Posts Tagged ‘Victoria real estate trends’
How to read the Victoria market without overreacting to headlines starts with one simple idea: national housing stories and local real estate decisions are not the same thing. It is easy to see a dramatic headline about falling sales, rising uncertainty, or interest rate risk and assume the same conclusion applies directly to Greater Victoria. However, the local market has its own mix of inventory, buyer demand, price behaviour, and micro-markets. In March 2026, the Victoria Real Estate Board reported 579 sales, which was 24.5 per cent higher than February, while active listings climbed to 3,261, up 7.9 per cent from March 2025. That is not a frozen market. It is a more balanced one. (vreb.org) That distinction matters. Nationally, CREA reported that Canadian home sales activity in March 2026 was virtually unchanged month over month, and Reuters reported that CREA also downgraded its 2026 forecast amid higher mortgage costs and wider uncertainty. At the same time, the Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25 per cent on March 18, 2026. Those are useful signals, but they are not a substitute for local interpretation. (crea.ca; bankofcanada.ca; (Reuters)) Headline Risk Comes From Oversimplifying the Story Most headlines are built to compress a complicated market into one emotion. That emotion might be fear, urgency, optimism, or caution. The problem is that real estate decisions are rarely improved by emotional compression. A headline might say sales are down, but that does not tell you whether inventory is up, whether pricing is stable in your segment, whether one property type is outperforming another, or whether your neighbourhood is behaving differently from the broader region. VREB said current conditions in Greater Victoria are creating fewer high-pressure transactions and giving both buyers and sellers more time for due diligence. That is a much more useful insight than a broad headline suggesting the sky is falling. (vreb.org) Start With Inventory, Not Emotion If you want to understand what is really happening, start by asking how much choice buyers have. At the end of March 2026, there were 3,261 active listings in the VREB region. That was up 12.3 per cent from February and up 7.9 per cent from March 2025. More inventory usually means more competition for sellers and more leverage for buyers. It also means buyers can be more selective, which tends to stretch timelines and reduce panic-driven decisions. (vreb.org) This is why one negative sales headline can be misleading. If listings are up but prices are relatively stable, that is a different market story from a true downturn driven by weak demand and collapsing values. Then Look at Property Type The Victoria market is not one market. It is a collection of smaller markets. CREA’s Victoria market conditions data for the first quarter of 2026 shows different timelines by property type: single-family homes: 26 median days on market townhouses: 31 median days on market condominiums: 30 median days on market (creastats.crea.ca) It also shows higher months of inventory across all three major categories compared with a year earlier. Single-family inventory was 4.3 months in Q1 2026, townhouse inventory was 3.7 months, and condominium inventory was 5.3 months. (creastats.crea.ca) So if a headline says “the market is slowing,” the better question is: which part of the market? Price Changes Need Context Too Another common mistake is reacting to one price stat without asking what it actually measures. VREB’s March 2026 benchmark for a Victoria Core single-family home was $1,330,200, down 1.1 per cent from March 2025 but up from February 2026. The benchmark for a Victoria Core condominium was $553,800, down 0.8 per cent year over year and also up from February. (vreb.org) That is a more nuanced story than a dramatic “prices are falling” headline. In plain terms, some values are softer than a year ago, but the month-to-month trend into spring improved. That is exactly why broad headlines can distort what is actually happening on the ground. Pay Attention to Timing, Not Just Direction A lot of headlines miss the seasonal rhythm of Victoria real estate. VREB noted that March 2026 followed a fairly typical spring pattern, with both sales and listings increasing from the previous month and the market generally building toward a peak in May or June. (vreb.org) That matters because a temporary slowdown in January or February can look dramatic in a headline while still being completely normal in a seasonal market cycle. Without context, people mistake rhythm for risk. Use Headlines as Prompts, Not Conclusions Good market headlines can still be useful. They just should not be treated as your final interpretation. A better process is: read the headline check whether it is national, provincial, or local compare sales, inventory, and benchmark prices break the market down by property type ask what is happening in your actual neighbourhood and price band That approach is slower, but it leads to better decisions. What Buyers and Sellers Should Really Watch Instead of reacting to every market story, buyers and sellers in Victoria should focus on the indicators that affect strategy most directly: active listings and months of inventory median days on market by property type benchmark price movement over time competition in your exact neighbourhood and price segment whether your goals depend on speed, price, or flexibility For example, someone buying a condo in the core should not interpret the market the same way as someone selling a detached home in a tightly held neighbourhood. The Bigger Lesson The Victoria market rarely rewards people for being the most emotional person in the room. It usually rewards people who understand local conditions, compare the right numbers, and avoid making big decisions based on broad narratives. Headlines are designed to get attention. Strategy is designed to get results. Final Thought If you want to read the Victoria market without overreacting to headlines, focus less on noise and more on what the local data is actually saying. Inventory is higher, buyers have more room to think, and different segments are moving at different speeds. That is not a reason to panic. It is a reason to be more strategic. If you want help interpreting what the current market means for your next move, contact Faber Real Estate Group for grounded local advice tailored to your situation. Brandon S., 5-Star Review, via Google “My wife and I sold our condo in View Royal and bought a place in Esquimalt with the help of The Faber Group. Scott helped us to find and buy the perfect home for our growing family in a very competitive market. He got to know our wants and needs and worked within our schedule with a small baby. Once we found the perfect place Scott helped us to get it for under the asking price and sold our condo in one day on the market with multiple offers over asking! We are so grateful that Scott helped us through this process, answering our many questions and alleviating our concerns. Thank you for helping us sell our first home and buy a beautiful house for our family.” 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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The spring market in Victoria, BC is now taking shape, and this year it looks more balanced, more selective, and less rushed than the fast-moving markets many people still remember. March 2026 sales in the Victoria Real Estate Board region rose to 579 properties, up 24.5 per cent from February, while active listings climbed to 3,261. VREB described this as a fairly typical spring pattern that usually builds toward May or June. More Listings Means More Choice One of the clearest themes this spring is inventory. Buyers are seeing more options than they did in many recent spring markets, and that changes the tone of the market. At the end of March 2026, active listings were up 12.3 per cent from February and 7.9 per cent from March 2025. That matters because more selection usually gives buyers more time to compare properties, review documents carefully, and make decisions with less pressure. This trend was already building in February. VREB reported 2,903 active listings at the end of that month, up 10.6 per cent from January and 10.4 per cent from the year before. In other words, spring did not suddenly appear in March. It has been building in stages, with supply steadily improving as more sellers prepare to list. Buyers Should Expect Better Conditions Than Recent Years For buyers, this spring should feel more manageable than the highly competitive conditions of past years. VREB noted that current conditions are creating fewer high-pressure transactions and allowing more time for due diligence. That does not mean every home will sit or every seller will negotiate heavily. Well-priced homes in strong locations can still move quickly. It does mean buyers have a better chance to compare options and make decisions with a plan rather than panic. That fits the broader provincial picture as well. BCREA says inventory across BC is running near its highest level in more than a decade, and it expects markets to remain broadly balanced in 2026, with price growth tempered by higher supply. Sellers Should Expect More Competition For sellers, the spring market still offers opportunity, but not in the same way it did in ultra-tight markets. More listings mean more competition. Buyers have more homes to compare, so pricing, presentation, and strategy matter more. A property that is well prepared and priced in line with today’s market can still attract strong attention. A property that is overpriced or poorly presented may sit longer than expected. This is where many sellers can get caught off guard. Spring brings more buyer activity, but it also brings more competing listings. More activity does not automatically mean more leverage for every seller. In a balanced market, the homes that stand out usually do so because the strategy behind them is stronger, not because the season alone carries them. This matches the current reality that VREB describes as offering opportunities for both buyers and sellers rather than strongly favouring one side. Prices Are Showing Stability More Than Acceleration If you are wondering whether spring 2026 will bring a sharp jump in prices, the current data suggests a steadier pattern. In the Victoria Core, the MLS HPI benchmark for a single-family home was $1,330,200 in March 2026, down 1.1 per cent from March 2025 but up from February 2026. The benchmark for a condo was $553,800, down 0.8 per cent year over year and also up month over month. That tells an important story. Prices are not showing the kind of fast upward pressure that buyers feared in past spring markets, but they are also not collapsing. Instead, we are seeing a market where values are relatively stable, with modest month-to-month improvement as spring demand builds. What This Means for Buyers If you are buying this spring, expect more choice, more time to think, and more room to be strategic. That said, do not confuse a more balanced market with an easy market. Good homes can still attract competition, especially if they are priced well and show well. The advantage for buyers this year is not unlimited negotiating power. It is the ability to be more deliberate. A smart buyer strategy this spring is to get clear on your budget, target neighbourhoods, and must-haves before the right property appears. When the right fit does come up, preparation still matters. The buyers who do best in a balanced spring market are often the ones who are patient first and decisive second. What This Means for Sellers If you are selling this spring, expect buyers to notice value gaps more quickly. They have more listings to compare, and that makes strong pricing and strong presentation more important. Spring can still be an excellent time to list, but it is no longer enough to rely on seasonal momentum alone. Sellers who are realistic from the start often put themselves in a stronger position than those who test the market too high and hope conditions will do the work for them. In this market, preparation, marketing quality, and pricing discipline are what create leverage. The Bottom Line on This Year’s Spring Market The spring market in Victoria, BC looks active, but measured. Sales are rising seasonally, inventory is improving, and the market is giving both buyers and sellers room to make better decisions. That is a healthier environment than the rushed conditions many people associate with spring real estate. It also means strategy matters more than ever. If you are planning to buy or sell this spring, the best next step is not to guess where the market is going. It is to understand how your specific property type, price point, and area fit into today’s conditions. If you want help building the right plan for this spring market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice tailored to your move. 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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As realtors working in Greater Victoria, we often get asked by buyers which types of homes offer the best value right now. Whether you are looking at condos, townhomes, detached houses, or properties in suburban neighbourhoods, the right choice depends on your lifestyle, budget, and long-term goals. Condos Condos remain a popular choice for first-time buyers, downsizers, and people seeking a low-maintenance lifestyle. In Greater Victoria, many condos are located near downtown or along transit corridors, making them convenient for work, shopping, and entertainment. Prices for condos have been relatively stable, and some buildings offer amenities such as gyms, pools, and concierge services. Condos are ideal if you want a smaller footprint and less responsibility for maintenance, though strata fees should be factored into your budget. Townhomes Townhomes are a great middle ground. They offer more space and privacy than a condo but are generally more affordable than detached homes. In areas like Langford, Saanich, and Oak Bay, townhomes are attractive to young families or buyers looking for more room without a full yard to maintain. Many townhome communities also have shared amenities and strong community appeal. Townhomes are a good option if you want a balance of affordability, space, and convenience. Detached Houses Detached houses offer the most flexibility, space, and privacy. They are perfect for growing families or anyone wanting a backyard, garage, or room to expand. Prices for detached homes in Greater Victoria are higher, especially in core areas like Fairfield, Oak Bay, and Fernwood. While the investment is larger, detached homes tend to hold their value well and offer long-term stability. If you can manage the budget, a detached home in a desirable neighbourhood is often the best long-term investment. Suburban Neighbourhoods Suburban homes, particularly in Langford, View Royal, and Sooke, have become increasingly popular. These areas offer more space for the price, larger lots, and newer construction. Suburban living may mean a longer commute for some, but it also provides access to parks, schools, and a quieter lifestyle. Suburbs are often the best buy for buyers seeking value, modern homes, and room to grow. The Bottom Line There is no one-size-fits-all answer when it comes to the best home type in Greater Victoria. Condos are great for convenience and low maintenance, townhomes offer a balance of space and cost, detached homes provide long-term investment potential, and suburban properties give more room for the price. The best choice depends on your priorities, budget, and lifestyle. As realtors in Greater Victoria, we help buyers navigate these options, evaluate the market, and find the right fit for their needs. The key is to understand the trade-offs and make a choice that works for your life today and in the future. 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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Victoria real estate myths can mislead both buyers and sellers. As we move into 2026 in Victoria, British Columbia, market conditions have shifted from the frenzy of earlier years. Here, we address common misconceptions with up-to-date data and practical insights. Myth 1: Prices Always Rise A pervasive belief is that real estate prices in Victoria will only go up. While long-term demographic demand and limited land supply support overall value retention, benchmark prices have not consistently climbed in 2025. Data from late 2025 shows single-family home benchmark prices slightly down year-over-year in the Victoria core and sales slowing, even as detached values remain relatively high. This reflects a stable or mildly softening market rather than unchecked price growth. Pricing is now more balanced, influenced by interest rates, inventory levels and buyers’ ability to act. Expect modest movement rather than guaranteed annual increases in 2026. Myth 2: Condominiums Are Always a Bad Investment Another common idea is that condos are poor investments in Victoria. The condo market did experience significant sales declines in 2025, especially compared to detached homes, and some downtown inventory softened. However, benchmark condo prices have shown mild appreciation in late 2025. Market niche, building quality, location and rental demand all matter for investment outcomes. Victoria’s condo segment can still offer opportunities, particularly where rental returns and future demand align with investor goals. Myth 3: You’ll Always Get Multiple Offers The extreme multiple-offer situations of the early 2020s have largely vanished. In balanced conditions, competitive offers occur but are no longer the norm. Accurate pricing, presentation and a strategic listing approach now drive stronger outcomes — not simply list-and-watch offers flood in. Myth 4: Real Estate Agents Aren’t Needed Anymore With abundant online data, some believe professional representation is optional. In a balanced and nuanced market, expert guidance remains critical for pricing strategy, negotiation and risk management — particularly in Victoria where micro-market variations can be significant. Myth 5: Rental Demand Always Sustains Values The link between rental demand and investment value is not automatic. Broader Canadian trends show rents softening into late 2025 and early 2026, which can temper yield expectations for investors. Conclusion Victoria’s real estate landscape in 2026 is defined by stability and balance, not runaway growth or universal downturns. Dispelling myths with current data helps buyers and investors make informed decisions rather than relying on assumptions rooted in past market behaviour. Raman B., 5-Star Review, via Google “Faber group is a power house team with motivation, drive and a desire to exceed your needs. This family based business excels in the Victoria real estate market and goes to great lengths to find the perfect property that suits you. I would highly recommend them, 5 out of 5 stars!!” 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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Many buyers are searching for homes that allow them to settle in quickly with minimal work. As construction costs rise and renovation timelines become less predictable, move in ready homes are gaining more attention and often selling faster than properties that require updates. Understanding why these homes are standing out can help buyers make better decisions in today’s market. Why Buyers Are Prioritizing Convenience and Certainty Renovations can add stress, cost, and time to the buying process. Move in ready homes provide the opposite experience. Buyers can take possession with confidence, avoid immediate upgrades, and focus on enjoying the home from day one. This level of convenience is especially appealing to busy professionals, families, and first time purchasers who want a smooth transition. How Updated Finishes Create Strong First Impressions Homes that have been well maintained or updated tend to photograph better, show better, and attract more interest online. Modern kitchens, refreshed bathrooms, and neutral colour schemes help buyers envision themselves living in the home. This often leads to increased foot traffic, stronger offers, and a more competitive market position. Cost Predictability Matters More Than Ever With renovation prices continuing to fluctuate, buyers appreciate the financial clarity that a move in ready home provides. There are fewer unknowns, fewer surprise expenses, and greater ability to plan ahead. This predictability can be a major advantage when budgeting for closing costs, moving costs, and future ownership responsibilities. Move In Ready Options Still Need Strong Due Diligence Even well presented homes require careful evaluation. Buyers should review home history, ask about recent upgrades, and understand the age of key systems such as roofs, plumbing, and electrical. A move in ready home is most valuable when both the cosmetic and functional features are in good condition. Why These Homes Stand Out in Competitive Markets In a market where buyers value simplicity and stability, move in ready homes often rise to the top of the list. They reduce barriers to settling into a new community and allow buyers to focus on lifestyle rather than renovation planning. As more purchasers prioritize low maintenance living, these properties will continue to play a key role in overall market activity. If you would like support identifying move in ready opportunities across the Westshore or Greater Victoria, we can help you compare neighbourhoods, property conditions, and long term value. Grace Chong., 5-Star Review, via Google “Zach is very pleasant and professional at all times. He's great to work with. He helped us find a great home for our family. Thank you.” 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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As realtors who have worked through hot cycles, slowdowns, and everything in between, we can confidently say that Greater Victoria is currently a balanced market. Not the runaway bidding wars of 2021-2022, and not the ultra-cautious environment immediately after the interest rate hikes. Instead, we’re in a middle ground where good properties sell, and buyers have room to think. Inventory and Sales Pressure The clearest indicator of balance is inventory relative to demand. At the end of October 2025, the Victoria Real Estate Board recorded 3,423 active listings across Greater Victoria. That’s well above the extremely low inventory levels of the pandemic boom, but it isn’t oversupply. It allows buyers to compare options without forcing sellers to slash prices. The sales-to-active-listings ratio sits around 18-20 percent. Industry standards consider roughly 12-16 percent a buyer’s market and 20-28 percent a seller’s market. The mid-to-high teens is the territory we call balanced. In practice, this means neither side has full leverage: buyers can negotiate, and sellers can still get fair results when priced correctly. What Prices Are Doing Prices in 2025 are steady overall, though the behavior varies by product type. The benchmark price for a single-family home in the Victoria core is approximately $1,276,500. That is down about 1.8 percent from 2024. The drop is far from a crash; it’s more of a normalization after years of outsized growth. Condominiums are holding firm. The benchmark condo price in the core is just over $551,000, up roughly 0.6 percent year-over-year. This segment benefits from affordability pressures and downsizers returning to the city. Townhomes sit in between. Average sales this year hover around $815,000, with a median around $794,500. They offer more space than a condo without the single-family price tag, and they remain attractive to young families. Across all property types, homes are selling close to listing price. Most transactions land in the 97-98 percent of asking range, which is another sign of equilibrium. When a market favors sellers, you see multiple offers and over-asking. In a soft market, homes sell well below list. Right now, neither extreme is dominant. How This Feels on the Ground If you’re a buyer, you can breathe. You’re no longer racing through 15-minute showings only to hear the home sold before you’ve reached your car. You can walk through several properties, compare finishes and layouts, and analyze monthly costs. You still need pre-approval and a strategic approach, but you have the luxury of choice. If you’re a seller, strategy matters more than ever. A well-priced home in a core neighbourhood like Fairfield, Oak Bay, or East Saanich still attracts strong attention. Listings that land above the comparable range or need too much work for today’s buyers will sit. Presentation, staging, and timing have become essential strategies again rather than optional add-ons. Why Balanced Markets Are Often the Best Balanced markets tend to be healthier and more sustainable. In an overheated market, buyers stretch beyond comfort, waive due diligence, and often regret the decisions that follow. In a weak market, sellers feel trapped or discouraged. Balance creates clarity. It allows everyone involved to act rationally, negotiate fairly, and make informed decisions. The Greater Victoria market is dynamic by nature. It reacts to interest rates, lifestyle migration, limited land supply, and the value people place on this region. But right now, the numbers and the day-to-day experience line up: this is not a market tilted heavily toward either party. It is one in which preparation and proper advice matter more than brute force. Justine Dancey, 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal and Scott treated us like family. We had only 5 days to find a home and Cal cleared his schedule to make himself available to us. Cal guided us in the purchase of our home, as if we were a member of his family asking for advice. I knew we could trust Cal. His service to us did not stop with the purchase of our home…he helped us find trades people and provided information about rental incomes in the area. We were new to the Island and I honestly felt that Cal adopted us and has made sure we had everything we needed. We did not just gain a realtor, but a friend. If you are looking for a realtor you can TRUST, and will look out for YOUR interests— then Cal and Scott are IT!!!” 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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