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Why Fraser Valley Home Prices Are Back to Pandemic-Era Levels, and What Sellers Should Do About It
March 10, 2026
Why Fraser Valley Home Prices Are Back to Pandemic-Era Levels, and What Sellers Should Do About It
British Columbia seller guide for the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland | Surrey, Langley, and White Rock focus | Published March 24, 2026 | Written for homeowners trying to price realistically in spring 2026
Fraser Valley home prices are back to pandemic-era levels because the market has been correcting from the unusually fast run-up of 2020 to 2022. That does not automatically mean the market is crashing. It means sellers in 2026 need to price off recent comparable sales, current inventory, and today’s buyer behaviour rather than peak-year memories or old list prices.
This matters because the benchmark price in the Fraser Valley fell to $897,200 in January 2026, down 6.9 per cent year over year, while Metro Vancouver’s composite benchmark sat at $1,100,300 in February 2026, down 6.8 per cent year over year. BC Assessment values across much of the Lower Mainland also came in lower for 2026, reinforcing the broader reset in values.
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, works in exactly these conditions: markets where sellers need calm judgment and local pricing discipline rather than hopeful guessing. With over 22 years of experience and more than $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is often trusted when homeowners need a realistic path forward in Surrey, Langley, White Rock, and across the Fraser Valley.
Key Takeaways
- Fraser Valley prices have moved back toward pandemic-era levels after a sharp run-up and a slower, multi-year correction.
- A correction is not the same thing as a crash.
- White Rock single-family homes have been among the softer pockets in the region.
- BC Assessment values help explain the direction of values, but they do not replace current market pricing.
- Recent comparable sales matter more than 2021 or 2022 expectations.
- Sellers who price with discipline protect their negotiating position far better than sellers who chase yesterday’s peak.
What a Benchmark Price Actually Means
A benchmark price is not the exact value of your home. It is a statistical estimate of what a typical home in a category is worth, based on a model that adjusts for property characteristics and changing market conditions.
That matters because benchmark prices help track market direction. They are useful for context, but they do not replace neighbourhood-level comparable sales when it is time to set a list price.
What the Current Numbers Are Saying
The Fraser Valley Real Estate Board reported that the composite benchmark price in January 2026 was $897,200, down 6.9 per cent from January 2025 and below $900,000 for the first time since spring 2021. The board also noted that this followed ten straight months of year-over-year price decline.
In Metro Vancouver, Greater Vancouver REALTORS® reported a February 2026 composite benchmark of $1,100,300, down 6.8 per cent from February 2025. That tells us the reset in values is not isolated to one board area. It is part of a broader regional correction.
BC Assessment’s 2026 release for the Lower Mainland said assessed values were generally down from 2025 levels, with many homeowners seeing changes in the range of roughly flat to down 10 per cent depending on property type and location. Those values are based on market conditions as of July 1, 2025, which makes them useful context but not a current pricing guide.
Why This Is a Correction, Not a Crash
To understand the current market, sellers have to separate the correction from the spike that came before it.
From 2020 through early 2022, housing across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland was lifted by an unusual mix of low borrowing costs, urgent demand, lifestyle changes, and very limited supply. Prices moved faster than normal because conditions were not normal.
The market since then has been unwinding part of that spike. Interest rates rose sharply. Borrowing power fell. Inventory increased. Buyers became more selective. That kind of retracing is what a correction looks like.
A crash usually implies disorder, panic selling, and a sudden breakdown in liquidity. That is not what most Fraser Valley sellers are dealing with in 2026. What they are dealing with is a more price-sensitive market that no longer rewards optimistic pricing.
What White Rock Is Telling Us
White Rock has been one of the places where the reset has been easier to see. BC Assessment’s 2026 Lower Mainland release said White Rock single-family homes saw some of the largest year-over-year assessment declines in the region, around 9 per cent. That does not mean every property is down by the same amount. It does mean sellers in White Rock need to be especially careful not to anchor to old expectations.
This is one of the reasons broad averages are not enough. In White Rock, the difference between a view property, an older home with deferred maintenance, and a cleanly updated detached home can be significant even inside the same postal area.
Why BC Assessment Is Useful, but Not Enough
BC Assessment values help homeowners understand how their property was valued for property tax fairness as of a fixed past date. They are useful for context. They are also one of the reasons sellers sometimes realize the market has shifted more than they thought.
But BC Assessment does not price your home for sale.
It does not fully capture what buyers are reacting to today, what nearby active competition looks like, or how much negotiating leverage current inventory has created in your segment. A seller who uses assessed value as a list-price strategy usually ends up behind the market instead of ahead of it.
What Sellers Should Do About It
The most practical response is not fear. It is adjustment.
That means sellers should price from:
- recent sold comparables in the same neighbourhood
- active competing listings buyers will compare against
- expired or cancelled listings that failed to sell
- current inventory and absorption rates for the property type
This is especially important in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock, where different neighbourhoods and price bands are moving at different speeds.
Why Recent Comparable Sales Matter More Than Peak-Year Pricing
One of the biggest pricing mistakes sellers make in a correction is treating the market high as though it is still a useful reference point. It usually is not.
Buyers do not care what a similar home could have sold for in early 2022. They care what similar homes are actually selling for now, what else is available now, and how long they might be able to wait.
This is one of the hardest emotional shifts for long-time owners. A correction can feel personal when it affects a home you have lived in for years. But the market does not price memories. It prices alternatives.
How AI-Assisted Pricing Can Help Without Replacing Judgment
AI-assisted pricing tools are most useful when they are used to structure the right comparison set, not to replace human judgment.
In practical terms, that means using them to compare:
- recent sold properties
- current active competition
- failed listings
- micro-neighbourhood absorption trends
- likely buyer response to small pricing changes
In a market like 2026, where overpricing is often more damaging than underexposure, structured pricing work can protect a seller from losing momentum in the first two weeks on market.
What This Looks Like in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock
Surrey
Surrey sellers need to be very careful about using citywide averages. Fleetwood, Cloverdale, Clayton, Guildford, and South Surrey are not moving the same way. Family-demand pockets can stay active while more discretionary segments soften.
Langley
Langley sellers are often dealing with a split market, especially in attached product. Some segments continue to see respectable absorption, while others face more new construction competition and price sensitivity.
White Rock
White Rock requires even more care at the upper end. Higher price points often mean more patient buyers, which makes overpricing easier to detect and harder to recover from.
What Sellers Often Overlook in a Correction
What sellers often overlook is that corrections do not affect every property equally. Two homes in the same neighbourhood can perform very differently if one is clearly prepared, cleanly priced, and easy to understand while the other is priced off old assumptions.
That is why corrections tend to punish strategy mistakes more visibly. They do not eliminate demand. They make demand more selective.
Common Mistakes Sellers Make When Prices Pull Back
- anchoring to 2021 or 2022 sale prices instead of current sold data
- treating BC Assessment like a list-price tool
- assuming a correction means no buyers are active
- pricing high to “leave room” in a market where buyers already have choice
- ignoring the neighbourhood and price-band differences inside the same city
Questions Sellers Are Asking About Prices in 2026
Are Fraser Valley home prices really back to pandemic-era levels?
Broadly, yes. The Fraser Valley benchmark has moved back below $900,000, which places it back near spring 2021 territory. That does not mean every property is worth what it was in 2021. It means the broader market has retraced to that range.
Does this mean the market is crashing?
No. The current pattern looks more like a correction from the unusual 2020 to 2022 run-up than a disorderly collapse.
Should I wait for prices to rebound before selling?
That depends on your personal timeline, your property type, and your next move. Waiting only makes sense if it fits your life and there is a strong reason to expect a better local outcome.
Can I use my BC Assessment to price my home?
Not by itself. Assessment values are useful for context, but current comparable sales and active competition are much more important for listing strategy.
Why is White Rock feeling softer?
White Rock can be more sensitive at higher price points because buyers often have more discretion and more time to compare.
Are all Surrey and Langley neighbourhoods behaving the same way?
No. Inventory, buyer profile, and property type all matter. One neighbourhood can stay relatively active while another feels much slower.
Can a well-prepared seller still get a strong result in a correction?
Yes. Corrections usually reward disciplined pricing and strong presentation more clearly than fast markets do.
What matters most right now?
Current comparable sales, neighbourhood competition, and realistic pricing matter most.
In Summary
Fraser Valley home prices are back near pandemic-era levels because the market has been correcting from an unusually fast and unusually strong spike. That is not the same thing as a crash. It is a reset that requires sellers to stop looking backward at the peak and start looking carefully at the current evidence.
For sellers in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock, the strongest path forward is still clear: use recent comparable sales, understand your exact segment, and price with discipline from day one.
Looking for a Calm Second Opinion on Where Your Home Fits in Today’s Market?
If you are trying to understand how much of the correction applies to your home, the most useful next step is not guessing from headlines. It is comparing your property to what buyers are actually choosing in your neighbourhood right now.
Related Reads
- 2026 Fraser Valley Market Guide for Sellers: Prices, Inventory, and Timing in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford
- Is Now a Good Time to Sell My Home in Surrey? A Data-Driven Answer for Spring 2026
- How to Price Your Home Right in a Buyer's Market: A Fraser Valley Seller's Playbook for 2026
Sources and Official Resources
- Fraser Valley Real Estate Board January and February 2026 market statistics
- Greater Vancouver REALTORS® February 2026 market report
- BC Assessment 2026 Lower Mainland property assessment release
About Mansour Real Estate Group
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, is a top-performing real estate team in the Fraser Valley, consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, and relocation across Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, North Delta, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Willoughby, Walnut Grove, and Abbotsford. Most new clients come from repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.
How U.S. Tariffs and Trade Uncertainty Are Affecting the Fraser Valley Housing Market in 2026
March 08, 2026
How U.S. Tariffs and Trade Uncertainty Are Affecting the Fraser Valley Housing Market in 2026
British Columbia housing guide for Fraser Valley sellers | Surrey, Langley, and White Rock focus | Published March 22, 2026 | Written for homeowners weighing a spring 2026 listing amid economic uncertainty
Trade uncertainty is affecting the Fraser Valley housing market in 2026 by making buyers more cautious, keeping some sellers on the sidelines, and putting more weight on pricing discipline than usual. For homeowners in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock, that means this spring is less about guessing where the market might go and more about controlling what can still be controlled: pricing, preparation, presentation, and timing within your own life plan.
This matters because uncertainty does not hit the housing market all at once. It usually shows up first in confidence. Buyers pause. Sellers hesitate. Transactions slow before prices fully adjust. That pattern has been visible across Canada as trade friction, tariff risk, and inflation concerns have weighed on activity. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, works in exactly these kinds of markets, where sellers need grounded judgment more than optimism. With over 22 years of experience and more than $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is often trusted when homeowners need a clear read on local conditions across Surrey, Langley, White Rock, and the broader Fraser Valley.
Key Takeaways
- Trade and tariff uncertainty are hurting confidence before they fully show up in final sale prices.
- CMHC has warned that trade pressures and geopolitical events could push inflation back above 3 per cent by mid-2026. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
- The Bank of Canada says trade restrictions and uncertainty are already weighing on growth, business expansion, and exports. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
- Royal LePage has repeatedly tied weaker buyer activity in Ontario and British Columbia to tariff and geopolitical uncertainty. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
- When buyers feel unsure, overpricing becomes even more damaging.
- Prepared, well-priced sellers can still achieve strong results in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock.
What Trade Uncertainty Means in Plain Language
Trade uncertainty means households and businesses are not fully sure how tariffs, supply chains, inflation, employment, and borrowing costs will evolve over the next several quarters. That uncertainty matters in housing because buying a home is one of the largest financial commitments most people ever make.
When households think inflation may rise, employment may weaken, or mortgage rates may stay elevated longer than expected, they often shift into a wait-and-see posture. That does not remove demand forever, but it can delay action long enough to soften seasonal momentum. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Why This Is Affecting Housing in 2026
CMHC’s summer 2025 housing market outlook said the trade environment and geopolitical events were expected to push inflation back above the 3 per cent mark by mid-2026, while also contributing to higher uncertainty and slightly rising unemployment. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
At the same time, the Bank of Canada’s January 2026 Monetary Policy Report said U.S. trade restrictions had disrupted the Canadian economy, weakened export demand, led some businesses to postpone expansion plans, and were keeping growth modest. The Bank also said uncertainty about trade policy was causing some U.S. customers to delay orders and some Canadian businesses to approach new contracts cautiously. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
Those are national signals, but they matter locally because a quieter economy tends to show up in the Fraser Valley as more cautious buyers, longer decision cycles, and more resistance to aggressive asking prices.
What CMHC and the Bank of Canada Are Signalling
CMHC’s view
CMHC’s 2026 housing outlook says resale markets should show signs of recovery, but remain below long-term averages. For British Columbia specifically, CMHC says 2025 was shaped by a weak labour market and trade volatility, with some improvement expected in 2026 but unemployment still historically high. It also says B.C. should see a smaller direct hit from global trade volatility than provinces with larger manufacturing exposure, though tariff effects still matter. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
The Bank of Canada’s view
The Bank of Canada says tariffs have a persistent negative impact on the Canadian economy, that trade policy uncertainty continues to weigh on investment plans, and that GDP growth is expected to remain modest through 2026. It also says the economy is adjusting slowly to this environment rather than snapping back quickly. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
How This Changes Buyer Behaviour in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock
Buyer hesitation usually shows up in a few familiar ways:
- more showings before an offer is written
- stronger resistance to overpricing
- more conditional offers
- more buyers waiting to see whether rates or prices improve further
Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper has said economic uncertainty driven by trade disputes and broader geopolitical tensions weighed on consumer confidence and muted what would normally have been more active periods in the market. Royal LePage also said softer sales were especially pronounced in Ontario and British Columbia, while economic uncertainty and the U.S. trade dispute weighed on confidence. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
That is exactly the kind of environment where buyers do not disappear, but become harder to rush.
What “Stagflation Risk” Means for Home Sellers
Stagflation risk usually refers to a period where inflation stays uncomfortable while economic growth remains weak and unemployment pressure builds. Sellers do not need to use the term, but they should understand the effect.
If inflation stays sticky while growth is soft, mortgage relief tends to come more slowly, buyer confidence stays fragile, and large financial decisions get delayed. CMHC’s warning about inflation moving back above 3 per cent by mid-2026 and the Bank of Canada’s view of modest growth under trade disruption are part of why this risk is being discussed at all. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
Why the Waiting Game Hurts Both Buyers and Sellers
One of the quieter problems in uncertain markets is that everyone starts waiting for clarity that may not come all at once. Buyers wait for better rates. Sellers wait for stronger prices. The result is slower activity and weaker momentum even when life still requires people to move.
This is not just theory. CREA-related reporting highlighted that Canada’s spring 2025 market slowed because tariff uncertainty pushed many buyers into a wait-and-see approach. Royal LePage commentary echoed that same pattern. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
What This Means in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock
Surrey
In Surrey, uncertainty tends to hit move-up buyers and rate-sensitive family buyers first. If they feel less secure about borrowing costs, employment, or trade-linked business conditions, they slow their search or negotiate harder. That makes launch pricing especially important for detached homes and townhomes.
Langley
Langley, especially Willoughby and nearby attached segments, can feel uncertainty through comparison shopping. Buyers already have choices, and uncertainty gives them another reason to wait or push on value. Sellers in these areas need sharper positioning and stronger presentation.
White Rock
White Rock can be especially sensitive because many buyers in higher price bands are not purely necessity-driven. They can pause longer. When confidence softens, pricing gaps become more visible and discretionary buyers take more time.
What Sellers Can Still Control
Sellers cannot control tariff policy, inflation forecasts, or trade headlines. They can control three things that matter more in uncertain markets:
- pricing
- preparation
- presentation
This is where many sellers lose ground. They react to uncertainty by trying to “leave room” in the price. In reality, uncertainty usually makes buyers more skeptical, not more generous. A listing that feels slightly overpriced in a confident market can feel obviously overpriced in an uncertain one.
The sellers who still perform well are usually the ones who remove doubt early. They price from recent comparable sales, prepare the home properly, and launch with a presentation that makes value easy to understand.
What Sellers Often Overlook Right Now
What sellers often overlook in a market like this is that uncertainty changes the emotional math of a purchase. Buyers do not only ask whether they like the home. They ask whether this is the right time to stretch, whether their job feels secure, and whether something better may appear if they wait.
That is why homes that are cleanly priced and clearly prepared can still stand out. They reduce the number of things a buyer has to rationalize. In uncertain markets, simplicity sells better than optimism.
Common Mistakes Sellers Make When the Economy Feels Uncertain
- waiting for “certainty” instead of making a decision based on personal timing and current evidence
- pricing high to create negotiation room in a market where buyers already feel cautious
- underestimating how much presentation matters when confidence is weak
- treating Surrey, Langley, and White Rock as though they respond identically
- assuming uncertainty means nobody serious is buying
Questions Sellers Are Asking About Tariffs and the Housing Market
Are tariffs directly reducing home prices in the Fraser Valley?
Not in a simple one-step way. Tariffs affect confidence, inflation expectations, business activity, and borrowing conditions, which then influence housing demand. :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}
Are buyers freezing because of trade uncertainty?
Many are becoming more cautious. Royal LePage and CREA-related reporting both pointed to a wait-and-see pattern during periods of tariff uncertainty. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
Does this mean I should delay listing my home?
Not automatically. Delaying only makes sense if your own timeline allows it and there is a clear local reason to expect better conditions for your property type and neighbourhood.
Is White Rock more sensitive to uncertainty than Surrey?
Some White Rock segments can be more sensitive because higher price points often involve more discretionary buyers who can pause longer.
What if inflation rises again in 2026?
If inflation rises again, rate relief may come more slowly and buyers may remain more cautious. CMHC warned inflation could move back above 3 per cent by mid-2026. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}
Are trade impacts the same across all of B.C.?
No. CMHC said British Columbia is expected to see a smaller direct hit from global trade volatility than provinces with larger manufacturing sectors, though trade volatility still matters. :contentReference[oaicite:15]{index=15}
Can a well-prepared seller still get a strong result this spring?
Yes. Uncertain markets are often tougher on weak strategy than on good homes. Sellers who price realistically and remove doubt early can still perform well.
What matters more right now, timing or strategy?
Strategy. Timing still matters, but in uncertain markets pricing, preparation, and presentation usually matter more.
In Summary
U.S. tariffs and trade uncertainty are affecting the Fraser Valley housing market in 2026 mostly through confidence. They are making buyers more careful, slowing some decisions, and putting extra pressure on pricing discipline in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock.
That does not mean sellers should panic or disappear. It means this is a market where clear thinking matters. When conditions feel noisy, the practical edge still comes from controlling what can be controlled and launching with a strategy that buyers can believe.
Looking for a Calm Read on Whether Listing This Spring Still Makes Sense?
If you are trying to decide whether to list during a period of trade and rate uncertainty, a useful first step is not guessing where the headlines go next. It is understanding how your neighbourhood, property type, and likely buyer pool are behaving right now.
Related Reads
- Is Now a Good Time to Sell My Home in Surrey? A Data-Driven Answer for Spring 2026
- 2026 Fraser Valley Market Guide for Sellers: Prices, Inventory, and Timing in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford
- How to Price Your Home Right in a Buyer's Market: A Fraser Valley Seller's Playbook for 2026
Sources and Official Resources
- CMHC Housing Market Outlook 2026
- CMHC Summer Update: 2025 Housing Market Outlook
- Bank of Canada Monetary Policy Report, January 2026
- Royal LePage market commentary on 2025 and 2026 housing conditions
- CREA-related market reporting on tariff-related buyer hesitation
About Mansour Real Estate Group
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, is a top-performing real estate team in the Fraser Valley, consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, and relocation across Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, North Delta, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Willoughby, Walnut Grove, and Abbotsford. Most new clients come from repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.
How the Bank of Canada’s 2.25% Rate Hold Affects Home Sellers in the Fraser Valley
March 06, 2026
How the Bank of Canada’s 2.25% Rate Hold Affects Home Sellers in the Fraser Valley
British Columbia housing guide for Fraser Valley sellers | Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford focus | Published March 6, 2026 | Written for homeowners weighing a sale, renewal, or move in a higher-rate environment
The Bank of Canada’s 2.25% rate hold matters to Fraser Valley sellers because it supports some buyer confidence, but it does not erase affordability pressure. For homeowners in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford, the practical effect is this: borrowing conditions are more stable than they were during the sharp hiking cycle, but many buyers still qualify cautiously, and many existing owners are renewing mortgages at much higher rates than the ones they locked in years ago. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
That means sellers should not read the current rate hold as a return to easy-credit conditions. It is better understood as a steadier environment where pricing, presentation, and property type still matter more than headline rate relief. Some buyers feel less nervous than they did during the fastest part of the rate cycle, but many are still constrained by qualification rules and monthly payment reality. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, works in exactly these kinds of markets, where sellers need clear local guidance rather than broad optimism. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is often trusted when a sale is tied to renewal pressure, a growing payment burden, or a move that needs to be timed carefully across the Fraser Valley.
Key Takeaways
- The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% in January 2026. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
- Rate stability helps confidence, but affordability is still tight for many buyers because mortgage costs remain elevated. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
- About 60% of mortgage holders renewing in 2025 and 2026 are expected to see a payment increase, according to Bank of Canada research. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
- Five-year fixed borrowers renewing in 2025 or 2026 could face average payment increases of roughly 15% to 20% compared with their December 2024 payment level. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
- Fixed mortgage rates do not move one-for-one with the policy rate because they are shaped more by Government of Canada bond yields. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
- The stress test still matters because many buyers must qualify at the greater of 5.25% or their contract rate plus 2%. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
What the 2.25% Rate Hold Actually Means
On January 28, 2026, the Bank of Canada held its target for the overnight rate at 2.25%, with the Bank Rate at 2.5% and the deposit rate at 2.20%. In its January 2026 Monetary Policy Report, the Bank said the Canadian economy was still adjusting to U.S. tariffs and a changed global trade landscape, and that growth was expected to remain modest. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
For home sellers, that hold is not a signal that borrowing has become cheap again. It is a signal that the policy rate is steady for now while inflation and growth risks are still being monitored closely. In plain language, buyers are no longer reacting to a fresh rate shock, but they are still shopping under tighter affordability than they enjoyed during the pandemic-era market. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
Why Many Homeowners Feel Pressure Even With a Rate Hold
One of the biggest stories for 2025 and 2026 is the mortgage renewal wave. Bank of Canada staff research says about 60% of mortgage holders renewing in 2025 and 2026 are expected to face a payment increase. The same note says the average monthly mortgage payment could be about 10% higher for those renewing in 2025 and about 6% higher for those renewing in 2026 compared with December 2024 payments, while five-year fixed-rate borrowers renewing in 2025 or 2026 could see average payment increases of roughly 15% to 20%. :contentReference[oaicite:10]{index=10}
CMHC has also written that Canada is in the middle of a major mortgage renewal wave and that many households are navigating higher rates during a period of economic uncertainty and rising unemployment. :contentReference[oaicite:11]{index=11}
For some Fraser Valley owners, that renewal pressure becomes one of the real reasons to sell. It is not always because they want to leave the market. Sometimes it is because the renewed monthly carrying cost changes what feels sustainable.
Why Fixed and Variable Rates Are Telling Different Stories
Many homeowners assume that if the Bank of Canada cuts or holds, all mortgage rates should move down in the same way. That is not how mortgage pricing works.
Variable mortgage rates are more directly tied to the policy rate and prime lending rates. Fixed mortgage rates, by contrast, are much more influenced by Government of Canada bond yields and market expectations. The Bank of Canada’s mortgage-payment research explicitly models fixed-rate mortgage renewals using Government of Canada bond trends, while variable-rate mortgages follow the path of the overnight rate more closely. CMHC also warned that mortgage costs could remain elevated even with modest policy-rate cuts because spreads had normalized and longer-term funding conditions still mattered. :contentReference[oaicite:12]{index=12}
This is why many households did not feel as much relief from rate cuts as they expected. A lower policy rate helped, but it did not automatically bring fixed borrowing costs back to pandemic-era levels.
What People Mean When They Say Rates May Be “About as Good as They’re Going to Get”
By late 2025, a lot of housing commentary had shifted from “how much lower can rates go?” to “are we near the bottom of this easing cycle?” That was not a formal Bank of Canada promise, but it became a common reading of the market after the overnight rate moved down to 2.25% and then held there. Public reporting in late 2025 also reflected a view among some economists that the Bank was more likely to hold through 2026 than continue cutting aggressively. :contentReference[oaicite:13]{index=13}
For sellers, the practical takeaway is not whether the phrase is catchy. The real point is that many buyers and sellers can no longer assume lower rates will arrive quickly enough to change affordability in a major way this spring.
How the Stress Test Still Limits Buyer Power
Even when rates hold steady, borrowers still have to qualify. OSFI says the current minimum qualifying rate for uninsured mortgages remains the greater of the contract rate plus 2% or 5.25%. That means many buyers still have to prove they can handle payments above the rate they are actually signing for. :contentReference[oaicite:14]{index=14}
This matters a lot to sellers because it helps explain why some buyers who look interested still come in lower than expected or disappear after looking closely at monthly numbers. The stress test keeps many households inside a tighter budget box than headline rate news might suggest.
What This Means for Sellers in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford
Surrey
Surrey sellers often feel this most clearly in rate-sensitive family segments. Buyers may still want the home, but they are shopping with stricter qualification limits. That usually means sharper resistance to overpricing and more care around monthly carrying cost.
Langley
Langley sellers, especially in townhome-heavy areas such as Willoughby, often face buyers comparing affordability across several similar options. Stable policy rates help confidence, but they do not erase the effect of higher renewal costs and fixed-rate pressure.
Abbotsford
In Abbotsford, monthly payment sensitivity can be especially visible in family-oriented price bands. When affordability is tight, buyers often become more practical and less emotional. Sellers who remove doubt early tend to do better than those who rely on broad market optimism.
What Sellers Often Overlook in a Stable-Rate Market
What sellers often overlook is that a stable policy rate is not the same thing as an easy financing market. The rate hold reduces one kind of uncertainty, but it does not restore borrowing power to what it was in 2021 or 2022.
Another thing sellers miss is how renewal pressure changes the market from both sides. Some homeowners become more motivated to sell because their own payment is rising. Some buyers stay cautious because their qualification room is still limited. That combination can create more listings without creating the same rise in urgency on the buy side.
Practical Pricing and Negotiation Advice for 2026
In this kind of market, sellers are usually better served by treating financing as a buyer obstacle that needs to be respected, not ignored.
That usually means:
- pricing from recent sold comparables, not from peak-year expectations
- expecting buyers to be more payment-focused than before
- preparing for financing conditions to remain common
- understanding that a cleaner list price often protects negotiating leverage better than “leaving room”
When affordability is stretched, buyers do not reward ambiguity. They reward homes that feel correctly priced from the start.
Common Mistakes Sellers Make Right Now
- assuming a stable policy rate means buyers can suddenly afford much more
- ignoring the difference between fixed and variable mortgage dynamics
- underestimating how much renewal pressure is motivating some sellers
- pricing as though the stress test no longer matters
- treating spring timing as more important than affordability reality
Questions Fraser Valley Sellers Are Asking
Does the 2.25% rate hold help home sellers?
Yes, in the sense that it reduces fresh rate-shock anxiety. But it does not remove affordability pressure or strict qualification limits. :contentReference[oaicite:15]{index=15}
Why are some owners still selling because of mortgage pressure?
Because many households are renewing into much higher rates than the ones they locked in years ago, and monthly costs can rise meaningfully. :contentReference[oaicite:16]{index=16}
Why haven’t fixed mortgage rates dropped as much as people expected?
Because fixed rates are influenced more by bond yields and funding conditions than by the overnight rate alone. :contentReference[oaicite:17]{index=17}
Does the mortgage stress test still apply in 2026?
Yes. OSFI says the current minimum qualifying rate remains the greater of 5.25% or the contract rate plus 2%. :contentReference[oaicite:18]{index=18}
Should I list now or wait for lower rates?
That depends on your timeline, your property type, and your next move. Many households can no longer count on quick rate relief to change affordability in a major way. :contentReference[oaicite:19]{index=19}
Are variable-rate buyers in a better position than fixed-rate buyers?
Variable-rate products tend to reflect policy-rate changes more directly, but every buyer still has to qualify and manage monthly payment risk. :contentReference[oaicite:20]{index=20}
What matters most for sellers in this environment?
Affordability-aware pricing, strong preparation, and realistic expectations matter most.
In Summary
The Bank of Canada’s 2.25% rate hold is helpful for stability, but it does not reset the housing market to the easy-credit conditions of the past. Buyers are still qualifying under a stress test, fixed mortgage costs are still influenced by bond yields, and many homeowners are still facing meaningful payment increases at renewal. :contentReference[oaicite:21]{index=21}
For sellers in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford, the message is straightforward: the market is steadier, not easy. Pricing and negotiation strategy still need to reflect what buyers can actually carry each month.
Need a Calm Read on Whether Renewal Pressure or Market Timing Should Drive Your Next Move?
When a renewal, a move, and a sale decision all overlap, it helps to look at the numbers before the pressure makes the decision for you. Sometimes the right answer is to hold. Sometimes the rate environment changes what makes sense now.
Related Reads
- Is Now a Good Time to Sell My Home in Surrey? A Data-Driven Answer for Spring 2026
- How U.S. Tariffs and Trade Uncertainty Are Affecting the Fraser Valley Housing Market in 2026
- Why Fraser Valley Home Prices Are Back to Pandemic-Era Levels, and What Sellers Should Do About It
Sources and Official Resources
- Bank of Canada January 2026 rate announcement and Monetary Policy Report
- Bank of Canada research on mortgage renewals in 2025 and 2026
- CMHC housing-finance and mortgage-renewal analysis
- OSFI mortgage stress-test guidance
- Bank of Canada Government of Canada bond yield data
About Mansour Real Estate Group
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, is a top-performing real estate team in the Fraser Valley, consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, and relocation across Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, North Delta, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Willoughby, Walnut Grove, and Abbotsford. Most new clients come from repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.
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