in sales
sqft of residential and commercial sold
families and business served
5 star online reviews
Websites advertising reach
Stats as of Dec 2025

$ 750,000,000 +
in sales
1,850,000 +
sqft of residential and commercial sold
1,000 +
families and businesses served
100's
5 star online reviews
26,000 +
Websites advertising reach
*Stats as of Dec 2025
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Coquitlam Townhouse Market 2026: Why Seller's Market Conditions (23% Sales-to-Active Ratio) Create Pricing Power When Detached Homes and Condos Face Buyer Advantages

June 05, 2026

Coquitlam Townhouse Market 2026: Why Seller's Market Conditions (23% Sales-to-Active Ratio) Create Pricing Power When Detached Homes and Condos Face Buyer Advantages

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group

Published: June 10, 2026 | Geography: Coquitlam, Tri-Cities, Metro Vancouver | Topic: Townhouse Seller Strategy

Most of the coverage on Coquitlam's 2026 real estate market leads with the same story: the composite benchmark is down 6.3% year-over-year, detached homes are slow, and buyers hold more leverage than they did two years ago. That framing is accurate for the overall market. It is not accurate for townhouses.

Coquitlam townhouses are operating under materially different conditions than detached homes and condos in the same city. The data from April 2026 shows a sales-to-active ratio of 23% for townhomes — the only segment in Coquitlam currently above the 20% threshold that signals a seller's market. If you own a Coquitlam townhouse and are thinking about selling, the broader market narrative does not apply to your property type.

Short Answer

Coquitlam townhouses posted a 23% sales-to-active ratio in April 2026, according to local market data — placing them firmly in seller's market territory. With a benchmark price of $1,008,100, days-on-market of 28 days, and only a 0.06% month-over-month price decline, townhomes are the most stable and competitive segment in Coquitlam right now. Detached homes at a 10% ratio and condos near 15% tell a different story.

Key Takeaways

  • Coquitlam townhouses hold a 23% sales-to-active ratio — a genuine seller's market signal in April 2026.
  • At 28 days on market, townhomes absorb faster than any other Coquitlam property type right now.
  • The townhouse benchmark of $1,008,100 declined only 0.06% month-over-month, showing price stability.
  • Detached homes at 10% ratio and a slower 31-day average sit firmly in buyer-favorable conditions.
  • Townhouse sellers who understand their segment have real pricing and negotiation leverage — most don't realize it.

Who This Applies To

  • Townhouse owners in Coquitlam considering a sale in 2026
  • Sellers who have been told the market is soft and are delaying unnecessarily
  • Investors evaluating whether to hold or liquidate a townhouse in the Tri-Cities
  • Owners downsizing from a detached home into a smaller property who need to understand relative market strength

When This Advice May Not Apply

Townhouses in buildings with significant deferred maintenance, unresolved strata issues, or active special levies may not benefit equally from these market conditions. Properties priced materially above comparable sold data will not benefit from a favourable ratio if buyers perceive a gap between the asking price and fair market value. The data reflects segment averages — individual results depend on property condition, strata health, and pricing discipline.

Data Used in This Article

  • Coquitlam April 2026 townhome / detached / condo SAR and DOM data — soldbycraig.ca local market update, third-party compilation of board data
  • Tri-Cities townhome vs. detached DOM and SAR — bridgewellgroup.ca Tri-Cities market report, third-party compilation
  • Metro Vancouver townhome benchmark and Burquitlam corridor demand — salarirealty.com May 2026 update, third-party analysis
  • Greater Vancouver attached home benchmark and YoY trend — wowa.ca, May 2026, third-party aggregation of board data

Note: These figures are drawn from third-party compilations of Greater Vancouver Realtors board data. Readers should verify current figures directly with the Greater Vancouver Realtors (GVR) board reports at gvrealtors.ca.

What the Sales-to-Active Ratio Actually Measures

The sales-to-active listings ratio compares the number of properties that sold in a given month against the total number of active listings in the same period. A ratio above 20% generally indicates upward pressure on prices, meaning sellers have leverage. A ratio below 12% favours buyers. The range between 12% and 20% is considered balanced.

In April 2026, Coquitlam's townhouse segment sat at 23% — above the seller threshold. Its detached segment sat at 10% — clearly in buyer's market territory. The broader Coquitlam composite market reflects these divergent segments, which is why the headline narrative of "buyer's market" is accurate in aggregate but misleading for townhouse owners specifically.

For sellers, the practical meaning of a 23% ratio is straightforward: there are fewer competing listings relative to buyer demand in your segment. Properties that are priced accurately and well-prepared are moving in roughly 28 days. That is not a market where heavy discounting or drawn-out negotiations are the norm.

Why Townhouses Are Outperforming Detached Homes and Condos in Coquitlam

The answer comes down to the intersection of affordability, supply, and buyer profile. Coquitlam detached homes benchmarked at approximately $1.64 million in early 2026. For the buyer pool that cannot or will not stretch to that price — young families, dual-income households without generational wealth, buyers relocating from Vancouver — a townhouse at $1,008,100 is often the only realistic path to ground-level living with a yard or private outdoor space.

Condos in the same city offer lower entry points but come without the space, storage, or layout that families typically need. That creates a demand concentration in the townhouse segment that neither condos nor detached homes experience equally. The missing middle supply gap is a structural feature of Metro Vancouver housing policy and zoning history, not a temporary fluctuation.

The Burquitlam corridor — anchored by SkyTrain access — has also continued to draw transit-oriented buyers who value walkability and commute efficiency. Townhomes near these nodes absorb consistently because the buyer profile is active and motivated. For context, Metro Vancouver townhomes overall benchmarked at $1,043,400 in May 2026, down 5.1% year-over-year according to wowa.ca — a softer decline than the 6.9% YoY drop recorded for detached homes in the same region.

Port Coquitlam, for comparison, showed a townhouse benchmark of $872,600 — providing additional buying options in the Tri-Cities for price-sensitive buyers, but Coquitlam's transit infrastructure and neighbourhood maturity continue to support a price premium. See Coquitlam vs. Port Coquitlam vs. Port Moody for a full budget-based comparison across the Tri-Cities.

How We Evaluate This

When Mansour Real Estate Group assesses the positioning of a townhouse listing, the composite market data is context — not the decision framework. What drives the pricing recommendation is the segment-specific sales-to-active ratio, the current DOM for that property type, how many comparable active listings exist, and where sold comparables have landed in the past 30 to 60 days.

A townhouse seller in Coquitlam who prices based on the headline narrative — "the market is soft" — risks underpricing relative to what the segment can actually support. A seller who understands the 23% ratio and prices to it, with a well-prepared home, is positioned to sell at or near list price without extended negotiation. The gap between those two outcomes is often measured in tens of thousands of dollars.

Coquitlam Townhouse Seller Checklist

  1. Confirm your townhouse benchmark and segment SAR with your agent before accepting any headline market framing
  2. Pull active comparable listings — not just sold data — to understand current competition within your strata tier and size range
  3. Request strata minutes and financial statements for the past two years to identify any issues that could surface during buyer due diligence
  4. Price to the townhouse segment data, not the composite Coquitlam market number, which is weighted by detached homes
  5. Set a realistic DOM expectation of 25 to 35 days — and resist the pressure to reduce price before that window has closed
  6. Ensure your strata documents are organized and ready to provide quickly — delays in strata document disclosure can stall subject removal and cost you a buyer
  7. Consider a pre-listing review of your unit's condition relative to current buyer expectations for the $950,000 to $1,100,000 price range

What We Commonly See

In our experience working with Coquitlam townhouse sellers, the most common missed opportunity is pricing to the wrong market. A seller reads that the Coquitlam composite is down 6.3% year-over-year, factors that into their expectations, and enters the market either underpriced or psychologically prepared for a heavily negotiated outcome. Neither is necessary in the townhouse segment at current ratios.

What often happens is that these sellers leave money on the table not because the market demanded it, but because their pricing strategy was calibrated to the wrong data set. A 10% detached ratio and a 23% townhouse ratio require completely different approaches — and conflating them is a real cost.

A common mistake is treating strata document preparation as an afterthought. In a segment where buyers are motivated and timelines are short, delays in producing depreciation reports, Form B certificates, or meeting minutes create friction that can derail a clean offer. Sellers who have these documents ready before listing typically experience smoother subject removal and fewer conditional offer extensions. For buyers new to strata ownership, the Coquitlam Real Estate Glossary covers Form B, depreciation reports, and related strata terms in plain language.

Common Questions About the Coquitlam Townhouse Market

What does a 23% sales-to-active ratio mean for a townhouse seller in Coquitlam?

It means demand is absorbing available supply quickly enough that sellers hold pricing leverage. Properties priced accurately are selling without significant discounting. A ratio above 20% is generally understood as a seller's market threshold in BC.

Is the Coquitlam townhouse market actually a seller's market even while the broader market is soft?

Yes, based on April 2026 data. The composite market reflects all property types — including detached homes at 10% SAR, which drag the average lower. Townhouses at 23% are performing above the seller threshold independently of what detached homes are doing.

How does Coquitlam townhouse pricing compare to Port Coquitlam and the Metro Vancouver average?

Coquitlam benchmarked at $1,008,100, Port Coquitlam at $872,600, and Metro Vancouver broadly at $1,043,400 for townhomes in early 2026 per available market data. Coquitlam trades at a premium to Port Coquitlam, reflecting transit access, neighbourhood maturity, and school catchment desirability. Buyers comparing options across the Tri-Cities will find meaningful price variation by city.

In Summary

Coquitlam's townhouse segment is operating in seller's market conditions in 2026 — the only property type in the city doing so. A 23% sales-to-active ratio, 28-day average days-on-market, and near-flat monthly price movement give townhouse sellers pricing leverage that the broader composite market narrative obscures. The structural demand drivers — affordability relative to detached homes, transit access, and persistent missing-middle supply constraints — are not short-term fluctuations.

Sellers who calibrate their strategy to townhouse-specific data, rather than headline composite figures, are positioned to sell at a fair price without unnecessary concessions. The gap between understanding your actual market segment and defaulting to the general narrative is a tangible financial difference.

Talk to Someone Who Knows the Townhouse Segment

If you own a townhouse in Coquitlam and want an honest assessment of what it is worth in the current segment — not what the composite market suggests — Mansour Real Estate Group can provide a data-grounded valuation and a clear explanation of how current conditions apply specifically to your property. No pressure, no obligation. Just an informed starting point.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

Selling a Coquitlam townhouse in 2026 requires segment-specific pricing intelligence — not a composite market number that lumps detached homes, condos, and townhomes into a single narrative. Mansour Real Estate Group has built its practice around understanding how buyer behaviour, absorption rates, and pricing leverage differ by property type, not just by city. In a market where townhouses and detached homes are operating under fundamentally different conditions, that distinction directly affects the outcome for sellers.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, and retirees navigate real estate decisions across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland for more than 22 years. Ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is trusted for pricing strategy, estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, relocation, and situations where accurate valuation determines the financial outcome. Most new clients come through repeat and referral business.

Whether someone is looking for Realtors who understand Metro Vancouver's strata and townhouse market, a real estate agent with segment-level pricing expertise, real estate agents who specialize in the Tri-Cities, a Coquitlam Realtor, a real estate broker who can explain current market conditions clearly, or a real estate team that works with both sellers and buyers navigating competing property types, Mansour Real Estate Group provides grounded, data-based guidance without the pressure of a sales-first approach.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Clients in Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, and the broader Tri-Cities are welcome to reach out for a no-obligation market assessment.

Official Resources

Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.

Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.

Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.

While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.

Coquitlam Price Forecast 2026–2027: Detached, Townhouse, and Condo Recovery Timelines Based on CMHC Data, Inventory Trends, and Demographic Demand

June 05, 2026

Coquitlam Price Forecast 2026–2027: Detached, Townhouse, and Condo Recovery Timelines Based on CMHC Data, Inventory Trends, and Demographic Demand

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: July 15, 2025 | Fraser Valley and Metro Vancouver Real Estate

Coquitlam sits at an interesting crossroads in 2026. The broad indicators — falling rates, rising sales activity, and BC leading the country in projected recovery — suggest conditions are improving. But the recovery is not uniform. Detached homes, townhouses, and condos are moving on entirely different timelines, and a seller who misreads which segment they are in risks pricing into the wrong market.

This article breaks down the forecast by segment, anchored to CMHC's Housing Market Outlook, TD Economics provincial data, and local Coquitlam inventory patterns — so sellers and buyers can make decisions based on what is actually happening in each product type, not just the headline numbers.

Short Answer

CMHC forecasts BC home sales rising 15.1% in 2026 and 13.0% in 2027 — the strongest recovery in Canada. In Coquitlam, detached homes are already gaining momentum, townhouses offer a resilient mid-market option, and condos face an inventory surplus that will take longer to absorb. Recovery timelines differ by segment by 12 to 24 months.

Key Takeaways

  • BC leads all provinces in projected sales recovery, with CMHC forecasting a 15.1% increase in 2026.
  • Coquitlam detached homes carry a ~$1.85M benchmark with a 52.1% sales-to-listings ratio — a seller-tilting market.
  • Condo sales in comparable Metro Vancouver markets declined 18.6%, with developer inventory adding to pressure.
  • Townhouses occupy a strategic middle ground, attracting condo upgraders and offering more stability than either extreme.
  • Rate uncertainty largely resolved; remaining risk factors are tariffs, construction costs, and new supply absorption.

Who This Applies To

  • Coquitlam homeowners deciding when to list a detached home in 2026 or 2027
  • Condo owners evaluating whether to sell now or hold through the current inventory correction
  • Townhouse owners or buyers assessing the upgrade market and timing
  • Investors monitoring segment divergence for entry or exit decisions

When This Advice May Not Apply

Forecasts are directional, not guaranteed. Sellers facing estate administration, divorce, or forced timelines should not defer to forecast windows — their circumstances require a different decision framework. See our guide to selling your Coquitlam home in a balanced market for strategy beyond timing.

Data Used in This Article

  • CMHC Housing Market Outlook — 2025/2026 national and BC forecast (official government source)
  • TD Economics Provincial Housing Outlook — January 2026 report (third-party institutional analysis)
  • CREA Forecast Update — 2025 resale market revision incorporating tariff uncertainty (industry body)
  • Greater Vancouver Realtors (GVR) Stats Package — local sales-to-listings and benchmark data (official board data)

Why Segment Matters More Than the Headline

Provincial recovery forecasts are meaningful context, but they average across markets, property types, and price points in ways that can mislead individual sellers. When CMHC projects a 15.1% increase in BC home sales for 2026, that number includes both a detached market with real buyer competition and a condo market still working through elevated supply.

Coquitlam illustrates this clearly. According to GVR board data, detached home sales in the Tri-Cities area posted gains of 32.5% year-over-year in comparable recent periods, while condo sales in the same region declined 18.6%. Those are not slight variations — they describe fundamentally different buyer conditions in the same city.

For the detached segment in Coquitlam, a benchmark around $1.85M combined with a 52.1% sales-to-listings ratio suggests conditions are already tilting toward sellers. Inventory is not abundant, demand is recovering, and the rate environment has stabilized. For condos, the story is the opposite: new developer completions have added supply into a market where first-time buyers — the primary condo buyer pool — are still constrained by affordability, even with expanded insured mortgage caps and 30-year amortization now available.

The Townhouse Position: Why the Middle Market Is Holding

Townhouses in Coquitlam have absorbed demand from two directions. Condo owners who accumulated equity through the 2020–2022 run-up are looking to upgrade without stepping into the $1.8M+ detached category. Families priced out of detached are considering townhouses as a longer-term hold. That combination has provided relative stability in townhouse pricing and absorption rates even as the broader market adjusted.

TD Economics' January 2026 provincial outlook supports this pattern nationally, noting that mid-density product — particularly townhouses and row homes — tends to outperform in correction-to-recovery transitions because it serves a wider buyer profile. In Coquitlam specifically, areas like Burke Mountain have seen consistent townhouse demand driven by family buyers seeking square footage, school access, and proximity to new amenities.

For townhouse sellers in 2026, the window appears more stable than condos and less price-sensitive than detached. Buyers in this segment are motivated and often pre-qualified — they know what they can afford and they are ready to move when the right product appears. New build comparisons matter here; buyers evaluating resale townhouses are also looking at presale options, which affects pricing expectations. For more on that dynamic, see our guide to presale versus move-in ready townhomes in Coquitlam.

What the Rate Environment Means for Each Segment

The Bank of Canada signalled in October 2025 that rates were likely at or near their floor. CREA's subsequent forecast update noted that this signal — more than any single rate cut — removed the hesitation that had kept qualified buyers on the sidelines for 18 months. First-time buyers, in particular, had been waiting for confirmation that rates would not fall further before committing.

For detached sellers, this is constructive. The buyers who can afford $1.5M to $2M+ in Coquitlam are not primarily rate-sensitive — they are equity-rich move-up buyers or high-income households. Their hesitation was always more about market direction than rate levels. With rates stable and prices recovering modestly, that group is re-engaging.

For condo sellers, stabilized rates help but do not solve the core problem: supply. The Coquitlam condo market in 2026 is contending with a wave of developer completions that were pre-sold in 2021 and 2022 and are now delivering into a softer market. Some of those buyers are reassigning rather than closing. That adds resale inventory on top of existing supply. Rate stability helps demand; it does not absorb existing listings faster.

Seller Checklist: Timing Your Coquitlam Listing by Segment

  • Detached sellers: Confirm current sales-to-listings ratio for your specific neighbourhood before pricing — not just city-wide data
  • Condo sellers: Audit active listings and days-on-market for your building and comparable buildings before setting a list price
  • Townhouse sellers: Identify whether presale competition exists in your micro-area and price accordingly
  • All segments: Obtain a professional valuation — not an automated estimate — that accounts for current competing inventory
  • All segments: Confirm buyer profile for your product type (first-time, move-up, investor) and prepare the home for that buyer's expectations
  • Timing: For detached and townhouse, spring 2026 entry aligns with peak buyer activity; condo sellers may benefit from waiting for inventory to thin in late 2026

What We Commonly See

In our experience working with Coquitlam sellers across product types, the most common mistake is applying city-wide market narratives to individual listings. A seller with a detached home on Burke Mountain and a seller with a condo near Lincoln Station are in different markets, facing different buyer pools, with different timelines — even if both describe themselves as "selling in Coquitlam in 2026."

What often happens with condo sellers in recovering markets is an over-reliance on the last comparable sale rather than the current active competition. If three similar units are listed below your asking price, your price is not competitive regardless of what sold six months ago.

For detached sellers, the risk runs in the opposite direction: underpricing in a thinning inventory environment because the seller is anchored to a correction-period reference point. Understanding the Coquitlam market by neighbourhood — not just by city — is critical. Our 2026 Coquitlam market report covers those neighbourhood-level patterns in detail.

How We Evaluate This

Mansour Real Estate Group assesses Coquitlam segment forecasts using a combination of CMHC and CREA forward data, GVR board statistics, active listing counts, days-on-market by product type, and on-the-ground buyer activity observed through our own transaction pipeline. National forecasts establish the direction. Local inventory data tells us whether that direction applies today or is still months away. For a broader breakdown of how the Tri-Cities compare as a buying and selling geography, see our comparison of Coquitlam vs. Port Coquitlam vs. Port Moody.

Questions About the Coquitlam Forecast

Q: What does a 15.1% increase in BC home sales actually mean for Coquitlam prices?

More sales activity does not automatically translate to higher prices. It means more transactions are occurring, which tightens inventory and gives sellers more negotiating leverage — particularly in detached, where supply is already constrained. Price appreciation follows when supply cannot keep pace with sales volume.

Q: Should a Coquitlam condo owner sell now or wait for the market to improve?

That depends on the specific building, current competing listings, and the seller's timeline. In general, condo sellers holding until late 2026 or early 2027 may see some inventory absorption — but there is no guarantee. Pricing competitively now, rather than chasing a market that may take time to correct, is often the better path. Consult a local real estate agent who can assess your specific building's supply situation.

Q: How do expanded CMHC mortgage rules affect Coquitlam buyers?

The 30-year amortization option for insured mortgages and the expanded $1.5M cap for insured purchases both expand the buyer pool, particularly for first-time buyers and those purchasing in the $1M to $1.5M range. This primarily helps condo and entry-level townhouse demand. Detached homes above $1.5M are largely outside these thresholds and are governed by conventional financing rules. For more detail on how these rules affect specific product types, see our breakdown of the CMHC 2026 forecast and its impact on Coquitlam buyers.

In Summary

BC is entering the strongest sales recovery in Canada by CMHC's own projection, but in Coquitlam that recovery plays out differently depending on property type. Detached homes are already showing seller-market characteristics. Townhouses are stable and well-positioned as the upgrade path for a large pool of condo owners. Condos face a longer correction window as developer supply absorbs. Sellers who understand which market they are actually in — not just which city — will make better decisions on timing and pricing in 2026 and 2027.

Talk to a Coquitlam Real Estate Specialist

If you are weighing the timing of a sale in Coquitlam — whether detached, townhouse, or condo — Mansour Real Estate Group can walk you through a segment-specific valuation and current inventory assessment. No obligation, no pressure. Just a clear picture of where your property sits right now.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

Understanding how a forecast translates into a specific pricing strategy for a Coquitlam detached home, townhouse, or condo requires more than reading the headline numbers — it requires local market knowledge at the segment level. Mansour Real Estate Group has built its reputation in the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland on exactly that: pricing discipline rooted in current inventory, buyer behaviour, and an honest read of where each product type actually sits in the cycle.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, and retirees navigate real estate decisions across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland for more than 22 years. Ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is trusted for pricing strategy, seller preparation, estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, and situations where accurate valuation is critical.

Whether someone is searching for a real estate agent who understands condo inventory dynamics, Realtors experienced in the Tri-Cities detached market, a real estate team with proven Fraser Valley expertise, a Coquitlam Realtor, a Metro Vancouver real estate broker, or real estate agents who can navigate a complex market transition, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for grounded analysis, honest market context, and results-driven process.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and recommendations from families who value a professional, transparent real estate experience.

Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.

Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.

Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.

While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.

Official Resources

Coquitlam Real Estate Market February 2026: Benchmark Prices, Sales-to-Active Ratios, and What the Data Means for Buyers and Sellers Right Now

June 05, 2026

Coquitlam Real Estate Market February 2026: Benchmark Prices, Sales-to-Active Ratios, and What the Data Means for Buyers and Sellers Right Now

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: March 17, 2026 | Geography: Coquitlam, Tri-Cities, Lower Mainland, BC

Coquitlam's housing market entered 2026 in a different condition than most of its Tri-Cities neighbours. After two years of compressed inventory and upward price pressure, February 2026 data shows the city moving through a deliberate transition — more listings, longer selling timelines, and a price stabilization that is creating real choices for both buyers and sellers. Whether you are evaluating a purchase or deciding when to list, reading the data correctly here matters more than it did twelve months ago.

This article draws on data from the BC Real Estate Association's Housing Monitor, CREA national statistics, and regional market reporting current to February 2026. It is intended as an interpretive guide for homeowners, buyers, and families navigating real estate decisions in Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, and the broader Tri-Cities area. For neighbourhood-specific strategy, see the linked articles throughout this guide.

Short Answer

In February 2026, Coquitlam's detached home benchmark sits at approximately $1,134,600 — up 13.3% year-over-year but down 6.6% from its quarterly peak, signalling price stabilization rather than decline. The market is shifting from seller-favoured toward balanced conditions as active listings rise and days on market extend. Buyers have more options than in 2024; sellers who price accurately still transact well.

Who This Applies To

  • Buyers evaluating detached homes, townhomes, or condos in Coquitlam or the Tri-Cities
  • Homeowners in Coquitlam considering listing in spring 2026
  • Investors and upsizers comparing Coquitlam to adjacent Lower Mainland markets
  • First-time buyers re-entering the market as mortgage rates stabilize below 6%
  • Families relocating to Coquitlam from Metro Vancouver or the Fraser Valley

When This Advice May Not Apply

This article reflects market conditions current to February 2026. Data shifts monthly and spring conditions may already differ. Neighbourhood-level pricing can diverge significantly from citywide benchmarks — Burke Mountain, Maillardville, and Coquitlam West each have distinct supply and demand profiles. Consult a local real estate professional before making pricing or offer decisions based on city-average figures alone.

Key Takeaways

  • Coquitlam's detached benchmark is $1,134,600 — higher than a year ago but stabilizing after a quarterly retreat.
  • Rising active listings are shifting negotiating power toward buyers, especially in attached and condo segments.
  • Mortgage rates below 6% have re-activated buyer demand and improved affordability relative to 2024 peaks.
  • Property-type divergence is real: detached homes are gaining while condos face inventory headwinds.
  • Sellers who price accurately at market — not above it — are still transacting successfully in this environment.

Key Terms

Benchmark Price: A measure of the typical price of a home in a given area, based on a standard property profile. Unlike average or median, it controls for property mix changes. Published by the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (REBGV) and BCREA.

Sales-to-Active Listings Ratio (SALR): The percentage of active listings that sold in a given month. Above 20% generally favours sellers; below 12% generally favours buyers; 12–20% is considered balanced. Cited by BCREA and REBGV.

Days on Market (DOM): The average number of days between a listing going live and an accepted offer. Nationally, DOM reached approximately 54 days in early 2026, according to CREA. Longer DOM gives buyers more time and leverage.

Data Used in This Article

  • BCREA Housing Monitor Dashboard — February 2026 release — BC-wide benchmark and SALR data — Official industry source
  • CREA National Statistics — February/March 2026 — National inventory, new listings, days-on-market, and affordability trends — Official industry source
  • Deeded.ca / Churchill Mortgage — February 2026 market update summaries — Third-party analysis of national context
  • Professional market interpretation — Mansour Real Estate Group — Local observation across Coquitlam and Tri-Cities transactions — Internal analysis

What the February 2026 Benchmark Numbers Show

According to BCREA's Housing Monitor Dashboard, Coquitlam's detached home benchmark price sits at approximately $1,134,600 as of February 2026. That figure is 13.3% higher than February 2025 — a meaningful year-over-year gain. But looking at the quarterly trend tells a more nuanced story: prices retreated approximately 6.6% from their Q3 2025 peak, and the month-over-month change in February was a modest -1.7%.

What this pattern reflects is not a market in freefall. It is a market that overshot in mid-2025 and has since found a more sustainable floor. Sellers who purchased before 2023 are still sitting on significant equity. Buyers who missed the peak are now entering a market where prices are predictable and negotiation room exists.

Attached homes and condos in Coquitlam are showing similar stabilization. Active inventory in those segments has climbed more steeply, which is why the condo segment requires a separate strategy from detached homes in this environment. Buyers evaluating townhomes specifically should review the segment-level analysis at Coquitlam Townhomes in 2026, where attached demand relative to supply tells a notably different story.

For neighbourhood-level pricing, benchmarks vary considerably. Burke Mountain detached homes carry a premium tied to newer construction and family-oriented infrastructure. Maillardville and Central Coquitlam offer entry points well below the city average. See the complete neighbourhood benchmark guide for a property-type breakdown by area.

What the Sales-to-Active Ratio Tells Us About Market Balance

The SALR is arguably the most reliable short-term signal of market direction. According to BCREA and CREA's national reporting, active listings across BC and nationally are up approximately 10% year-over-year as of early 2026. New listings rose 4.1% in the most recent reporting period. In Coquitlam specifically, this inventory recovery is most visible in the condo and attached segments, where units are spending more time on market before selling.

When the SALR dips below 20%, the market begins favouring buyers. When it falls below 12%, buyers have clear negotiating leverage. Based on current inventory levels and sales pace, Coquitlam's attached and condo segments appear to be approaching or entering that balanced-to-buyer range. Detached homes remain tighter — meaningful demand persists, particularly for well-located family properties near SkyTrain access and school catchments.

National days-on-market data from CREA has climbed to approximately 54 days on average. In Coquitlam's more competitive detached segments, properties are still moving faster than that. But for condos and some townhome tiers, 45 to 60 days is increasingly realistic, and buyers should factor that timeline into subject-removal planning.

For sellers preparing to list in this environment, the step-by-step strategy in Selling Your Coquitlam Home in 2026 walks through how to position a property when conditions are neither strongly seller- nor buyer-driven. Pricing accurately from day one is the single most important variable in a balanced market.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, we read Coquitlam market data by separating headline averages from property-type and neighbourhood realities. City-average benchmark figures are useful for understanding direction, but they can obscure important divergences — a detached home in Burke Mountain is not the same market as a resale condo in Coquitlam West.

Our valuation process for Coquitlam properties in February 2026 starts with the current benchmark, applies a neighbourhood-specific adjustment, accounts for property condition and presentation, and then stress-tests the price against current active competition — not last quarter's sales. In a stabilizing market, the gap between what sold six months ago and what will sell today can be meaningful, and sellers who ignore that gap often sit longer and ultimately accept less.

Affordability, Mortgage Rates, and What's Activating Buyer Demand

One reason Coquitlam has not seen the sharper price declines that some analysts predicted is that buyer demand has remained present, just more selective. According to CREA and mortgage industry data current to February 2026, five-year fixed mortgage rates are sustaining below 6%, and the estimated median household income required to qualify for a Coquitlam detached home has declined from approximately $103,000 in 2025 to approximately $94,000 — a meaningful shift in real affordability.

First-time buyers who delayed in 2024 are re-entering. Families relocating from Metro Vancouver are finding Coquitlam's price point and SkyTrain proximity compelling compared to Burnaby or New Westminster alternatives. That demand base is real, but it is also price-sensitive. A detached home listed at $1,180,000 in a stabilizing market will attract different buyer interest than one listed at $1,095,000. The First-Time Buyer's Guide to Purchasing a Home in Coquitlam in 2026 walks through what that buyer profile is looking for and how to compete successfully when multiple offers return to better-priced properties.

Seller Checklist: Preparing to List in Coquitlam in a Balanced Market

  1. Obtain a current comparative market analysis based on February 2026 sales — not Q3 2025 comps.
  2. Understand your property-type segment: detached, townhome, and condo each have different current SALR and buyer pools.
  3. Complete any deferred maintenance before listing — buyers in a balanced market are more likely to walk away from condition issues than in a seller's market.
  4. If your property is strata, have your Form B, depreciation report, and financials ready before listing, as informed buyers in Coquitlam's condo market are requesting these early.
  5. Price at market from day one — overpriced listings in Coquitlam's current environment accumulate days on market and signal weakness.
  6. Review new presale competition in your segment, particularly if you are selling a condo. Presale incentives from developers affect resale expectations.

What We Commonly See

In our experience working with Coquitlam sellers in a transitioning market, the most common mistake is anchoring list price to the Q3 2025 peak rather than current comparable sales. A home that might have sold at $1,180,000 last summer may now find its buyer range between $1,080,000 and $1,130,000 — and listing above that range typically adds weeks of market time before reaching the same outcome.

What often happens with condo sellers specifically is an underestimation of how much the increased inventory has changed buyer expectations. In 2024, buyers often waived strata document review under competition pressure. In 2026, with more choices available, the same buyers are reading depreciation reports and asking detailed questions about upcoming levies before making offers.

A common pattern we also observe is buyers in Coquitlam's detached segment successfully negotiating on price-per-square-foot when a property has been listed for more than 21 days. Active competition from new listings resets the buyer's reference point, and sellers who did not price correctly on launch often find themselves in a weaker negotiating position three weeks in than they were on day one.

Questions and Answers

What is the current benchmark price for a detached home in Coquitlam?

According to BCREA's Housing Monitor Dashboard, Coquitlam's detached benchmark is approximately $1,134,600 as of February 2026 — up 13.3% year-over-year but down 6.6% from the Q3 2025 peak, indicating stabilization.

Is Coquitlam currently a buyer's market or a seller's market?

Conditions vary by segment. Detached homes remain competitive, while attached housing and condos are trending toward balanced or buyer-favourable conditions as active inventory climbs and days-on-market extend.

How are mortgage rate changes affecting Coquitlam buyers in 2026?

Rates sustaining below 6% and an estimated affordability improvement — from roughly $103,000 to $94,000 in median income needed — are bringing more buyers back to the Coquitlam market, particularly first-time buyers and Metro Vancouver relocators, according to CREA and mortgage industry data current to February 2026.

In Summary

Coquitlam's February 2026 data describes a market that has moved through its correction and is finding a new equilibrium. Detached prices are up meaningfully year-over-year but have stabilized after a quarterly retreat. The SALR is shifting toward balance in attached and condo segments, giving buyers more negotiating room than at any point since 2022. Sellers who understand the current benchmark — and price to it rather than against it — are still transacting well. The spring 2026 market in Coquitlam will reward accuracy and penalise optimism.

Talk to a Coquitlam Real Estate Specialist

If you are evaluating a purchase or sale in Coquitlam and want to understand how these numbers apply to your specific property, neighbourhood, or timeline, Mansour Real Estate Group is available for a no-pressure conversation. We work from data, not sales scripts, and we will tell you what the market actually supports — not what you want to hear.

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About Mansour Real Estate Group

When buyers and sellers are navigating a transitioning market like Coquitlam in 2026, the difference between a confident decision and a costly one usually comes down to the quality of local market interpretation available. Mansour Real Estate Group has been providing Coquitlam, Tri-Cities, Lower Mainland, and Fraser Valley clients with grounded, data-driven real estate guidance for more than 22 years.

Led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. The group is trusted for seller strategy, buyer representation, estate sales, downsizing, relocation, and complex transactions that require both accurate valuations and clear communication at every stage.

Whether someone is searching for a Coquitlam Realtor with deep market knowledge, real estate agents experienced in Tri-Cities pricing strategy, a real estate team that understands the difference between a detached and condo market in the same city, a Lower Mainland real estate broker, or real estate agents who will price a home accurately rather than just win the listing — Mansour Real Estate Group is known for analysis first, results second, and reputation third.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, and surrounding communities across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and recommendations from families who found a real estate group they could trust with a major financial decision.

Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.

Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.

Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.

While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.

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