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    What Homeowners Need to Know Before Moving From Condo to House

    April 23, 2026

    Moving from condo to house can feel like a natural next step. More space, more privacy, and more flexibility often sound like clear upgrades. However, condo to house is not just a square-footage decision. It is a lifestyle and cost decision that changes how you live, maintain your property, and plan your budget.

    For many Victoria homeowners, this move happens after a life change. A growing family, remote work, pets, storage needs, or simply wanting more room can all push the condo to start feeling too small. At the same time, moving into a house means taking on responsibilities that were once shared through strata living.

    Why this move appeals to so many owners

    There is a reason people think about leaving condo living behind.

    A detached house can offer:

    • more indoor space
    • a private yard
    • fewer shared walls
    • room for children, guests, or a home office
    • more control over renovations and day-to-day use
    • less concern about strata rules and restrictions

    That extra freedom is real. So is the extra responsibility.

    The biggest mindset shift: you become fully responsible

    In a condo, many major items are shared or managed through the strata. That does not mean condo ownership is simple, but it does mean certain responsibilities are spread out.

    In a house, they are yours.

    That includes:

    • roof maintenance
    • gutters and drainage
    • exterior paint or siding
    • yard care
    • fencing
    • plumbing and electrical repairs
    • heating system upkeep
    • windows, decks, and exterior wear

    For some buyers, this feels exciting. For others, it is the hidden cost of more freedom.

    Monthly costs change in a different way

    One of the most common mistakes buyers make when going from condo to house is comparing only the mortgage payment.

    A house may remove strata fees, but that does not automatically make ownership cheaper.

    Instead, the monthly cost structure shifts.

    Condo costs often include:

    • strata fees
    • shared building maintenance
    • building insurance through the strata
    • fewer direct exterior maintenance expenses

    House costs often add:

    • higher utility bills
    • property maintenance
    • landscaping or yard tools
    • separate home insurance
    • repair reserves for major items
    • potentially higher property taxes depending on area and value

    The lesson is simple: do not swap a strata fee for a false sense of savings.

    Maintenance is no longer somebody else’s problem

    This is often the biggest real-world adjustment.

    Many condo owners move into a house because they want more control. That is fair. Just remember that control comes with tasks.

    Before buying a house, ask yourself:

    • Am I comfortable managing repairs?
    • Do I want to spend weekends on upkeep?
    • Do I have room in my budget for surprise costs?
    • Would I rather maintain a yard or pay strata fees?
    • How old are the roof, windows, furnace, and hot water system?

    A house can be a better fit. It just needs to be a fit for your time and energy too.

    Your search criteria need to expand

    Condo buyers often focus heavily on interior finish, building quality, strata documents, and monthly fees.

    House buyers still care about those things, but the checklist becomes broader.

    Now you also need to look at:

    • lot size
    • drainage
    • age and condition of major systems
    • foundation type
    • attic and crawlspace issues
    • neighbourhood fit
    • school catchments if relevant
    • commute and traffic patterns
    • renovation potential
    • long-term resale appeal

    In other words, the property becomes more complex. So does the due diligence.

    The emotional shift is bigger than many people expect

    A condo often offers simplicity. A house often offers possibility.

    That sounds positive, but it can also create pressure.

    Buyers moving into a house often start thinking:

    • Should we stretch a little more for the better neighbourhood?
    • Should we buy something move-in ready or something with upside?
    • How much work are we willing to take on?
    • Are we buying for today or for the next ten years?

    This is why upsizing can feel less straightforward than people expect. More options do not always create more confidence. In fact, Faber’s market strategy work highlights that in a market with more inventory and more choice, clients often need stronger decision support and more structured planning, not less.

    Selling your condo and buying a house requires coordination

    This move is often tied to two transactions, not one.

    That means you need a strategy for:

    • pricing and selling the condo realistically
    • understanding how quickly it may sell
    • knowing your financing position for the house
    • deciding whether to sell first or buy first
    • planning possession dates and move timing

    A rushed decision on one side can create stress on the other side.

    For example, overpricing the condo may delay the sale and affect your house purchase plans. On the other hand, buying too quickly without understanding the real costs of house ownership can lead to regret after possession.

    What condo owners often underestimate about houses

    Outdoor upkeep

    A yard looks great in listing photos. It also needs mowing, trimming, weeding, cleanup, and seasonal maintenance.

    Ongoing repair budgeting

    In a condo, special assessments feel frustrating because they arrive all at once. In a house, repairs can show up one by one. The cost still arrives.

    Furnishing and space creep

    A larger home often needs more furniture, more storage solutions, and more ongoing upkeep inside too.

    Heating and utility use

    Detached homes often cost more to heat and cool. Older homes can increase that difference even more.

    Time

    This is the overlooked one. A house asks for more attention. Some buyers love that. Others miss the simplicity of condo living more than they expected.

    What to think about before making the jump

    1. Why do you want a house?

    Make sure the answer is specific. More space is not enough on its own. What problem is the house solving?

    2. What kind of house fits your life?

    Not every detached home offers the same experience. A newer small-lot home, an older character home, and a suburban family house all come with different workloads and benefits.

    3. What is your real monthly comfort zone?

    Build a budget that includes repairs, utilities, insurance, and maintenance, not just mortgage qualification.

    4. How much work do you want to take on?

    There is a big difference between wanting freedom and wanting projects.

    5. What is your timing plan?

    If you need to sell the condo first, build that into the strategy early. If you buy first, understand the carrying risk.

    A practical framework for moving from condo to house

    Step 1: Review your current condo position

    Understand likely sale value, monthly ownership costs, and what equity you can bring forward.

    Step 2: Define your next-home priorities

    Separate must-haves from nice-to-haves. Space, yard, location, school area, and condition all need to be ranked.

    Step 3: Build a house budget properly

    Include more than mortgage and taxes. Add maintenance reserves, utilities, insurance, and move costs.

    Step 4: Study the property, not just the photos

    A house purchase needs stronger due diligence because there are more systems, more components, and more long-term costs.

    Step 5: Coordinate the move as one plan

    Treat the condo sale and house purchase as connected decisions, not separate events.

    Final thoughts

    Moving from condo to house can be a smart next step, but only when the decision is based on the full picture. More space and freedom can absolutely improve your lifestyle. The key is knowing what extra cost, responsibility, and planning come with that change before you commit.

    If you are thinking about moving from condo to house in Greater Victoria, contact Faber Real Estate Group for advice on timing, budgeting, and finding the right fit for your next chapter.

     

    Matt C., 5-Star Review, via Google

    “I would highly recommend not only the Faber group however specifically Scott. He treated us with the utmost respect and looked out for our best interests. Our selling and buying process were seemless with little stress due to Scott handling everything behind the scenes. Furthermore not only did Scott show us exactly what we were looking for he knew what location would best suit our lives.”

    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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