Posts Tagged ‘VREB March 2026’
The Greater Victoria real estate market is giving buyers more room to breathe than it did a year ago. The Greater Victoria real estate market is still active, but it is clearly more competitive for sellers. Sales are down from last year, inventory is up, and buyers have more time to compare options, negotiate, and look for value. In March 2026, a total of 579 properties sold through the Victoria Real Estate Board, which was 5.5% lower than March 2025, when 613 properties sold. Detached home sales were down 2.4% year over year, and condo sales were down a sharper 18.8%. At the same time, active listings climbed to 3,261, up 7.9% from March 2025 and 12.3% from February 2026. That matters because it tells us buyers are not competing in the same tight environment they were used to in past markets. What That Means in Plain Terms This is a market with more supply and softer demand than last spring. That does not mean homes are not selling. It means sellers need to adjust their expectations. When inventory rises and sales fall, buyers gain leverage. They can be more selective. They can wait for the right home. They can compare condition, location, layout, and price across more listings. They are also more likely to push for better terms, ask tougher questions, and look for homes they feel are priced well from day one. For sellers, this is not the kind of market where most properties can simply come out high and expect to attract a top-dollar result. The strategy has to be tighter than that. Price, presentation, and timing all matter more when buyers have options. Buyers Are Looking for Deals One of the clearest signals in the current numbers is that buyers are shopping carefully. The Victoria Core benchmark for a single family home in March 2026 was $1,330,200, down 1.1% from March 2025. The benchmark for a condo was $553,800, down 0.8% year over year. Prices have not collapsed, but the direction tells an important story: buyers are resisting overpricing, and values are not rising fast enough to bail out an ambitious list price. That is why today’s buyers are often drawn to homes that feel like strong value. They are not just asking, “Do I like this home?” They are also asking, “Is this priced better than the other five I saw this week?” In a market like this, the overpriced listing often becomes the listing that sits. The Market Is Close to Buyer-Friendly Territory The sales-to-active listings ratio helps explain the tone of the market. In March 2026, there were 550 total residential sales and 3,261 active listings, which works out to roughly 16.9%. VREB notes that for Victoria, a ratio below 17% points to downward pressure on prices, 17% to 28% is considered balanced, and above 28% signals upward pressure on prices. In other words, the market is sitting right on the edge of buyer-friendly conditions. That does not mean every neighbourhood or property type behaves the same way. Greater Victoria is still made up of many micro-markets. A well-priced home in a high-demand pocket can still move quickly. But broadly speaking, sellers are competing harder for attention than they were a year ago. What Sellers Need to Understand Right Now If you are thinking about selling, the message is not “do not sell.” The message is do not sell with last market’s expectations. This market rewards sellers who: price based on current competition, not peak headlines prepare the home properly before it hits the market understand what buyers will compare it against respond quickly when feedback points to price or condition concerns This is especially important because buyers are no longer being rushed into decisions at the same pace. VREB itself noted that the current mix of supply and demand has created fewer high-pressure transactions and has given both sides more time for due diligence and decision-making. That is a major shift from the kind of market where almost any decent listing could rely on urgency to do part of the work. The Bottom Line The current Greater Victoria market is more competitive for sellers than it was last year. Sales are down. Inventory is higher. Buyers have more choice and are looking closely for value. That means top-dollar outcomes are still possible, but they are far less likely to come from overpricing or wishful thinking. They come from accurate pricing, strong preparation, and a strategy built for the market that exists now, not the one sellers remember. For homeowners considering a move, this is the time to be realistic, not reactive. A smart strategy can still produce a strong result, but the market is asking sellers to earn it. If you are thinking about selling and want honest advice on where your home fits in today’s market, contact Faber Real Estate Group for a clear pricing and positioning strategy tailored to your property. Michael F., 5-Star Review, via Google “Cal and Scott exceeded our expectations in every way. They were always available to answer our questions and address any concerns immediately, providing exceptional support throughout the entire process. Their dedication and expertise made the selling and buying experience seamless and stress-free.” 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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