Market mood: more selection, more patience, and slightly softer demand.
January is often a “reset” month in real estate — people re-enter the market after the holidays, but not everyone jumps in at once. January 2026 reflected that seasonal return, with a key twist: inventory stayed strong while sales pulled back, which generally creates more choice for buyers and more defined outcomes for sellers.
What the Latest Data Suggests (Regional Overview)
The Victoria Real Estate Board (VREB) reported 339 total sales in January 2026, down 19.7% from 422 in January 2025, and down 7.6% from December 2025.
That drop in sales matters because it signals a market that’s moving at a more cautious pace — not stalled, but less urgency-driven.
At the same time, active listings rose. At month-end there were 2,624 active listings, up 3.1% from December and 9.6% higher than January 2025.
That combination (more listings + fewer sales) is why VREB described January as sitting on the threshold between a balanced market and a buyer’s market.
Pricing signals were mixed, and that’s normal in a market made up of micro-markets. Benchmark values (MLS® HPI) show small month-to-month movements, and modest year-over-year changes, which supports a “stable but selective” interpretation.
Property Type Perspectives (Mandatory)
🏡 Single Family Residential (Detached)
Single family home sales were 153, down 21.1% year-over-year.
This suggests demand is present, but buyers are taking more time and comparing more options.
One helpful “pace + competition” signal is the single-family sell/list ratio of 40%, with 55 days to sell and 590 active listings at month-end (VREB category: Single Family – Residential).
Interpretation: detached homes can still sell well when priced and presented properly, but sellers should expect fewer instant decisions.
🏘️ Townhouses & Duplexes (Combined)
In the VREB package, “Row/Townhouse” recorded 53 sales (slightly up year-over-year), and “Half Duplex (Side-by-Side)” recorded 9 sales (with other duplex subtypes showing minimal activity this month).
Together, that reinforces the role of ground-oriented attached housing as the “middle path” — attractive to move-up buyers and downsizers who want space without detached pricing.
Row/townhouse showed a 32% sell/list ratio, 54 days to sell, and 263 active listings (row/townhouse only).
Interpretation: this segment tends to stay active because it’s a value bridge — but buyers are still careful, especially when monthly payments feel tight.
🏢 Condominium Apartments
Condo sales were 109, down 25.3% year-over-year.
That’s the largest sales drop among the main categories, and it typically signals selectivity, not necessarily distress.
Condo conditions: 27% sell/list ratio, 52 days to sell, and 682 active listings at month-end.
Interpretation: buyers are paying closer attention to total ownership costs (fees, building quality, future maintenance), and condos often feel the “payment sensitivity” first.
Area-Level Insight (Core vs Westshore vs Peninsula)
Benchmark pricing showed meaningful differences by area:
Core (Single Family benchmark): $1,265,500, up from December, but down 2.5% YoY.
VREBNewsReleaseFull jan 2026Westshore (Single Family benchmark): $1,016,200, up 2.4% YoY.
VREBNewsReleaseFull jan 2026Peninsula (Single Family benchmark): $1,254,600, up 1.2% YoY.
VREBNewsReleaseFull jan 2026
Interpretation: affordability and housing mix continue to shape outcomes. Westshore tends to respond differently than the Core because buyers comparing value and “newer stock” may land there first.
How Greater Victoria Fits Into the Bigger Picture
VREB noted that market direction in 2026 may be shaped by inventory levels plus external forces like interest rates, global trade tensions, and consumer confidence.
For people considering a move here, that’s a reminder that Greater Victoria is both small and diverse — micro-markets matter.
What This Means for Different Groups
🟦 Buyers
More inventory and slower sales typically means more selection and calmer negotiations. The main advantage right now is choice — and the ability to be disciplined about condition, layout, and value.
🟩 Sellers
This is a market where pricing realism and presentation matter more. With more listings available, buyers can move on quickly if something feels overpriced.
🟨 Investors / Builders / Developers
A market hovering near “buyer-leaning balance” tends to reward product that is well-positioned on price and usability. Absorption depends heavily on location and housing form.
🟪 People Considering a Move
Greater Victoria remains a lifestyle-driven market — but your experience will vary dramatically depending on area + housing type + budget range.
What This Data Does Not Show
These statistics can’t predict the outcome for a specific home. Two properties in the same neighbourhood can perform very differently depending on condition, pricing strategy, and competition that week.
Bottom Line
January 2026 suggests a market that is steady, inventory-rich, and more decision-friendly, with conditions close to balanced but slightly buyer-leaning. No urgency required — just good local context.