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 Condo Sellers 2026: Why Rising Inventory and Comparable Units Create Pricing Pressure — And How to Differentiate When Buyer Options Multiply

June 06, 2026

Coquitlam Condo Sellers 2026: Why Rising Inventory and Comparable Units Create Pricing Pressure — And How to Differentiate When Buyer Options Multiply

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA, Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: July 15, 2026 | Geography: Coquitlam, Tri-Cities, Metro Vancouver | Topic: Condo Seller Strategy

If you own a condo in Coquitlam and are thinking about selling in 2026, the market you are entering is meaningfully different from the one that existed two years ago. Inventory is up, days on market are climbing, and benchmark prices have declined. That combination is not a reason to panic — but it does require a different approach than simply listing and waiting.

This article explains what is driving the pressure, why condos are more vulnerable to pricing contagion than other property types, and what condo sellers can do — practically and strategically — to protect their equity when buyers have more choices than they have had in years.

Short Answer

Coquitlam condo benchmark prices have fallen approximately 8% year-over-year to around $668,800, with inventory rising and days on market averaging 31 to 33 days. In a market where comparable units are easy to compare, a single below-market sale can reset buyer expectations across an entire building. Sellers who differentiate on presentation, pricing psychology, and narrative — rather than chasing the lowest price — are best positioned to hold equity.

Key Takeaways

  • Coquitlam condo benchmark prices fell roughly 8% year-over-year, with inventory continuing to rise.
  • The sales-to-active ratio for condos sits at 0.15 to 0.16 — technically balanced, but buyer-friendly in practice.
  • One panic sale in a building can lower buyer offer expectations for every comparable unit that follows.
  • Staging, pricing psychology, and a differentiated marketing narrative now matter more than timing alone.
  • CMHC forecasts modest condo resale pickup in 2026, but only if sellers avoid the race-to-the-bottom trap.

Who This Applies To

  • Coquitlam condo owners considering a sale in 2026
  • Investors holding a Coquitlam condo unit and evaluating exit timing
  • Downsizers or upsizers moving out of a condo into a townhouse or detached home
  • Executors managing an estate that includes a Coquitlam condo

When This Advice May Not Apply

If your condo has unique attributes — a rare floor plan, a specific view corridor, or a building with unusually strong strata financials — standard differentiation tactics still apply but your starting position is stronger. Consult a local real estate professional for an assessment specific to your unit and building.

Data Used in This Article

  • Patrick Hung Market Intelligence, April 2026 — benchmark prices, DOM, sales-to-active ratios (third-party market analysis, Metro Vancouver / Tri-Cities)
  • BridgeWell Group, Tri-Cities Real Estate Market Report — inventory trends, segment comparisons (third-party analysis, Coquitlam / Tri-Cities)
  • Hello West Coast, Coquitlam Market Update December 2025 — benchmark price YoY data, condo-specific inventory (third-party analysis, Coquitlam)
  • CMHC / Vancouver Housefinders 2026 Outlook — presale collapse data, 2026 resale forecast (official forecast / third-party summary)

Why Condos Are Different From Detached Homes in a Rising Inventory Market

When detached home inventory rises in Coquitlam, individual properties still carry unique characteristics — lot size, orientation, renovation quality, and neighbourhood micro-location all create natural differentiation. Buyers comparing two detached homes are rarely comparing exact equivalents.

Condos do not work that way. Two units on the same floor of the same building, with the same layout and similar finishing, are functionally identical in the eyes of most buyers. That comparability is what makes the condo segment uniquely vulnerable to what analysts sometimes call pricing contagion.

According to market data from April 2026 reviewed by Patrick Hung Real Estate Market Intelligence, Coquitlam condo inventory is up 7.9% year-over-year, while the sales-to-active ratio sits at approximately 0.15 to 0.16. For context, a ratio below 0.12 is typically classified as a buyer's market; 0.15 to 0.16 sits in balanced territory but gives buyers meaningful leverage. Meanwhile, the townhouse segment — as covered in Coquitlam Townhomes in 2026: Why This Is the Hottest Segment in the Tri-Cities — sits at 0.23, a measurably stronger seller position.

For the full market context across all property types, see Coquitlam Real Estate Market Report: What the 2026 Data Tells Buyers and Sellers.

The Panic Sale Problem: One Unit Resets the Whole Building

Here is the dynamic that most condo sellers in Coquitlam do not fully account for: in a building with multiple similar units on the market simultaneously, the first seller to drop their price significantly does not just sell their unit — they hand buyers a new reference point for every other unit that follows.

A buyer who sees that unit 604 sold at $40,000 below the building's benchmark will anchor their offer for unit 802 to that sale, not to the prior benchmark. That is not irrational — it is how buyers protect themselves when they have options and time. With days on market now averaging 31 to 33 days according to April 2026 data, buyers in Coquitlam's condo market have both.

The broader Metro Vancouver condo market context reinforces this. As tracked by multiple market observers through spring 2026, the metro condo segment posted its weakest monthly performance in March 2026, with prices down 0.2% in a single month — a direct result of elevated inventory and a small number of motivated sellers repricing their units downward. Presale condo activity collapsed approximately 60% year-over-year as of spring 2025, according to CMHC-cited data, which means resale supply is not being absorbed by a strong presale pipeline the way it was in 2021 and 2022.

This is the environment condo sellers in Coquitlam are entering in 2026. The goal is not to be the unit that resets the building's benchmark. The goal is to be the unit that sells before the next one does — at a price that reflects your unit's actual strengths, not the desperation of whoever lists next door.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, our approach to condo pricing in a rising-inventory market starts with a building-level analysis, not just a neighbourhood-level CMA. We look at what has sold in the specific building within the past 90 days, what is currently active and competing directly with your unit, and what the strata documents reveal about financial health and upcoming levies — because buyers are asking those questions before they make offers.

From there, we work backward from buyer psychology. At 31 to 33 days on market, buyers are not rushing. They are comparing. That means your unit needs a reason to be chosen over the comparable one two floors up — whether that reason is condition, price positioning, included items, or a clearly articulated narrative about what makes this specific unit worth paying for.

Condo Seller Checklist

  1. Pull the strata minutes and Form B before listing — buyers will request them, and surprises delay or kill deals.
  2. Identify every active comparable unit in your building and within your immediate area — know what you are competing against, not just what sold.
  3. Invest in professional staging that makes your unit's floor plan feel larger and more livable than the identical unit two floors up.
  4. Price within a range that reflects current sold data — not peak 2022 comps — while leaving room for negotiation without going below your acceptable floor.
  5. Prepare a clear written narrative for your listing that distinguishes your unit: floor level, view, parking, storage, renovations, or building amenities.
  6. Confirm your strata's depreciation report is current and that no special levies are pending or undisclosed — these are deal-breakers for financed buyers.
  7. Plan your first price review at day 14 if no accepted offer — do not wait until day 30 to make a decision.

What We Commonly See

In our experience, the most common mistake Coquitlam condo sellers make in a rising-inventory market is pricing to a neighbour's list price rather than to the actual sold data. List prices in a buyer-leaning market are aspirational. Sold prices are the truth. When sellers price to a nearby active listing that has been sitting for 40 days, they are chasing a number that the market has already rejected.

What often happens is that sellers hold out for three to four weeks, then drop their price — sometimes below where they would have landed had they priced correctly from day one. That late price reduction signals distress to buyers, invites lower offers, and can make the seller appear negotiable in ways that cost more than the reduction itself.

A common mistake specific to condo sellers is underinvesting in staging because the unit is already clean and tidy. In a market where buyers are comparing your unit to three others in the same building, tidy is not enough. Staged and photographed well is the baseline for standing out — not a premium option.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How much have Coquitlam condo prices dropped in 2026?

Based on data tracked through early 2026, Coquitlam condo benchmark prices have fallen approximately 8% year-over-year to around $668,800. This follows the broader Metro Vancouver condo correction tied to elevated inventory and rate sensitivity.

Q: How long does it typically take to sell a condo in Coquitlam right now?

Market data from April 2026 shows average days on market for Coquitlam condos ranging from 31 to 33 days. Well-positioned, well-staged units in desirable buildings can sell faster. Units priced above current market expectations or with strata concerns often take significantly longer.

Q: Should I wait for the market to recover before selling my Coquitlam condo?

CMHC forecasts a modest resale pickup in 2026, but recovery is contingent on pricing stabilizing — which only happens if sellers avoid further discounting. Waiting carries its own risk: if inventory continues rising or rates stay elevated, conditions may not improve materially. The better question is whether your personal timeline and financial position allow you to wait, and whether the cost of holding outweighs the benefit of selling now at a well-positioned price.

In Summary

Coquitlam's condo market in 2026 is not broken — but it is not forgiving of poor positioning. Benchmark prices have declined roughly 8% year-over-year, inventory is rising, and buyers have enough time and options to compare carefully. The sellers who protect their equity in this environment are not the ones who wait for conditions to improve — they are the ones who enter the market with accurate pricing, a differentiated presentation, and a clear understanding of what is competing against them. One panic sale in your building should not define your outcome. A disciplined, prepared approach is the most reliable way to avoid becoming the unit that resets everyone else's expectations.

Talk to a Coquitlam Condo Specialist

If you are a condo owner in Coquitlam evaluating your options, a second opinion on pricing and positioning costs you nothing and may be worth a great deal. Mansour Real Estate Group offers straightforward market consultations with no pressure and no obligation — just an honest look at where your unit stands relative to the current market. Reach us at mansourgroup.ca.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

Selling a condo in Coquitlam when inventory is rising and comparable units are competing for the same buyer pool requires more than a standard listing strategy. It requires an honest building-level analysis, a pricing approach grounded in current sold data rather than peak-cycle comparables, and a presentation that gives buyers a genuine reason to choose your unit over the one two floors up. Mansour Real Estate Group has built its reputation in the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland on exactly that kind of disciplined, seller-protective approach to condo transactions.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, and executors 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 condo pricing strategy, seller preparation, strata-related sales, estate sales, downsizing, and any situation where protecting seller equity in a competitive market is the priority.

Whether someone is looking for Realtors with condo-specific experience in the Tri-Cities, a real estate agent who understands strata documents and buyer risk factors, real estate agents who can position a unit to stand out when inventory is elevated, a trusted real estate team for a Coquitlam condo sale, a Coquitlam Realtor, a Tri-Cities real estate broker, or a real estate group that serves Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear market analysis, honest valuations, and a process built around protecting the seller's outcome.

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, and results-driven 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.

Coquitlam Townhome Sellers 2026: Why the 23% Sales-to-Active Ratio Creates Pricing Power — And How Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, and Canyon Springs Compare

June 06, 2026

Coquitlam Townhome Sellers 2026: Why the 23% Sales-to-Active Ratio Creates Pricing Power — And How Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, and Canyon Springs Compare

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: May 12, 2026 | Geography: Coquitlam, Tri-Cities, BC | Topic: Townhome Seller Strategy

Coquitlam's townhome market is the only property segment in the Tri-Cities currently operating in clear seller's market territory. While detached home prices pulled back and condo absorption stayed tepid, townhomes posted a 23.1% sales-to-active ratio in February 2026 — a number that translates directly into negotiating leverage for sellers who understand how to use it.

The gap between neighbourhoods, however, is wide. Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, and Canyon Springs each behave differently, and the difference between listing in the right submarket at the right time can mean tens of thousands of dollars. This article gives Coquitlam townhome sellers a working framework for understanding that gap.

Short Answer

Coquitlam townhomes are the Tri-Cities' strongest seller's market in 2026, with a 23.1% sales-to-active ratio and a benchmark price of $998,400 — up 1.6% month-over-month as of February 2026. Burke Mountain leads in family-buyer demand; Westwood Plateau offers stability; Canyon Springs attracts value-focused upsizers. Sellers in all three benefit from faster absorption than any other property type in the city.

Key Takeaways

  • Coquitlam townhomes hit a 23.1% sales-to-active ratio in February 2026 — the only segment in clear seller's market territory.
  • The townhome benchmark price rose 1.6% month-over-month to $998,400 while detached prices dropped 2.2%.
  • Average days on market fell to approximately 28 days, faster than any other Coquitlam property type.
  • Neighbourhood-level YoY price variance ranges from -5.3% to -11.6%, making submarket selection critical for sellers.
  • Three-bedroom-plus townhomes with double garages and walkable school access are absorbing fastest across all three neighbourhoods.

Who This Applies To

  • Coquitlam townhome owners considering listing in 2026
  • Sellers in Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, Canyon Springs, or Eagle Ridge
  • Homeowners deciding whether to sell now or wait for a more favourable window
  • Families upsizing or downsizing within the Tri-Cities townhome segment

When This Advice May Not Apply

This analysis focuses on attached ground-oriented townhomes. If your property is a stacked townhome, a rowhome with condo-style registration, or a ground-floor condo marketed as a townhome, absorption rates and buyer expectations may differ. Consult the Coquitlam condo market analysis if strata documentation and condo-specific buyers are relevant to your situation.

Data Used in This Article

  • Greater Vancouver Realtors market reports, February 2026 — official board data, sales-to-active ratios and benchmark pricing by property type
  • CMHC Housing Market Outlook, 2026 — official federal housing forecast, ground-oriented attached segment projections for North Fraser communities
  • Sam Tabrizi Coquitlam Market Report, February 2026 — third-party neighbourhood-level analysis, YoY price variance by submarket
  • Bridgewell Group Tri-Cities market data — third-party days-on-market analysis, absorption by property type

What the 23.1% Sales-to-Active Ratio Actually Means for Sellers

The sales-to-active ratio measures how many active listings sold within a given month. A ratio above 20% typically signals seller's market conditions — meaning demand is outpacing supply enough that sellers hold negotiating leverage. At 23.1%, Coquitlam townhomes sit comfortably above that threshold.

For context: Coquitlam detached homes posted a 13% sales-to-active ratio in the same period, and condos came in at 13.2%. Both sit in balanced-to-buyer territory. Townhomes are not just performing better — they are operating in a fundamentally different supply-demand environment. As the broader 2026 Coquitlam market report makes clear, segment divergence is one of the defining features of the current cycle.

In practical terms, a 23.1% ratio means sellers can reasonably price at or slightly above the benchmark, expect faster offers, and in well-positioned listings, receive competing offers. It does not mean every townhome sells above asking — condition, strata health, garage configuration, and school proximity still determine whether a listing absorbs in the first week or sits for a month.

Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, and Canyon Springs: How They Compare

Burke Mountain is driving the strongest family-buyer demand in Coquitlam's townhome segment. Newer builds, larger floor plans, double garages, and proximity to newer school catchments make it the first choice for upsizers relocating from condos or older attached properties. Three-bedroom-plus units here are absorbing fastest, and well-positioned listings are attracting competitive bids. The trade-off for sellers is that buyers expect newer-condition finishes — properties showing deferred maintenance or dated interiors are penalized more sharply here than in older neighbourhoods.

Westwood Plateau offers a different profile. Established neighbourhood, strong school reputation, and a buyer pool that skews toward families already familiar with the area — often upsizing within Coquitlam rather than relocating from elsewhere. Pricing stability is better than in some submarkets, and the neighbourhood's commuting distance to SkyTrain connections adds a consistent demand floor. Sellers here benefit from lower YoY price volatility, though the ceiling for premium pricing is somewhat constrained by the older townhome stock relative to Burke Mountain.

Canyon Springs attracts value-focused buyers — families who want the Coquitlam townhome experience at a price point closer to $900,000 than $1.1 million. Absorption is solid, days on market are competitive, and the neighbourhood's established green space and recreational access resonates with buyers being priced out of Westwood Plateau. For sellers, the opportunity is positioning value accurately: underselling relative to market is a real risk when buyers in this range are highly active. The Eagle Ridge and River Springs resilience analysis offers additional context on how adjacent submarkets are holding up under current conditions.

How We Evaluate This

When Mansour Real Estate Group advises a townhome seller in Coquitlam, we do not start with the benchmark price. We start with the submarket. Benchmark figures represent the median of all sales across the city — they obscure the difference between a Burke Mountain townhome with a double garage on a school catchment boundary and a Canyon Springs unit backing onto a collector road with a single-car garage.

Our pricing approach layers the city-wide sales-to-active ratio against neighbourhood-level absorption, comparable sold data within 500 metres where possible, buyer profile analysis for the specific price range, and strata financial health. The goal is to find the price that maximizes proceeds without triggering the extended days-on-market that shifts negotiating leverage back to buyers. For sellers interested in a full pricing methodology, the data-driven Coquitlam pricing guide walks through that framework in detail.

Definitions

Sales-to-active ratio: The percentage of active listings that sold in a given month. Above 20% is generally a seller's market; below 12% favours buyers; 12–20% is balanced.

Benchmark price: The price of a typical home in a given area, adjusted for property attributes. Produced by Greater Vancouver Realtors and FVREB using the MLS Home Price Index methodology.

Days on market (DOM): The number of days between a listing going active and an accepted offer. Lower DOM indicates faster absorption and stronger seller leverage.

Townhome Seller Checklist — Coquitlam 2026

  1. Confirm your strata's current financials — buyers' agents are requesting Form B and depreciation reports upfront in this price range.
  2. Get a neighbourhood-level comparable analysis, not just a city-wide benchmark — submarket variance of 6% or more is real and affects your list price.
  3. Identify your buyer profile before setting price — Burke Mountain buyers expect newer finishes; Canyon Springs buyers are equity-sensitive and comparison-shopping actively.
  4. Address garage and parking presentation — double-garage configurations are driving demand; single-car or tandem setups need clean presentation to minimize discount risk.
  5. Confirm school catchment details and have them documented — walkable school access is a primary search filter for buyers in the $950,000–$1.1 million townhome range.
  6. Decide on offer strategy before listing — at 23.1% sales-to-active, some sellers benefit from a structured offer date; others do better with immediate review depending on competition at launch.

What We Commonly See

In our experience, Coquitlam townhome sellers most often leave money on the table in one of two ways. The first is pricing to the city-wide benchmark without accounting for the submarket premium — a Burke Mountain townhome with newer construction and school proximity can legitimately price 4–7% above the benchmark if the comparable set supports it. Sellers who anchor to the published number and don't adjust for local demand miss that upside.

The second common mistake is poor strata document preparation. What often happens is a buyer's agent requests the depreciation report and Form B immediately upon showing interest — if those documents aren't ready, the transaction stalls, confidence drops, and the seller loses the momentum that a 23.1% market creates. In a segment where buyers are competing, a clean, organized disclosure package accelerates subject removal and protects the seller's negotiated price.

Questions and Answers

Is a 23.1% sales-to-active ratio enough to justify pricing above the benchmark?

It creates the conditions to price at or above benchmark, but the final number must be supported by neighbourhood-level comparables. City-wide ratios reflect overall demand; your actual leverage depends on supply and absorption in your specific submarket.

How does the CMHC 2026 forecast affect Coquitlam townhome sellers?

CMHC's 2026 Housing Market Outlook projects ground-oriented attached homes in North Fraser communities — which includes Coquitlam — as the strongest-performing segment due to their price competitiveness versus detached homes and commuting value to downtown Vancouver. This supports continued demand through the selling season.

Why are Coquitlam townhome prices rising while detached prices are falling?

Townhomes occupy a price point that detached buyers are increasingly moving into as affordability tightens. They attract both upsizers from condos and downsizers from detached homes simultaneously — a wider demand funnel than either of those segments. Detached homes face a narrower, more rate-sensitive buyer pool. For detached price context by area, see the Coquitlam detached home benchmark guide.

In Summary

Coquitlam townhomes are the only segment in the Tri-Cities with a clear seller's market reading in 2026, and the 23.1% sales-to-active ratio translates into real negotiating power — but only for sellers who understand how that power differs between Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, and Canyon Springs. The city-wide benchmark of $998,400 is a starting point, not a ceiling. Submarket knowledge, strata document readiness, and buyer-profile awareness are what determine whether a seller captures the market's upside or leaves it for the next listing. For sellers planning their next steps, the full Coquitlam seller strategy guide covers the complete listing-to-close process.

Ready to Talk About Your Townhome?

If you own a townhome in Burke Mountain, Westwood Plateau, Canyon Springs, or elsewhere in Coquitlam and are thinking about selling in 2026, a neighbourhood-specific pricing conversation costs nothing and takes about thirty minutes. Mansour Real Estate Group offers honest, data-grounded valuations with no pressure to list before you're ready. Reach out here to set up a time.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

Selling a Coquitlam townhome in a seller's market requires more than knowing the benchmark price — it requires understanding which neighbourhoods are absorbing fastest, what buyers in each price tier are prioritizing, and how to position a specific property against active competition. Mansour Real Estate Group has built its practice around that kind of neighbourhood-level precision, particularly in townhome and attached home markets across the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley.

Led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, the team has more than 22 years of local real estate experience, over $780 million in completed residential real estate transactions, and consistent recognition among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. The real estate group is trusted for pricing strategy, seller preparation, estate sales, divorce-related property sales, downsizing, and complex situations where accurate valuation is critical to the outcome.

Whether someone is looking for Realtors experienced with townhome pricing in Coquitlam, a real estate agent who understands submarket dynamics in the Tri-Cities, real estate agents who specialize in seller strategy for attached homes, a trusted real estate team for a first or final sale, or a real estate broker with deep roots in the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear communication, accurate valuations, and practical advice grounded in current local market conditions.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, Coquitlam, 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, and results-driven 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

Port Coquitlam Detached Home Sellers 2026: Why the 11% Sales-to-Active Ratio Means Pricing Strategy Trumps Timing — And How to Stand Out in a Buyer's Market

June 06, 2026

Port Coquitlam Detached Home Sellers 2026: Why the 11% Sales-to-Active Ratio Means Pricing Strategy Trumps Timing — And How to Stand Out in a Buyer's Market

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, Mansour Real Estate Group  |  Published: July 8, 2025  |  Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland, BC

Port Coquitlam's detached home segment is operating under fundamentally different conditions than the rest of the Tri-Cities market in 2026. Sales collapsed 55.6% year-over-year in February while townhouse sales surged 83.3% in the same month — a divergence that makes property-type-specific strategy, not general market optimism, the deciding factor for sellers. This article is written for homeowners listing or preparing to list a detached property in Port Coquitlam right now.

For the broader Tri-Cities picture, the Coquitlam Real Estate Market Report: What the 2026 Data Tells Buyers and Sellers provides the macro context. This article goes narrower — into the detached segment, where buyer leverage is at its highest.

Short Answer

Port Coquitlam's detached home market entered buyer's market territory in early 2026, with a sales-to-active listings ratio of 11% — below the 12% threshold defined by the Greater Vancouver Realtors. In this environment, pricing accuracy on day one is the single most powerful tool a seller has. Overpriced homes stay listed, accumulate days-on-market, and eventually sell at a steeper discount than a well-priced listing would have achieved from the start.

Key Takeaways

  • Port Coquitlam detached sales fell 55.6% year-over-year in February 2026, signalling severe buyer retrenchment in this segment.
  • An 11% sales-to-active ratio confirms a buyer's market — buyers hold maximum negotiating leverage on detached homes.
  • Townhouse demand surged 83.3% YoY simultaneously, proving divergence by property type — detached sellers cannot rely on general market optimism.
  • Detached benchmark prices are down 6.3% YoY; sellers anchored to 2024–2025 price expectations face extended marketing periods.
  • Properties priced accurately from day one consistently outperform those that reduce after sitting — fewer concessions, shorter timelines.

Who This Applies To

  • Homeowners preparing to list a detached property in Port Coquitlam in 2026
  • Sellers who have already listed and are not receiving offers
  • Estate executors or families managing a detached property sale in the Tri-Cities
  • Owners considering whether to list now or wait for conditions to improve

When This Advice May Not Apply

If a property is located in a particularly resilient pocket — such as those explored in Eagle Ridge and River Springs Coquitlam: The Most Resilient Neighbourhoods in a Down Market — or has rare attributes that create their own demand, some of these dynamics shift. The guidance below applies to the broad detached segment in Port Coquitlam under current conditions.

Data Used in This Article

  • Greater Vancouver Realtors (GVR) Monthly Market Report, February 2026 — official market statistics including sales, new listings, and sales-to-active ratios by property type and sub-area. Official source.
  • GVR Benchmark Price Data, January 2026 — detached benchmark prices for the Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam sub-area. Official source.
  • MLA Canada / GVR: Sales-to-Active Listings Ratio Thresholds — 12% lower bound defining a buyer's market; 20% upper bound defining a seller's market. Industry-standard methodology.

Key Definitions

Sales-to-active listings ratio: The number of sales in a month divided by total active listings, expressed as a percentage. Below 12% is a buyer's market. Above 20% is a seller's market. Between 12% and 20% is balanced. At 11%, Port Coquitlam detached is firmly in buyer's market territory.

Benchmark price: The GVR's measure of a typical home's value based on attributes, adjusted to remove outlier effects. More stable than average or median sale price for trend analysis.

What the 11% Ratio Actually Means for a Detached Seller

According to the Greater Vancouver Realtors' February 2026 Monthly Market Report, Port Coquitlam's detached home sales-to-active listings ratio sat at 11% — a number that crosses the formal threshold into buyer's market territory. At that ratio, for every nine homes on the market, roughly only one sold. Buyers know this. They take their time, submit lower offers, and include more conditions.

What makes this particularly challenging is the simultaneous context: townhomes in the Tri-Cities are trading at a 25% sales-to-active ratio — a seller's market. That contrast is not abstract. It means buyers who might have purchased a detached home five years ago are now actively choosing townhomes instead, attracted by lower entry price, lower maintenance, and often better location-to-price ratios near SkyTrain.

Detached sellers are not competing primarily against other detached sellers. They are competing against a shift in buyer preference. That requires a different kind of positioning — one built around pricing discipline, property presentation, and honest comparison to what buyers can buy instead at a lower cost.

Why Pricing Strategy Is the Primary Lever — Not Timing

The instinct many sellers have is to wait — to hold out for a better market. This can be a sound strategy when conditions are improving. In Port Coquitlam's detached segment in early 2026, the data does not clearly support that instinct. New listings fell 22.8% year-over-year according to the GVR's February report, yet sales fell faster. Fewer sellers listing did not translate into faster sales. Buyer demand contracted more sharply than supply.

The detached benchmark in the Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam area sat at approximately $1,647,800 in January 2026, down 6.3% year-over-year per GVR benchmark data. The gap between where sellers expect to price and where buyers are willing to transact is the core problem. That gap does not close by waiting — it closes by pricing accurately from the first day of listing.

A property that lists at market and sells in three to four weeks typically achieves a better net outcome than one that lists high, sits for 60 to 90 days, reduces price twice, and eventually sells below where an accurate initial price would have landed. Days-on-market is a visible signal. Buyers and their agents notice it and factor it into offer strategy. For more on pricing methodology, the planned resource at How to Price Your Coquitlam Home Right the First Time will cover this in depth.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, when we evaluate a detached property in a buyer's market, we start by building a comparable sales analysis that focuses on sold properties — not active listings. Active listings show you what sellers are hoping to achieve. Sold data shows you what buyers are actually paying.

We layer in days-on-market patterns for unsold listings, pending price reductions in the area, and the relative positioning of competing properties by lot size, age, condition, and walkability to transit or schools. The goal is to find a price that generates showing activity in the first two weeks — because in a buyer's market, activity in the first two weeks is the strongest indicator of a successful sale. If a property is not generating showings, the price is the reason in the large majority of cases.

Seller Checklist — Port Coquitlam Detached Homes

  1. Build a sold-comparable analysis, not a listing-based price opinion. Use the last 60 to 90 days of closed sales in Port Coquitlam only, adjusted for lot size, age, and condition.
  2. Check days-on-market for unsold listings in your price range. If similar homes have been sitting for 45 or more days without offers, the market has already priced them out of relevance.
  3. Identify your property's three strongest attributes. Lot size, school catchment, garage configuration, suite potential, and finished basement are common differentiators in Port Coquitlam. Lead with these in marketing.
  4. Complete pre-listing repairs that affect buyer perception at first showing. Deferred maintenance signals risk to buyers who already have leverage. In a buyer's market, condition issues become negotiating tools against you.
  5. Commission professional photography and, where appropriate, a floor plan. Buyers in this segment are comparing online before they visit. Presentation quality affects showing volume.
  6. Set a price with a clear internal rationale. Know what your minimum acceptable net is, adjusted for closing costs and moving expenses, so you can respond to offers from a position of clarity rather than emotion.
  7. Review staging options specific to the detached segment. Curb appeal, main living areas, and the primary bedroom drive buyer decisions. See what actually moves the needle in Staging a Home for Sale in Coquitlam.

What We Commonly See

Sellers pricing to their purchase history, not the current market. In our experience, the most common reason a detached home sits unsold in Port Coquitlam is that the seller priced based on what they paid, what a neighbour sold for in 2023, or what they need for their next purchase — none of which are relevant to what today's buyer will pay. The market does not adjust to the seller's circumstances.

Underestimating how quickly buyers notice days-on-market. What often happens is that a home lists on a Thursday, generates modest interest the first weekend, and then sees showing activity drop sharply by week three. By that point, buyer agents are telling their clients the property "has been sitting" — and the offer strategy shifts accordingly. First-week activity is disproportionately important.

Overlooking neighbourhood location nuances within Port Coquitlam. A common mistake is treating all detached homes in Port Coquitlam as equivalent. Buyers paying $1.5 million-plus are distinguishing between areas near Burke Mountain access, school catchments, and walkability to the West Coast Express. Properties in stronger micro-locations can support firmer pricing. Those in less connected areas need to be priced accordingly. The upcoming analysis of Burke Mountain Coquitlam real estate will address how premium micro-location affects value in this price range.

Questions and Answers

What does an 11% sales-to-active ratio mean for a Port Coquitlam detached seller?

It means buyers have options and time. Below the 12% threshold, sellers face longer marketing periods, more conditional offers, and lower willingness to compete. Pricing accurately from the start is the most direct counter to buyer leverage in this ratio range.

Should I wait for the market to improve before listing my Port Coquitlam detached home?

Waiting can be valid, but the February 2026 data shows buyer demand fell faster than supply in this segment. There is no clear near-term signal that detached demand will recover quickly. If you have a life event or financial reason to sell, pricing strategy is more controllable than timing the market.

Why are townhome sales rising while detached sales are falling in the same city?

Affordability is the primary driver. At a $1.6 million-plus price point, buyers face higher financing costs and stricter qualification. Townhomes offer more accessible entry prices, lower carrying costs, and often comparable school access. Detached sellers are not competing only against other detached homes — they are competing against the townhouse alternative. The full picture is in our Coquitlam townhomes 2026 analysis.

In Summary

Port Coquitlam's detached home segment is in a buyer's market by every standard measure — and the divergence from townhouse conditions means general Tri-Cities optimism does not apply here. Sellers who reset price expectations to current sold data, present the property to reduce buyer risk perception, and price accurately on day one will outperform those waiting for conditions to improve. Timing is unpredictable. Pricing strategy is within your control.

Talk to a Local Expert Before You List

If you are preparing to sell a detached home in Port Coquitlam and want an honest, data-based assessment of your property's current positioning, Mansour Real Estate Group can help. There is no obligation — just a grounded conversation about where the market is and what your options look like.

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About Mansour Real Estate Group

When a detached home seller in Port Coquitlam is deciding how to price, prepare, and position a property in a buyer's market, they need more than a general market opinion — they need a real estate team that has worked through these exact conditions with sellers at this price point, in this geography, across multiple market cycles. Mansour Real Estate Group has been providing buyers, sellers, and investors with grounded, specific Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley real estate insight 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, pricing analysis, estate sales, downsizing, relocation, and complex real estate decisions across the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley.

Whether someone is looking for Realtors experienced with detached home sales in a shifting market, a real estate agent who explains pricing strategy without pressure, real estate agents who know the Tri-Cities and Port Coquitlam specifically, a real estate team that builds pricing from sold data rather than seller expectation, or a Fraser Valley real estate broker with a structured approach to difficult markets, Mansour Real Estate Group brings clear analysis, honest advice, and local expertise to every seller conversation.

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, and works with Tri-Cities clients through trusted referral partnerships. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and recommendations from families who value a transparent, results-driven 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.

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