key May 2026 Market Numbers Here are the main Greater Victoria market numbers from May 2026: 713 total properties sold Sales were down 5.9% from May 2025 Sales were up 10.9% from April 2026 385 single-family homes sold 188 condominiums sold 98 townhomes sold 4,029 active listings at month-end Inventory was up 8.6% from April 2026 Inventory was up 8.4% from May 2025 The benchmark value for a single-family home in the Victoria Core was $1,339,000 in May 2026. That was up 0.3% from May 2025 and almost unchanged from April 2026. The benchmark value for a condominium in the Victoria Core was $551,400 in May 2026. That was down 1.9% from May 2025 and down from April 2026. What This Means for Buyers For buyers, May 2026 created more breathing room. More listings mean buyers may have more time to view homes, compare options, review documents, and make decisions without the same pressure seen in hotter markets. That said, good homes are still moving. Buyers should not assume every property will sit or that every seller will negotiate heavily. The best opportunities still require preparation. Buyers should focus on: Getting pre-approved before viewing homes Understanding full monthly costs Comparing recent sales, not just list prices Reviewing strata documents carefully Looking at building condition, insurance, and future maintenance Being patient, but ready when the right property appears In a market with more choice, the advantage goes to buyers who know exactly what they are looking for. What This Means for Sellers For sellers, May 2026 was a reminder that pricing matters. When inventory rises, buyers can be more selective. They are no longer forced to rush toward the first suitable option. They can compare similar homes, neighbourhoods, finishes, floor plans, strata fees, outdoor space, parking, and overall condition. This does not mean sellers cannot do well. It means the first impression matters more. Sellers should focus on: Pricing based on current comparable sales Understanding active competition Preparing the home before photos and showings Highlighting the strongest features clearly Avoiding overpricing at launch Adjusting quickly if market feedback is clear The homes that stood out in May were the ones that felt well-positioned from day one. Westshore Real Estate Market: More Choice and Practical Value The Westshore continued to be one of the most active areas in Greater Victoria. Langford, Colwood, View Royal, Sooke, Metchosin, and the surrounding communities remain important markets for buyers looking for more space, newer housing, and relative value compared to the core. The Westshore appeals to a wide range of buyers, including first-time buyers, young families, move-up buyers, and people looking for newer condos or townhomes. With more inventory available, buyers in the Westshore had more options to compare. This made pricing and presentation especially important for sellers. A well-priced home in a strong location can still attract serious attention, but buyers are more likely to compare it against other similar listings nearby. Saanich Real Estate Market: Established Neighbourhoods Still Matter Saanich remained a steady and desirable part of the Greater Victoria market in May 2026. Saanich East and Saanich West continue to attract buyers who value established neighbourhoods, schools, parks, transit access, larger lots, and central convenience. Areas such as Gordon Head, Lakehill, Broadmead, Royal Oak, Tillicum, and surrounding neighbourhoods can perform differently depending on property type and condition. A renovated family home, an original-condition home, a suite-potential property, and a townhome will each attract a different buyer pool. For buyers, Saanich remains a market where neighbourhood knowledge matters. For sellers, it is important to price based on the specific pocket, not just the broader municipality. Victoria Real Estate Market: Walkability and Condos Remain Important Victoria and Victoria West continued to play an important role in the May 2026 market. The core remains attractive to buyers who value walkability, transit, restaurants, employment areas, shopping, parks, and lifestyle convenience. Condos are a major part of this market, especially for first-time buyers, downsizers, investors, and people who want to live close to downtown amenities. However, buyers are looking beyond the unit itself. In May 2026, buyers were paying close attention to: Strata fees Parking Storage Building maintenance Insurance deductibles Depreciation reports Contingency reserve funds Rental and pet bylaws Walkability and noise exposure In the Victoria condo market, the building often matters as much as the unit. Sidney Real Estate Market: Lifestyle, Walkability, and Downsizing Demand Sidney continued to attract buyers looking for lifestyle, walkability, and a quieter pace. The Sidney market is often driven by people who value access to the waterfront, local shops, cafes, services, marinas, and a more relaxed Peninsula lifestyle. It can appeal strongly to downsizers, retirees, and buyers who want convenience without being in the centre of Victoria. For sellers in Sidney, presentation and pricing are important because buyers tend to compare long-term livability very carefully. Floor plan, building quality, parking, storage, outdoor space, and walkability can all influence value. For buyers, Sidney can offer a strong lifestyle fit, but it is still important to compare property types and understand the long-term costs of ownership. Detached Homes, Condos, and Townhomes: Different Markets Under One Roof One of the most important things to understand about Greater Victoria is that there is not one single market. There are several smaller markets moving at the same time. Detached homes may perform differently than condos. Townhomes may attract different demand than older apartments. A family home in Saanich may have a different buyer pool than a downtown Victoria condo or a Langford townhome. That is why broad headlines can be misleading. The question is not just, “What is the market doing?” The better question is, “What is the market doing for this property type, in this area, at this price point, right now?” Why Inventory Matters So Much Inventory gives buyers choice. When inventory is low, buyers often have to act quickly and compete harder. When inventory rises, buyers can slow down, compare options, and be more selective. For sellers, rising inventory means their home needs to stand out. Price, presentation, marketing, condition, and timing all matter. In May 2026, Greater Victoria had the most inventory the market had seen in 11 years. That does not automatically make it a buyer’s market, but it does create a more strategic environment. Buyers have more opportunities. Sellers have more competition. The Bottom Line for May 2026 The Greater Victoria real estate market May 2026 was active, but more balanced and selective than many recent spring markets. Buyers had more choice and more time to make decisions. Sellers could still succeed, but they needed to be realistic, prepared, and well-positioned. Westshore continued to offer practical value and strong activity. Saanich remained steady because of its established neighbourhoods and central convenience. Victoria continued to appeal to buyers looking for walkability and lifestyle. Sidney remained attractive for those seeking a quieter, community-focused Peninsula lifestyle. The biggest takeaway is simple: strategy matters. In a market with more inventory, buyers need clarity and sellers need precision. If you are thinking about buying or selling in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for local advice, neighbourhood insight, and a clear strategy based on your goals.   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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    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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