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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 More Listings Do Not Always Mean Lower Prices
    May 19, 2026

    More listings do not always mean lower prices. It can feel that way at first because buyers suddenly have more choice, homes may take longer to sell, and sellers may need to compete harder for attention. But inventory is only one part of the pricing picture. In Greater Victoria, price movement depends on the relationship between supply, demand, property type, location, condition, and seller motivation. More listings can create more balance, but they do not automatically create a falling market. According to the Victoria Real Estate Board, active listings have increased in recent months, while benchmark prices have shown only modest year-over-year changes depending on property type and area. In April 2026, the Victoria Core single-family benchmark was down 1.2% year-over-year, while the condo benchmark was down 0.8% year-over-year. Inventory Gives Buyers More Choice When more homes come to market, buyers usually gain more breathing room. They may have: More properties to compare More time to make decisions More room to negotiate on terms Less pressure to compete on every listing More confidence walking away from homes that do not fit This matters. A market with more listings often feels different from a tight inventory market. Buyers may become more selective, and sellers may need stronger pricing, preparation, and presentation. But more choice does not always mean buyers suddenly have more purchasing power. Demand Still Matters Prices tend to soften when supply rises and demand weakens at the same time. If more listings come to market but buyer demand remains steady, prices may hold. If desirable homes are still limited in certain areas, buyers may continue to compete for the best options. A market can have more total listings while still having limited supply for specific buyer needs, such as: Detached homes in walkable neighbourhoods Well-maintained townhomes Family homes near schools Updated condos in strong buildings One-level homes for downsizers Properties with suites or income potential This is why broad inventory numbers can be misleading. The market may look well supplied overall, while certain segments still feel tight. Not All Listings Compete With Each Other A luxury waterfront home, a downtown condo, a Langford townhome, and a Saanich family home do not all compete for the same buyer. More listings in one category do not automatically affect prices in another. If condo inventory rises, that may not change demand for detached homes in Oak Bay. If rural properties take longer to sell, that does not necessarily mean entry-level townhomes will drop. Greater Victoria is made up of many smaller markets. Price behaviour can change by: Municipality Neighbourhood Property type Price range Condition School catchment Walkability Strata health Renovation level Lot size or development potential This is why local context matters more than the headline number. Sellers Adjust Before Prices Drop When listings increase, the first change is often not price. It is seller behaviour. Sellers may need to: Price more realistically Prepare the home more carefully Improve photos and presentation Respond faster to feedback Be more flexible with dates or terms Adjust expectations around days on market Some sellers will reduce their price if they overshoot the market. Others may hold firm if their property is well-positioned, properly priced, and in a category where demand remains strong. More listings can create pressure. But pressure is not the same as a price drop across the board. Buyers Still Care About Quality In a market with more choice, buyers do not simply buy the cheapest home. They often become more careful. They compare condition, layout, building records, neighbourhood, future maintenance, and resale potential. A well-presented home can still stand out, even when there are more listings available. For sellers, this means preparation matters. A home that feels clean, cared for, and easy to understand may attract stronger interest than a similar home that feels tired or overpriced. For buyers, this means patience helps, but waiting for prices to fall may not be the best strategy if the right home appears and the numbers work. More Listings Can Create a Healthier Market A market with more listings is not always bad news. In many cases, it creates a healthier environment. Buyers can make decisions with less pressure. Sellers get more realistic feedback. Negotiations may become more balanced. Conditional offers may become more common. Everyone has a little more room to think. That can be a positive shift, especially after years where low inventory made the process feel rushed. The Bottom Line More listings do not always mean lower prices because real estate is not one single market. Inventory matters, but it must be weighed against demand, location, property type, condition, price range, and buyer motivation. For buyers, more listings can mean better choice and stronger negotiating conditions. For sellers, it means strategy matters more than assumption. The best results usually come from reading the specific micro-market, not reacting to broad headlines. 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.   Raymond S., 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal and his team at the Faber Real Estate Group went above and beyond in helping us to find a home that would meet our criteria. We always felt as though we were their most important clients. Cal and Scott's negotiating skills helped us to stay within our budget and still fulfill all of our requirements. Besides the teams professionalism and knowledge, we also appreciated their honesty and high standards regarding moral values. Cal and the team helped make buying a home a pleasant experience.” 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 Comparable Sales Can Mislead Buyers and Sellers
    May 5, 2026

    Comparable sales in real estate are one of the most common tools used to estimate value. Buyers use them to decide what to offer. Sellers use them to decide how to price. Appraisers, lenders, and REALTORS® also rely on them to understand what similar homes have recently sold for. However, comparable sales in real estate can also be misleading when they are used too quickly or without enough context. A sold price tells you what one buyer was willing to pay for one property at one moment in time. It does not automatically tell you what your home is worth, what another buyer should offer, or how today’s market will respond to a new listing. That is where the real analysis begins. Not Every Similar Home Is Truly Comparable At first glance, two homes may seem almost identical. They may be in the same neighbourhood, have similar square footage, and offer the same number of bedrooms. But small differences can create very different values. Important differences may include: Lot size and usable yard space Sun exposure and privacy Renovation quality Deferred maintenance Layout and flow Suite potential Parking Street noise Views Strata condition Age of major systems Proximity to schools, parks, or busy roads A home on a quiet cul-de-sac may sell differently than a similar home on a busier street. A renovated kitchen may help, but if the roof, perimeter drains, or windows need attention, buyers may still discount the price. The details matter because buyers do not purchase square footage alone. They buy the full experience of the property. Sold Prices Reflect the Market Conditions at That Time Comparable sales are historical data. That means they are useful, but they are always looking backward. A sale from three months ago may not reflect today’s buyer activity, inventory levels, interest rate environment, or local competition. In a fast-moving market, even a sale from a few weeks ago can lose some relevance. This matters for both buyers and sellers. For sellers, relying too heavily on older high sales can lead to overpricing. For buyers, relying too heavily on older lower sales can lead to offers that do not compete. The better question is not simply, “What did similar homes sell for?” It is, “What has changed since those homes sold?” Condition Can Change the Entire Conversation Condition is one of the biggest reasons comparable sales can mislead people. Two homes may look similar online, but one may be move-in ready while the other needs major updates. Photos can hide a lot. A home may photograph beautifully but still have concerns with moisture, electrical, plumbing, roofing, windows, or overall maintenance. On the other hand, a home that looks dated may be extremely well cared for and structurally strong. This is why condition needs to be reviewed carefully, not assumed from listing photos. Buyers should avoid thinking, “That home sold for less, so this one should too,” without asking why. Sellers should avoid thinking, “My neighbour got that price, so I should too,” without comparing condition honestly. The Best Comparable May Not Be the Closest One Many people assume the best comparable sale is the one closest to the property. Sometimes it is. But proximity alone does not make a sale useful. In Greater Victoria, small location differences can change buyer demand quickly. A few blocks can affect walkability, school catchments, views, noise, lot usability, and overall appeal. A better comparable might be farther away but more similar in style, size, condition, and buyer profile. For example, a well-maintained 1970s family home in one part of Saanich may compare better with a similar home in another nearby pocket than with a brand-new build down the street. The goal is not to find the nearest sale. The goal is to find the most relevant sale. List Price and Sold Price Tell Different Stories A sold price matters, but the story behind it matters too. A home may sell over asking because it was intentionally priced low to attract multiple offers. Another home may sell under asking because it started too high and sat on the market. A third home may sell quickly at full price because it was priced accurately from the start. Without context, the numbers can create the wrong impression. Buyers may think every home is overpriced because they see price reductions. Sellers may think every home should attract competing offers because they saw one sale go over asking. Both can be wrong. The better analysis looks at: Original list price Final list price Sold price Days on market Price reductions Number of competing listings Property condition Buyer activity Offer terms The price is only one part of the story. Unique Properties Are Harder to Compare Some homes are easier to price than others. A standard condo in a large building with several recent sales may have clear comparable data. A custom home, acreage, waterfront property, view property, character home, or rural property is much harder to compare. Unique properties require more interpretation because there may not be a perfect match. In these cases, value often depends on buyer depth. How many buyers are looking for that specific type of property? How often do similar homes become available? How much are buyers willing to pay for rare features? This is why unusual homes need a more careful pricing strategy. The wrong comparable can create the wrong expectation. Buyers Can Use Comparables Too Aggressively Buyers sometimes use comparable sales as a negotiation weapon. They may find the lowest recent sale and treat it as the only number that matters. But if that sale had poor condition, an awkward layout, a motivated seller, or a less desirable location, it may not support a lower offer on a better property. A strong buyer strategy is not about forcing every home to fit the cheapest comparable. It is about understanding fair value, then deciding what the property is worth to you based on condition, competition, and long-term fit. The best buyers stay disciplined without ignoring context. Sellers Can Use Comparables Too Optimistically Sellers can make the opposite mistake. They may focus on the highest sale in the area and assume their home should match or exceed it. But the highest sale may have had better renovations, better timing, stronger presentation, a larger lot, or more motivated buyers. This can lead to a pricing problem. When a home starts too high, it can lose early momentum. Buyers may compare it to better-priced alternatives and move on. Over time, the listing may need a price adjustment, and the final result may be weaker than if it had launched with a sharper strategy. A good pricing conversation should include both the best-case sale and the realistic competition. Active Listings Matter Too Comparable sales show what has already happened. Active listings show what buyers can choose from right now. This is especially important in a market where buyers have more selection. A seller may feel confident because a similar home sold well last month, but if several competing homes are now available, buyers may have more leverage. For buyers, active listings help explain why one home may still attract strong interest. If the property is the best option in its price range, older comparable sales may not fully capture current demand. Pricing should consider both past sales and present competition. The Most Useful Comparables Need Adjustment A comparable sale is rarely perfect. That is why adjustments matter. A REALTOR® may look at a comparable and adjust for differences such as: Larger or smaller lot Better or worse condition Renovations Basement suite Garage or parking View Location Strata fees Building condition Outdoor space Timing of the sale The goal is not to make the numbers look exact. The goal is to understand the range of reasonable value. Real estate pricing is part data, part interpretation, and part buyer psychology. What Buyers Should Ask Before relying on a comparable sale, buyers should ask: How similar is the property really? Was the condition better or worse? Did it sell in a different market environment? Was it priced low to create competition? How many similar homes are available now? Would today’s buyers view this home as better or worse? These questions help buyers avoid overpaying or losing a good property because they relied on the wrong sale. What Sellers Should Ask Before using a comparable to set a price, sellers should ask: Is my home honestly in similar condition? Does my home have the same buyer appeal? Was the other sale an outlier? What competition will buyers compare us against? Are we pricing for attention or testing the market? What happens if we do not receive strong activity in the first two weeks? These questions help sellers build a pricing strategy instead of chasing a number. Final Thoughts Comparable sales in real estate are useful, but they are not automatic answers. They need context, adjustment, and honest interpretation. For buyers, comparables can help you understand value and avoid emotional overpaying. For sellers, they can help you price with confidence and avoid unrealistic expectations. But in both cases, the best results come from looking beyond the sold price and understanding the full story behind the sale. If you are buying or selling in Greater Victoria and want help understanding what comparable sales really mean for your next move, contact Faber Real Estate Group for clear, local advice. Tatiana S., 5-Star Review, via Google “Absolutely phenomenal service from start to finish! Scott took the time to really get to know us and understand our likes and dislikes, what were dealbreakers and what really sold us in finding our perfect first home! Being first time homebuyers, he was extremely patient with all of our questions and very thorough when it came down to the finer details. Without a doubt, I would recommend him to everyone!” 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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    A Practical Guide to Year-End Real Estate Planning in Greater Victoria
    December 18, 2025

    As the year comes to a close, real estate planning often takes a back seat to the holidays. However, December can be one of the most strategic times for buyers and sellers in Greater Victoria. Fewer active participants, motivated decision-making, and year-end financial considerations create opportunities that are easy to miss without a plan. Here are practical steps buyers and sellers should consider before the year ends: Year-End Strategies for Home Buyers Review Financing and Get Pre-ApprovedIf you are planning to buy in the new year, now is the time to review your mortgage options. Securing a pre-approval helps you understand your purchasing power and protects you against potential rate changes. It also allows you to act quickly if the right property appears during the quieter winter market. Refine Your Search CriteriaUse December to narrow down neighbourhoods, property types, and non-negotiables. Attend open houses, explore communities, and track recent sales. This groundwork positions you to move decisively when new listings appear in January. Watch for Motivated SellersSome sellers list in December due to job relocations, financial deadlines, or life changes. With less competition from other buyers, you may find more room to negotiate on price, conditions, or possession dates. Prepare for Tax and Legal PlanningIf you are purchasing an investment property, review tax implications, ownership structure, and closing timelines with your accountant or lawyer before the year ends. Year-End Considerations for Home Sellers Assess Market Value and TimingEven if you are planning to sell in early spring, December is an ideal time to assess pricing, recent comparable sales, and buyer demand in your area. This allows you to enter the new year with a clear strategy rather than reacting to the market. Complete Pre-Listing ImprovementsUse the slower season to handle repairs, maintenance, and energy-efficiency upgrades. These improvements can increase buyer confidence and reduce negotiation friction once your home hits the market. Organize Documentation EarlyGather property disclosures, permits, strata documents if applicable, and utility records now. Being prepared reduces stress and shortens timelines when you are ready to list. Consider a Strategic Winter ListingIn some cases, listing before year end can be advantageous. With fewer homes on the market, well-presented properties often receive more focused attention from serious buyers. Planning Ahead Creates Leverage Whether you are buying or selling, end-of-year planning is about preparation, not pressure. Taking the time now to review finances, understand the market, and clarify your goals puts you in a stronger position heading into the new year. In Greater Victoria’s competitive real estate market, informed and proactive decisions often make the difference between reacting to change and benefiting from it. Yemi E., 5-Star Review, via Google “Scott has been very receptive and sincere with my family since we’ve been on the island 2 years ago. The fountain of knowledge mixed with the love of the island truly shows. I recommend this agent cause he actually listens to your needs.” 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 “Building Lasting Relationships, One Home at a Time.”

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