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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Burnaby Detached Home Days on Market by Neighbourhood 2026: What's Driving 30–60 Day Variances and How to Use DOM Data to Price and Time Your Sale

June 04, 2026

Burnaby Detached Home Days on Market by Neighbourhood 2026: What's Driving 30–60 Day Variances and How to Use DOM Data to Price and Time Your Sale

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: July 15, 2026 | Burnaby, BC — Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland

Burnaby's detached home market in 2026 is not behaving as a single market. Depending on the neighbourhood, a seller is looking at a sale in 30 to 40 days — or a prolonged listing that stretches past 60. That gap is not random. It reflects real differences in buyer demand, school catchments, transit access, lot characteristics, and price-point expectations. Yet most sellers are pricing against city-wide averages, not the specific micro-market their property actually sits in.

This article breaks down what the days-on-market data shows across Burnaby's three major detached zones — East, North, and South — and explains how to use that data to make a better pricing and timing decision before you list.

Short Answer

In early 2026, Burnaby detached homes are selling in roughly 30–40 days in high-demand pockets near SkyTrain and strong school catchments, while properties in slower micro-markets are sitting 60 days or longer. The difference comes down to buyer pool size, list price accuracy, and whether the property meets what active buyers in that specific zone are looking for right now. Aggregate city data masks this variance entirely.

Key Takeaways

  • Burnaby's detached segment shows 30–60+ day DOM variance by neighbourhood in early 2026, a gap invisible in Metro Vancouver aggregate data.
  • SkyTrain proximity, school catchment quality, and lot size are the documented primary drivers of faster absorption in Burnaby detached homes.
  • DOM is a leading indicator — rising days on market in a pocket typically precedes downward price pressure within 60 to 90 days.
  • The April 2026 GVR report confirmed detached homes gaining momentum while condo and townhouse segments lagged, making neighbourhood-level DOM the most actionable current data for detached sellers.
  • Pricing 5–8% above the neighbourhood's current absorption ceiling reliably extends DOM past 45 days and weakens the seller's negotiating position.

Who This Applies To

  • Owners of detached homes in Burnaby East, Burnaby North, or Burnaby South preparing to list in 2026
  • Sellers deciding between listing now versus waiting for a different seasonal window
  • Homeowners who received a price recommendation but want to understand whether that price fits their specific neighbourhood's current absorption rate
  • Estate executors or trustees managing a Burnaby detached property who need to understand realistic sale timelines

When This Advice May Not Apply

If your property has significant lot assembly potential, heritage complications, or is priced in the $3M+ range, neighbourhood DOM benchmarks for standard detached homes may not apply. Those transactions operate on different buyer timelines. Consult directly with a Burnaby-experienced agent for situation-specific guidance.

Data Used in This Article

  • GVR April 2026 Market Insights Report — official monthly release, Greater Vancouver Realtors, April 2026, Metro Vancouver geography, official board data
  • BCREA Housing Monitor Dashboard — provincial housing data, bcrea.bc.ca/economics, January–May 2026 range, official industry body
  • BCHB January 2026 Market Insights — bchb.ca, January 2026, BC geography, third-party analysis drawing on MLS data
  • Wowa.ca Vancouver Housing Market — May 2026 property-type breakdown, third-party aggregation of MLS data, used for segment-level context only

What DOM Actually Measures — and Why It Matters More Than Price

Days on market measures the number of calendar days between a listing going active on MLS and an accepted offer. In isolation, it tells you how long a property sat. In context — compared to the neighbourhood benchmark — it tells you whether a property was priced correctly, positioned well, and whether the buyer pool for that area was active at the time of listing.

DOM is a leading indicator of price direction. When neighbourhood DOM rises over consecutive months, it signals that buyers are becoming more selective or that seller pricing expectations have moved ahead of what the market will absorb. That pattern typically precedes price softening within 60 to 90 days. When DOM contracts, it signals tightening supply or rising demand — and sellers who price correctly in that window can expect stronger offer positioning.

For Burnaby detached sellers in 2026, the April GVR Market Insights report noted that detached homes were gaining momentum relative to the condo and townhouse segments, where diverging trends were widening. That divergence makes neighbourhood-level DOM data particularly actionable right now, because the detached segment is not moving uniformly — it is moving by pocket.

Understanding the full Burnaby market picture for 2026 sets the context for why these neighbourhood-level differences matter as much as they do right now.

Why Burnaby's Three Detached Zones Perform Differently

Burnaby East covers neighbourhoods like Capitol Hill, Burnaby Heights, and the area bordering Coquitlam. Detached homes here tend to be older stock on standard lots, often with suites. The buyer pool includes families prioritizing school catchment access and investors seeking rental income. When prices are positioned within the buyer pool's financing ceiling, these properties move in the 30–45 day range. When they are listed at the seller's expectation rather than current comparable sales, they slide toward 60+ days quickly. The Capitol Hill and Heights areas specifically attract buyers who have already been outbid or priced out of the North and South zones, making accurate pricing especially important — this buyer is motivated but not unlimited in flexibility. For a deeper look at what that buyer is seeing, the Capitol Hill and Edmonds buyer opportunity guide covers the demand picture from the other side of the transaction.

Burnaby North includes Government Road, Parkcrest, Westridge, and the SFU adjacency areas. This zone has historically had the largest lot sizes relative to Burnaby's detached stock and attracts a different buyer — typically a family upgrading from a smaller detached home or a move-up buyer from a townhouse in a different municipality. Transit access here is indirect compared to South Burnaby, which means the buyer pool is more car-dependent and more sensitive to lot quality and condition of the home. The Government Road and Greentree Village seller advantage analysis shows why certain pockets in this zone continue to favour sellers even as the broader market softens. DOM in these pockets runs 35–50 days when priced right. Poorly priced listings trend toward 65–75 days.

Burnaby South — including Metrotown, Central Park, and South Slope — benefits from the strongest SkyTrain access of the three zones. The transit-to-value relationship across Burnaby neighbourhoods is well documented, and South Burnaby's detached market reflects it. The buyer pool here is broader — including households that do not rely on a car — which translates to faster absorption when supply is limited. However, this zone has also seen inventory increases in early 2026, and sellers listing without a clear pricing rationale are finding that the SkyTrain premium does not automatically protect against a long DOM if the price is out of step with recent comparables.

How to Use DOM Data to Price and Time Your Listing

DOM data is only useful when compared to a relevant benchmark. The relevant benchmark is not Metro Vancouver's average. It is the trailing 90-day median DOM for detached homes in your specific MLS sub-area within Burnaby. That figure tells you what the current buyer pool is absorbing, at what pace, and at what price-to-list ratio.

If the neighbourhood benchmark is 38 days and a competing active listing has been sitting for 55 days, that tells you the competing property is either overpriced or has a condition issue the market is rejecting. That creates a positioning opportunity — a well-priced property entering the market in that context will absorb much of the active buyer demand quickly.

If the benchmark is 55 days and rising month-over-month, that signals a softening pocket. Sellers in that environment need to list at or slightly below current comparable sales to avoid the cost of an extended DOM — which includes carrying costs, the reputational signal a stale listing sends to buyers, and the likelihood of a lower final sale price after a price reduction. Burnaby home pricing strategy for 2026 covers the mechanics of that decision in detail.

Timing also matters. The Burnaby detached sales ratio analysis shows that even in a market where overall sales-to-active ratios are below the seller's market threshold, certain neighbourhoods maintain tighter conditions. Listing during a window when competing inventory in your sub-area is low — even briefly — is a meaningful timing advantage that a static pricing strategy cannot replicate.

Before finalizing your approach, reviewing the preparation steps that reduce DOM is worth doing — condition and presentation affect how buyers perceive value relative to your asking price, which directly affects absorption speed.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, neighbourhood DOM analysis is built into the pre-listing pricing process, not treated as a secondary consideration. Before we recommend a list price for any Burnaby detached property, we pull the trailing 60 and 90-day DOM for that specific MLS sub-area, compare it to the same period in the prior year, and identify whether the trend is contracting or expanding.

We then overlay that with the current active-to-sold ratio for the sub-area and the average sale-to-list price ratio for properties that sold within the first 30 days versus those that required a price reduction. That combination tells us where the market's absorption ceiling sits right now — and that ceiling is what the list price needs to be at or below to avoid the compounding cost of an extended listing.

Key Definitions

Days on Market (DOM): Calendar days from active MLS listing to accepted offer. Cumulative DOM (CDOM) includes time across re-listings.

Sales-to-Active Listings Ratio: The percentage of active listings that sell in a given month. Below 12% generally favours buyers; above 20% favours sellers.

Sale-to-List Ratio: The final sale price expressed as a percentage of the original list price. A ratio below 97% in a neighbourhood suggests buyers have pricing power.

MLS Sub-Area: The geographic boundary used by GVR to track localized market statistics — more granular than a city-level average.

Seller Checklist: Using DOM Data Before You List

  • Pull trailing 60 and 90-day DOM for detached homes in your specific Burnaby MLS sub-area — not city-wide.
  • Identify whether DOM is contracting or expanding month-over-month — trend matters more than the snapshot number.
  • Review all currently active competing listings in your sub-area and note which ones have already reduced price or exceeded the neighbourhood DOM benchmark.
  • Ask your agent for the sale-to-list ratio for properties that sold within 30 days versus those requiring a reduction — this reveals where the absorption ceiling sits.
  • Compare your planned list price to the price range of homes that sold within 35 days in the last 90 days. If yours is more than 5% above that range, revisit the pricing rationale.
  • Identify the current active inventory count in your sub-area — lower inventory amplifies DOM advantages for well-priced listings.
  • Time your list date to avoid competing with re-listed properties that buyers have already seen and rejected — new supply to the market is more powerful than new-to-you supply.

What We Commonly See

In our experience working with Burnaby detached sellers, the most common mistake is pricing against a sale that closed four to six months ago rather than what is selling in the current 60-day window. A sale from October 2025 is not a reliable benchmark for a May 2026 list price — market conditions, competing inventory levels, and buyer financing capacity have all shifted.

What often happens is that sellers list 7–10% above the current absorption ceiling based on an older comparable, sit on the market past 45 days, then reduce to a price that is actually below where they could have closed if they had priced correctly from the start — because a stale listing carries a stigma that fresh listings do not.

A common mistake specific to Burnaby South sellers is assuming the SkyTrain premium will close the gap between their asking price and current buyer capacity. Transit proximity does add value, but it does not override the pricing ceiling. In a market where inventory is rising, the transit premium compresses — it helps a correctly priced property sell faster, but it does not rescue an overpriced one.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What counts as a "fast" DOM for Burnaby detached homes in 2026?

Based on GVR sub-area data through early 2026, a sale within 35 days reflects strong buyer demand and accurate pricing in Burnaby's detached segment. Properties selling in under 20 days in this market are typically priced at or below absorption ceiling, often in high-competition pockets near SkyTrain or in-demand school zones.

Q: Does a long DOM always mean the price was wrong?

Not always. Condition, presentation, seasonal timing, and competing inventory all affect DOM. However, in the Burnaby detached segment, overpricing relative to current comparables is the single most frequent cause of extended DOM. Condition and presentation issues are usually the second cause — and both are avoidable with proper pre-listing preparation.

Q: Should I wait for DOM to shorten before listing, or list now to capture current demand?

That depends on your specific sub-area's trend. If neighbourhood DOM is contracting month-over-month, listing sooner captures a tightening window. If it is expanding, waiting without a price adjustment strategy does not help — the market moves faster than most sellers expect. A current DOM analysis of your specific sub-area is the starting point for that decision. The upcoming full seller's guide for Burnaby detached homes in 2026 covers timing decisions in detail.

In Summary

Burnaby's detached home market in 2026 is a collection of micro-markets, not a single trend. Days on market varies by 30 to 60+ days depending on the neighbourhood, and that variance is the clearest signal available about where buyer demand is concentrated and where pricing expectations have moved ahead of reality. Sellers who anchor their list price to current, neighbourhood-specific DOM data — rather than city averages or older comparables — are positioning themselves to sell faster, with less negotiation, and without the compounding cost of a price reduction on a stale listing. The data is available. Using it correctly is the advantage.

Talk to the Mansour Real Estate Group team about a neighbourhood-specific DOM review before you set your list price. There is no obligation — just a current, honest read of what your specific Burnaby sub-area is doing right now.

Visit mansourgroup.ca or call to arrange a pre-listing consultation.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

When homeowners in Burnaby are preparing to sell a detached property, the decisions made before the listing goes live — including how to read neighbourhood DOM data, how to set a price that reflects current buyer capacity rather than seller expectation, and how to time the listing relative to competing inventory — typically determine the outcome more than anything that happens after. Mansour Real Estate Group has built its reputation across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland on pricing discipline, honest valuations, and a willingness to have difficult conversations about market reality before a listing goes live rather than after.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, executors, and retirees navigate important 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, detached home sales, estate sales, divorce-related property sales, downsizing, and complex situations where accurate valuation and neighbourhood-level data are critical to protecting seller equity.

Whether someone is looking for a Realtor with deep knowledge of Burnaby's detached market, real estate agents who specialize in neighbourhood-level pricing analysis, a real estate team that provides honest DOM-based market context before recommending a list price, or a real estate broker with experience across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for data-driven recommendations, clear communication, and a process built around protecting the seller's position from the first 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. 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

Burnaby Buyer's Maximum Purchase Power in 2026: How Bank of Canada Rate Holds, New Insured Mortgage Rules, and 30-Year Amortization Changes Impact Your Budget

June 04, 2026

Burnaby Buyer's Maximum Purchase Power in 2026: How Bank of Canada Rate Holds, New Insured Mortgage Rules, and 30-Year Amortization Changes Impact Your Budget

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group | Burnaby, Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland | Published May 2026

Two significant mortgage rule changes took effect in early 2026, and they are reshaping what buyers can realistically purchase in Burnaby. The 30-year amortization option on insured mortgages and the new $1.5M insured mortgage cap are real improvements — but their effect on monthly payments and qualification thresholds is more modest than many buyers expect, especially in a market where entry-level townhouses and condos now routinely trade above $900,000.

This article breaks down what those changes actually mean in dollar terms for buyers targeting the $1M–$1.5M segment where Burnaby activity is currently concentrated, including the income requirements, stress test implications, and the rate risk that lenders are watching closely heading into 2027.

Short Answer

The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% through April 2026, and new federal rules now allow 30-year amortizations and insured mortgages up to $1.5M. These changes meaningfully reduce the minimum down payment required on properties up to $1.5M and lower monthly payments modestly — but income requirements to qualify above $1M remain high, the stress test still applies to uninsured mortgages, and buyers stretching into 30-year terms carry materially more financial risk if rates rise or income falls.

Key Takeaways

  • The $1.5M insured mortgage cap lets buyers purchase up to $1.5M with less than 20% down, reducing upfront capital requirements significantly.
  • A 30-year amortization lowers monthly payments versus a 25-year term, but raises total interest paid over the life of the mortgage.
  • The Bank of Canada held at 2.25% through April 2026; a 1% rate increase later reduces buyer budgets by roughly 10% for the same payment.
  • Lenders qualify buyers at up to 40% of gross income for mortgage payments, leaving approximately 20% of pre-tax earnings for all other costs.
  • Longer amortizations are linked to higher financial stress probability if borrower income drops, per Bank of Canada research.

Who This Applies To

  • First-time buyers in Burnaby evaluating condos or townhouses priced between $700K and $1.5M
  • Move-up buyers transitioning from a condo to a townhouse or from a townhouse toward a detached property
  • Buyers with less than 20% saved who want to understand the new insured mortgage rules before pre-approval
  • Investors or dual-income households calculating qualifying income for properties above $1M

When This Advice May Not Apply

This article addresses conventional insured and uninsured residential purchases. It does not apply to rental-income-qualified applications, commercial property, or self-employed borrowers with atypical income documentation. Consult a licensed mortgage professional for advice specific to your financial situation.

Data Used in This Article

  • Bank of Canada Key Interest Rate — official policy rate data, April 2026 — bankofcanada.ca
  • Federal mortgage rule changes (amortization and cap) — TD Economics analysis, Global News reporting — 2024–2025
  • Purchasing power sensitivity to rate changes — Nesto mortgage rate forecast, Owl Mortgage practical affordability guide — 2025–2026
  • Financial stress risk of longer amortizations — Bank of Canada research, referenced in TD Economics commentary

Key Definitions

Insured mortgage: A mortgage where the borrower puts down less than 20%, requiring CMHC or equivalent mortgage default insurance. As of 2026, available on properties priced up to $1.5M.

Amortization: The total repayment period of a mortgage. A 30-year amortization reduces monthly payments versus 25 years but increases total interest paid.

Stress test: A federal qualification requirement that tests borrowers at the higher of the contract rate plus 2%, or 5.25%. Applies to all uninsured mortgages.

GDS/TDS ratios: Gross Debt Service and Total Debt Service ratios. Lenders generally allow housing costs up to 39% of gross income (GDS) and total debt up to 44% (TDS).

What the 2026 Mortgage Rule Changes Actually Do

Before 2026, insured mortgages were capped at $999,999, meaning any purchase at or above $1M required a minimum 20% down payment regardless of the buyer's financial profile. That created a hard barrier for buyers targeting Burnaby's townhouse and detached market, where average prices in many neighbourhoods exceed that threshold.

The new $1.5M insured mortgage cap means a buyer purchasing a $1.3M townhouse can now put down as little as 5% on the first $500,000 and 10% on the remainder — roughly $105,000 — instead of the $260,000 previously required. That is a meaningful reduction in the cash needed at the time of purchase, though CMHC insurance premiums apply and are added to the mortgage balance.

The 30-year amortization option extends repayment from the standard 25 years, reducing the required monthly payment for the same mortgage amount. On a $900,000 mortgage at a 5% rate, for example, the monthly payment on a 30-year schedule is roughly $300–$350 lower than on a 25-year schedule. That difference can shift a buyer's qualifying income threshold by $8,000–$10,000 annually, which is meaningful for buyers at the margin. For context on how Burnaby prices have evolved to reach these levels, the Burnaby real estate price history since the 2022 peak explains the trajectory in detail.

What neither change does is alter the stress test for uninsured mortgages, reduce the income required to carry a mortgage above $1M over time, or remove the rate risk embedded in variable or short-term fixed products.

What the Numbers Look Like for Burnaby Buyers in 2026

Burnaby's active market is concentrating in the $1M–$1.5M band, particularly for townhouses in areas like Brentwood and Metrotown, and for entry-level detached properties in neighbourhoods such as Capitol Hill and Edmonds. To qualify for a $1M mortgage under a standard lender's GDS guidelines, a household generally needs a gross annual income of approximately $175,000–$200,000, depending on other debts, property taxes, and strata fees included in the calculation.

That income threshold is not attainable for most individual buyers in Burnaby, which is why dual-income households dominate purchases above $1M. For buyers targeting the $700K–$900K condo range — where the Burnaby price band analysis identifies the clearest value — the new 30-year amortization provides more practical relief, bringing qualifying income requirements closer to $130,000–$150,000 for a household.

The rate sensitivity component is equally important. The Bank of Canada held at 2.25% through April 2026, according to official Bank of Canada reporting, and mortgage rate forecasters broadly expect that level to hold through most of 2026. But forecasts from Nesto and TD Economics both flag the possibility of 1.00–1.50 percentage point increases by end of 2027 if inflation re-accelerates. A 1% rate increase on a $900,000 mortgage reduces buyer purchasing power by approximately $90,000 for the same monthly payment — a risk that buyers stretching into 30-year insured mortgages near the $1.5M cap carry with minimal buffer.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, our approach to buyer purchasing power starts with a verified pre-approval — not a rough estimate — before a client tours any properties priced within 10% of their ceiling. The reason is practical: in the $1M–$1.5M Burnaby segment, buyers who discover a financing gap after finding a property they want are at a serious disadvantage, particularly if competing offers are present.

We also work with buyers to establish a realistic comfort budget separate from their maximum qualifying amount. Lenders will approve borrowers up to roughly 40% of gross income for mortgage payments. That leaves only about 20% of pre-tax income for all non-housing costs — groceries, transportation, childcare, savings, and discretionary spending. In our experience, buyers who borrow at or near their maximum qualification threshold with a 30-year amortization carry meaningful financial fragility that a moderate income disruption can expose. The step-by-step buyer process is covered in depth in our first-time buyer guide for Burnaby in 2026.

Buyer Checklist: Preparing Your Finances Before You Start

  1. Get a full pre-approval — not a pre-qualification — with a licensed mortgage broker before viewing properties above $700K.
  2. Calculate your comfort payment at today's rate and again at today's rate plus 1.5% to test rate sensitivity.
  3. Confirm whether you qualify for an insured mortgage under the new $1.5M cap and what CMHC premium will be added to your balance.
  4. Budget all closing costs — property transfer tax, legal fees, title insurance, and any strata adjustments — separately from your down payment. See the full breakdown in the Burnaby closing costs guide.
  5. Ask your lender to show the 25-year versus 30-year amortization comparison — both the monthly payment difference and the total interest difference over the full term.
  6. Identify your debt service ratio including any existing car loans, student loans, or lines of credit before your pre-approval appointment.
  7. Understand whether your target property is strata, and confirm that strata fees are included in the lender's GDS calculation.

What We Commonly See

Buyers confuse maximum approval with realistic budget. In our experience, buyers who receive a $1.3M pre-approval and immediately search for properties at that ceiling often discover after a few months that the monthly payment leaves them unable to maintain savings or absorb unexpected expenses. The number on the approval letter represents a lender's risk ceiling — not a recommended spending target.

The 30-year amortization is treated as free money. What often happens is that buyers focus on the lower monthly payment without running the total interest calculation. On a $900,000 mortgage at 5%, a 30-year amortization costs approximately $145,000–$160,000 more in interest than a 25-year schedule over the full repayment period. That is not a reason to avoid the 30-year option, but it should be understood as a trade-off, not a free benefit.

Rate holds expire unnoticed. A common mistake is securing a pre-approval with a rate hold of 90–120 days and then shopping past the expiry date without renewing. If rates rise between your original hold and your actual purchase date, your qualifying amount decreases — sometimes enough to change the properties you can reasonably target in Burnaby's $1M–$1.5M segment. Buyers also comparing new construction versus resale should note that new construction timelines frequently outlast a standard rate hold.

Questions and Answers

Does the 30-year amortization apply to all mortgages in 2026?

No. As of 2026, the 30-year amortization is available on insured mortgages for first-time buyers and on new construction purchases. Uninsured mortgages — those with 20% or more down — remain on a maximum 25-year amortization schedule under standard lender guidelines, though some lenders offer extended terms as uninsured products with different risk pricing.

Does the stress test still apply now that rates are lower?

Yes. The federal mortgage stress test applies to all uninsured mortgages and requires qualification at the higher of the contract rate plus 2%, or the regulatory floor of 5.25%. With the Bank of Canada policy rate at 2.25%, many fixed mortgage rates are in the 4.5–5.5% range, meaning the stress test qualifying rate for most buyers is 6.5–7.5% — significantly above the contract rate.

What income does a Burnaby buyer need to qualify for a $1.2M purchase with 10% down?

On a $1.08M insured mortgage at approximately 5%, with property taxes and strata fees included in the GDS calculation, a household typically needs a gross annual income in the range of $190,000–$210,000 to qualify. Individual circumstances, existing debt, and lender-specific policies affect this threshold. A licensed mortgage broker can provide a precise number based on actual income documentation.

In Summary

The 2026 mortgage rule changes — the $1.5M insured cap and the 30-year amortization option — reduce the upfront cash required and modestly lower monthly payments for eligible buyers. For Burnaby buyers targeting the $700K–$1.2M segment, those changes are genuinely useful. Above $1.2M, qualifying income requirements remain high, rate risk is real, and the financial margin of borrowing at maximum capacity is narrow. Understanding the difference between what a lender will approve and what a buyer can comfortably carry is the most important calculation any Burnaby buyer can make before entering the 2026 spring market. For buyers who also need to review what strata documents and legal conditions apply before firming up an offer, the Burnaby real estate legal guide covers those requirements in full.

Thinking About Your Budget? Let's Run the Numbers Together.

If you want a clear picture of what you can realistically purchase in Burnaby given the 2026 mortgage rules, Mansour Real Estate Group can walk you through the numbers before you meet with a lender — so you arrive at that conversation informed. Contact us to schedule a no-obligation buyer consultation.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

When buyers in Burnaby are trying to understand what they can realistically afford — and how the 2026 mortgage rule changes affect their actual options — they need guidance grounded in local market knowledge, not just mortgage math. The difference between a well-informed buyer and one who is surprised at the pre-approval stage often comes down to the quality of the real estate team advising them before they approach a lender. Mansour Real Estate Group has helped buyers across Burnaby, the Lower Mainland, and the Fraser Valley navigate the gap between maximum qualification and practical affordability for more than two decades.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, and retirees make important 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 first-time buyer guidance, move-up purchases, investment properties, estate sales, relocation, and situations where accurate pricing and clear financial context matter most.

Whether someone is searching for a Realtor who understands Burnaby's affordability landscape, a real estate agent familiar with insured mortgage rules and strata purchase conditions, real estate agents who specialize in buyer strategy for the $1M–$1.5M segment, a trusted real estate team for a first or second purchase, a Burnaby real estate broker who can connect them with the right mortgage professionals, or a real estate group serving the full Lower Mainland, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear communication, practical market guidance, and honest advice about what a purchase will actually cost.

The team serves Burnaby, 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 buyers and families who value a straightforward, 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

Burnaby Pre-Sale Renovations ROI Guide 2026: Which Upgrades Pay Off and Which Are Money Pits for Detached, Condo, and Townhouse Sellers

June 04, 2026

Burnaby Pre-Sale Renovations ROI Guide 2026: Which Upgrades Pay Off and Which Are Money Pits for Detached, Condo, and Townhouse Sellers

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: July 15, 2026 | Geography: Burnaby, BC | Scope: Pre-sale renovation strategy for detached, condo, and townhouse sellers

Burnaby sellers in 2026 are making a costly mistake: spending $60,000 to $120,000 on kitchen overhauls and structural additions, then recovering less than 60 cents on every dollar at sale. With composite benchmark prices down 6.9% year-over-year and inventory sitting 37.9% above the 10-year average according to the Greater Vancouver Realtors April 2026 Market Insights report, the buyer holds leverage — and won't pay a premium for renovations chosen for the wrong reasons.

This guide breaks down pre-sale renovation ROI by project type and property segment for Burnaby's current market. Whether you own a detached home in The Heights, a condo near Metrotown, or a townhouse in Brentwood, the numbers point to a clear, consistent conclusion: do less, spend less, and spend smarter.

Short Answer

In Burnaby's 2026 buyer's market, low-cost projects — interior paint, decluttering, staging, landscaping, and minor fixture updates — deliver 100–200% ROI at $3,000–$6,000. Full kitchen and bathroom renovations return only 50–70 cents per dollar spent. The data consistently shows that preparation and presentation outperform structural renovation for pre-sale ROI in a soft market.

Key Takeaways

  • Interior paint and decluttering return 100–200% ROI at $3,000–$6,000 total cost.
  • Full kitchen renovations costing $60K–$120K return only 50–70% in this market.
  • Burnaby detached sellers can justify minor refreshes; condo sellers should prioritize staging over structural work.
  • Buyers in a buyer's market discount renovated homes if pricing doesn't reflect current benchmarks.
  • The correct renovation budget decision starts with an accurate pricing analysis, not a contractor quote.

Who This Applies To

  • Detached homeowners in Burnaby Heights, Capitol Hill, or Government Road preparing to list
  • Condo sellers near SkyTrain corridors facing investor-driven competition
  • Townhouse owners in Brentwood or Lougheed evaluating pre-sale spend
  • Estate sellers or executors managing a Burnaby property sale under time and budget constraints

When This Advice May Not Apply

If a property has a structural defect, outdated electrical, or a health-and-safety issue that will surface in a buyer inspection, those items warrant different consideration than cosmetic upgrades. This guide addresses discretionary pre-sale improvements only. Consult a qualified contractor and your real estate advisor for condition-based decisions.

Data Used in This Article

  • Greater Vancouver Realtors (GVR) — April 2026 Market Insights Report: Official monthly market statistics including benchmark prices, sales-to-active ratios, inventory levels, and property-type trend data. Primary/official source.
  • Remodeling Cost vs. Value Report (via Opendoor, referencing 2024 national data): Renovation ROI benchmarks by project type. Industry/third-party source.
  • Rain City Properties — Pre-Sale Renovation ROI Analysis 2026: Vancouver-market specific renovation return estimates. Third-party industry analysis.
  • Mansour Real Estate Group — Internal market observations: Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland transaction experience. Professional interpretation.

What the Burnaby Market Actually Looks Like Right Now

According to the GVR's April 2026 Market Insights report, Burnaby's composite benchmark price has declined 6.9% year-over-year, and active listings sit 37.9% above the 10-year seasonal average. The sales-to-active listings ratio for condos and townhouses has remained in buyer's market territory, while detached homes have shown a modest recovery in sales activity.

That divergence matters directly for renovation decisions. A detached seller in Government Road or Greentree Village faces a different buyer pool than a condo seller competing against 30 similar units near a SkyTrain station. The buyer profile, the financing constraints, and the price sensitivity all differ — and so does the renovation math.

Understanding Burnaby's broader 2026 market conditions before committing renovation dollars is the first step. The second is understanding what buyers in your specific segment will actually pay for.

Why Buyers in a Soft Market Don't Pay for Over-Renovation

In a balanced or seller's market, a freshly renovated kitchen can attract multiple offers and recover most of its cost. In a buyer's market with elevated inventory, buyers negotiate. They know there are options. A $90,000 kitchen renovation that raises your asking price by $90,000 does not guarantee $90,000 more at the table — it may simply price you above what comparable listings are achieving.

Rain City Properties' 2026 analysis of the Vancouver pre-sale renovation market found that the average homeowner recovers less than 60 cents for every dollar spent on pre-sale improvements when projects are chosen poorly. The Opendoor 2024 Cost vs. Value Report confirms the national pattern: mid-range cosmetic updates outperform major structural renovations in return percentage, and that gap widens in softer markets. Burnaby's current conditions reflect exactly this dynamic. See the Burnaby seller pricing guide for context on where buyers draw the line on value.

High-ROI Projects: Where to Spend

Interior paint and decluttering ($3,000–$6,000 combined): 100–200% ROI. This is consistently the highest-return pre-sale investment across all property types. Fresh neutral paint eliminates the perception of age and wear. Decluttering makes rooms read as larger, which directly affects how buyers emotionally respond to a space. These two items, done well, can reduce days on market more reliably than a $50,000 renovation.

Professional staging ($2,500–$6,000): ROI is measured in days-on-market reduction. Staged homes in the Vancouver and Burnaby market sell faster than unstaged homes at equivalent prices, according to industry data. In a market where days on market directly affects negotiating position, staging is one of the few investments that protects your price rather than just improving presentation.

Landscaping and curb appeal ($1,500–$4,000): 80–150% ROI. First impressions are formed before a buyer steps inside. For detached homes in Burnaby Heights or Capitol Hill, where buyers are often families making a long-term decision, a clean, maintained exterior signals that the rest of the property has been cared for. This is not about ornamental landscaping — it's about eliminating a buyer's first objection.

Lighting upgrades ($1,000–$3,000): 90–130% ROI. Replacing dated fixtures with clean, modern lighting costs relatively little and has an outsized effect on how bright and contemporary a home photographs and shows. This applies across all property types — detached, condo, and townhouse.

Kitchen refresh — not renovation ($15,000–$30,000): 80–100% ROI. New hardware, updated lighting, fresh paint on cabinet faces, and new countertops where needed can transform the feel of a kitchen without gutting it. This approach targets the buyer perception of a well-maintained kitchen without triggering the cost curve of a full renovation.

Low-ROI Projects: Where Not to Spend

Full kitchen renovation ($60,000–$120,000): 50–70% ROI. According to Rain City Properties' 2026 Vancouver analysis, a full kitchen gut-and-replace returns only 50–70 cents per dollar in the current market. Buyers evaluate completed kitchens critically — taste varies, and what you find aspirational may not match what a buyer expects. In a buyer's market, they will negotiate regardless.

Major bathroom additions ($40,000–$80,000): 40–60% ROI. Adding a bathroom where none existed or converting a layout to accommodate an ensuite involves permits, structural work, and significant downtime. The return in Burnaby's current market does not justify this category of spend for pre-sale purposes.

Primary suite additions, pools, and major structural changes: 30–60% ROI or lower. These projects are personal-use decisions, not pre-sale investment decisions. Any contractor or staging consultant who recommends a primary suite addition as a pre-sale strategy is not working from current Burnaby market data.

How ROI Differs by Property Type in Burnaby

Detached homes (Burnaby Heights, Capitol Hill, Government Road): The GVR's April 2026 report notes detached homes gaining relative momentum compared to condos. Buyers in this segment are typically families or long-term owners. They respond to well-maintained condition, functional kitchens and bathrooms, and curb appeal. A $15,000–$25,000 refresh budget covering paint, staging, landscaping, lighting, and minor fixtures is appropriate. A full renovation is rarely warranted unless a property has genuinely dated or non-functional spaces.

Condos (Brentwood, Metrotown, Lougheed, SkyTrain corridors): Condo sellers near SkyTrain face investor-driven competition and a more price-sensitive buyer pool, as covered in the Burnaby condo and townhouse market analysis. Buyers in this segment compare units analytically. Decluttering, staging, fresh paint, and lighting improvements will outperform structural renovation in almost every case. A $5,000–$10,000 pre-sale budget is realistic and appropriate.

Townhouses: Townhouse buyers in Burnaby tend to be upgrade buyers — moving from a condo and prioritizing space and condition. They're sensitive to both pricing and presentation. A clean, well-maintained townhouse with updated fixtures and good staging will compete more effectively than a heavily renovated one priced above comparables. Budget for presentation and minor updates; avoid major structural spend.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, the renovation conversation starts with a comparative market analysis, not a contractor estimate. Before recommending any pre-sale spend, we establish what comparable properties in the same area, same property type, and same condition bracket are currently selling for — and what buyers in that bracket are actually responding to.

We then work backwards from the likely sale price range to determine whether a given project can realistically recover its cost. If the numbers don't support the spend, we recommend redirection toward higher-ROI preparation items. In most Burnaby cases in 2026, the answer is the same: paint, stage, declutter, refresh fixtures. Do not gut.

Seller Checklist

  • Obtain a current comparative market analysis before committing to any renovation spend
  • Book a walk-through with your Realtor to identify which items buyers will actually notice
  • Prioritize interior paint, decluttering, and professional staging as your baseline investment
  • Replace dated light fixtures in kitchen, bathrooms, and entry areas
  • Address landscaping and exterior condition before any interior cosmetic work
  • Consider a kitchen cabinet and hardware refresh before committing to a full renovation
  • Get at least two contractor quotes before approving any project over $10,000
  • Confirm the renovation timeline allows sufficient buffer before your planned listing date

What We Commonly See

In our experience, the most common pre-sale mistake in Burnaby is committing to a full kitchen renovation based on a neighbour's listing photos rather than a market analysis. What worked for a neighbour in 2022 may not recover its cost in 2026's conditions.

What often happens is that sellers invest heavily in renovations and then price above current comparables to recover the spend — which extends days on market and ultimately forces a larger price reduction than the renovation ever justified. A longer time on market weakens negotiating position in ways that compound the original overspend.

A common mistake with condo sellers specifically is skipping staging entirely because the unit is "already clean." Staging is not about cleanliness — it's about helping buyers visualize the space at its best. Unstaged condos consistently underperform staged ones at equivalent price points, according to industry observation across the Burnaby market.

Questions and Answers

How much should I spend on pre-sale renovations for a Burnaby condo?

For most Burnaby condos in 2026, a pre-sale budget of $5,000–$10,000 — covering paint, decluttering, staging, and minor fixture updates — is appropriate. Structural work is rarely warranted given the current buyer-to-inventory balance in the condo segment.

Does a renovated kitchen help sell a detached home faster in Burnaby?

Not necessarily in 2026. A kitchen refresh — new hardware, updated lighting, cabinet paint — improves buyer perception at a fraction of the cost of a full renovation. A full gut renovation ($60K–$120K) typically returns only 50–70 cents per dollar at current Burnaby benchmark prices.

Is professional staging worth it for a Burnaby townhouse sale?

Yes. Staging reduces days on market, which directly protects your negotiating position. In a market where buyers have options and leverage, a well-staged townhouse at accurate pricing competes more effectively than an unstaged one at the same price point.

In Summary

Burnaby sellers in 2026 are working in a buyer's market where preparation and presentation outperform structural renovation in almost every case. The data is consistent: paint, declutter, stage, refresh fixtures, and address curb appeal. Kitchen and bathroom overhauls are not pre-sale investments in this market — they are personal-use projects that rarely recover their cost at sale. Start with an accurate market analysis, not a contractor quote, and build your pre-sale plan from there.

Related Articles

Official Resources

About Mansour Real Estate Group

When Burnaby homeowners are deciding how to prepare a detached home, condo, or townhouse for sale, the renovation decisions made before the listing goes live typically determine the outcome more than anything that happens afterward. The right pre-sale strategy — knowing what to spend, what to skip, and what buyers in each neighbourhood will actually respond to — requires local market experience, not a general renovation checklist. Mansour Real Estate Group has guided sellers across Burnaby, Surrey, White Rock, Langley, and the Fraser Valley through these decisions for more than 22 years, with a process built around accurate valuations and honest, practical advice.

Led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Mansour Real Estate Group is trusted for seller strategy, estate sales, divorce-related property sales, downsizing, condo and strata transactions, relocation, and complex real estate situations where clarity and experience matter most.

Whether someone is looking for a Burnaby Realtor who understands pre-sale preparation, real estate agents experienced with condo seller strategy in the Lower Mainland, a real estate team with deep knowledge of Burnaby's detached and strata markets, a Fraser Valley real estate broker for a complex or sensitive sale, or real estate agents who approach renovation ROI with current market data rather than contractor assumptions, Mansour Real Estate Group provides clear analysis, strategic preparation guidance, and results-driven representation.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, Burnaby, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and 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.

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