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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Surrey Investment Property Cap Rates and Rental Yields by Neighbourhood 2026: Why Newton, Whalley, and Fleetwood Outperform Surrey City Centre — And Where Emerging Rezoning Activity Creates Hidden Value for Landlords

June 11, 2026

Surrey Investment Property Cap Rates and Rental Yields by Neighbourhood 2026: Why Newton, Whalley, and Fleetwood Outperform Surrey City Centre — And Where Emerging Rezoning Activity Creates Hidden Value for Landlords

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: May 13, 2025 | Geography: Surrey, BC — Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland | Updated for 2026 market conditions

Surrey's investor landscape in 2026 is not a single market — it's five or six distinct ones operating at different yield levels, with different risk profiles, and responding to different demand drivers. For landlords and portfolio investors evaluating where to deploy capital or whether to hold or sell, the neighbourhood you choose matters more than the city name on the listing.

This article compares cap rates and rental yield performance across Newton, Whalley, Fleetwood, and Surrey City Centre using April 2026 FVREB market data, BC Assessment property valuation records, Form B strata financial disclosures, and Mansour Real Estate Group's proprietary rental market analysis. It is written for investors, landlords, and anyone evaluating whether Surrey income property still pencils out in today's buyer's-market conditions.

Short Answer

In 2026, Newton and Whalley detached rental properties produce gross cap rates of 4.2–4.8% at current purchase prices, outperforming Surrey City Centre condos at 3.1–3.5% after strata fees. Fleetwood adds a third dimension: tighter current yields offset by meaningful post-SkyTrain appreciation potential. City Centre strata buildings with 20-plus-year-old depreciation report red flags are compressing net yields by an additional 0.8–1.2% annually, making neighbourhood selection the single most important variable in a Surrey investment decision this year.

Key Takeaways

  • Newton and Whalley gross cap rates (4.2–4.8%) outperform City Centre condos by a full percentage point after strata fees in 2026.
  • Fleetwood detached sales volume rose 32% year-over-year in early 2026, attracting investors betting on SkyTrain-driven appreciation alongside current rental income.
  • Older Surrey City Centre strata buildings carry special levy risk that reduces net yields by 0.8–1.2% annually — a material drag on condo investment returns.
  • Rezoning activity near Guildford and Fleetwood SkyTrain stations creates mid-term appreciation optionality not reflected in today's purchase prices.
  • Ground-oriented attached housing in Fleetwood and Walnut Grove offers better cash-flow profiles than high-rise condos in transit-premium corridors.

Who This Applies To

  • Landlords currently holding or evaluating Surrey rental property
  • Portfolio investors comparing neighbourhoods for a first or additional Surrey purchase
  • Homeowners deciding between selling and converting a property to a rental
  • Out-of-area investors with capital allocated to the Lower Mainland or Fraser Valley
  • Buyers weighing condo versus ground-oriented attached housing for rental income

When This Advice May Not Apply

This analysis focuses on residential rental properties. Commercial properties, mixed-use buildings, and development land follow different yield frameworks. Investors purchasing presale condos — where delivery timelines and rental-market conditions may shift before completion — face additional risks covered separately. Nothing in this article constitutes investment, tax, legal, or financial advice. Consult a qualified advisor before making investment decisions.

Data Used in This Article

  • FVREB Market Data, April 2026 — Official sales volume, benchmark pricing, and neighbourhood-level transaction data. Fraser Valley Real Estate Board.
  • BC Assessment Property Valuation Records, 2026 — Current assessed values by neighbourhood and property type. BC Assessment Authority.
  • Strata Financial Disclosure Databases (Form B Filings) — Depreciation report summaries, special levy forecasts, and contingency reserve fund balances for Surrey City Centre strata buildings.
  • Mansour Real Estate Group Proprietary Rental Market Analysis — Internal analysis of listed and leased rental properties across Surrey submarkets, 2024–2026.
  • SkyTrain Expansion Timeline and Rezoning Coordination Documents — TransLink Surrey-Langley SkyTrain project documentation and City of Surrey rezoning applications near station nodes.

Key Definitions

Gross Cap Rate: Annual gross rental income divided by purchase price, expressed as a percentage. Does not account for vacancy, management fees, maintenance, property tax, strata fees, or financing costs.

Net Cap Rate: Annual net operating income (after all operating expenses except debt service) divided by purchase price. This is the number that determines real cash-flow viability.

Form B: A mandatory strata disclosure document in BC that includes the strata corporation's financial statements, depreciation report summary, special levy history, and contingency reserve fund balance. Required before a buyer completes a strata purchase.

Depreciation Report: An engineering assessment of a strata building's common property condition and projected repair costs over a 30-year horizon. Red flags include underfunded contingency reserves relative to projected repair needs, which signal future special levy risk.

How We Evaluate This

When investors ask us to evaluate a Surrey rental property, we run two parallel assessments. The first is a current-yield analysis: what does the property actually produce today at a realistic rent, after strata fees, property tax, and a vacancy allowance? The second is a five-year total-return projection: what does the holding period look like when you factor in expected appreciation, mortgage paydown, and exit conditions?

Neighbourhood selection changes both numbers. A City Centre condo that looks attractive on gross yield often fails the net-yield test once strata fees, special levy risk, and building-age maintenance costs are applied. A Fleetwood townhouse with a slightly lower gross yield may produce a substantially better five-year total return once SkyTrain-corridor rezoning and price trajectory are modelled. We do not treat all Surrey investment properties as equivalent. The neighbourhood, property type, building age, and strata financial health each materially change the investment thesis.

Newton and Whalley: Where Surrey's Strongest Gross Yields Are Found in 2026

Newton and Whalley have consistently delivered higher gross cap rates than Surrey City Centre for one straightforward reason: entry prices are lower while rents track city-wide demand. According to FVREB April 2026 data and Mansour Real Estate Group's rental analysis, detached rental properties in Newton and Whalley are producing gross cap rates of 4.2–4.8% at current purchase prices — 8 to 12% below benchmark. That pricing discount, combined with stable tenant demand from workers, families, and newcomers drawn to both neighbourhoods' transit access and amenity density, creates a yield profile that City Centre cannot match at comparable property sizes.

Whalley in particular benefits from its SkyTrain adjacency at King George and Gateway stations. Tenant demand for ground-floor suites and secondary suites in detached homes near transit has remained firm through the 2025–2026 buyer's-market correction. Because purchase prices have softened more than rents, the yield spread has widened in investors' favour. For investors considering whether to buy in 2026 or wait, the current buyer's-market conditions in Surrey provide useful context on how long this entry-price advantage may persist.

Newton's strength is slightly different. Larger lots and an older detached housing stock mean more properties with legal or built-in secondary suites, which is the structural feature that makes Newton's multi-income properties pencil out at current financing rates. A detached home producing two rental income streams against a below-benchmark purchase price is the most straightforward positive-cash-flow scenario available in Surrey's residential market today. Understanding how school catchments affect tenant demand profiles in Newton — particularly for family tenants — is covered in our analysis of how schools affect home values across Surrey's neighbourhoods.

Surrey City Centre Condos: Why Strata Fees and Depreciation Reports Are Compressing Net Yields

Surrey City Centre condos carry a transit-proximity premium in their purchase prices that is not matched by an equivalent rental premium. According to FVREB April 2026 benchmark data and Form B strata disclosures reviewed in Mansour Real Estate Group's analysis, City Centre condo investors are working with gross yields of approximately 3.5–4.0% before operating costs. Once strata fees are deducted — which in 20-plus-year-old buildings in this corridor frequently run $500–$750 per month — net cap rates fall to 3.1–3.5%. That range, at current financing rates, produces negative or near-zero cash flow on typical investor-grade financing.

The deeper problem is what depreciation report analysis reveals about older City Centre buildings. Form B disclosures in several 20-plus-year strata buildings in the City Centre corridor show contingency reserve funds that are underfunded relative to projected repair obligations over the next decade. The result is foreseeable special levy exposure — additional one-time assessments that can reach tens of thousands of dollars per unit — which Mansour Real Estate Group's analysis estimates reduces effective net yield by 0.8–1.2% annually when amortized across a typical holding period. For condo investors who rely on tight yield margins, this is a material risk that does not show up in gross cap rate comparisons. The Surrey condo market update for City Centre provides additional context on how price movements in this segment are affecting the broader investment calculus.

This does not mean City Centre condos are uniformly poor investments. Newer buildings with well-funded contingency reserves, lower strata fees, and strong rental demand near SFU Surrey campus or the new hospital district can still produce acceptable net yields. But investors must read the Form B carefully, obtain the full depreciation report, and model special levy risk explicitly — not treat the gross yield as the investment case. Buyers financing these properties should also understand the impact of the mortgage stress test on investment property affordability, which tightens the effective cap rate threshold needed to justify a purchase at current rates.

Fleetwood: Lower Current Yield, Higher Appreciation Optionality

Fleetwood operates on a different investment logic than Newton or Whalley. According to FVREB April 2026 data, detached-home sales volume in Fleetwood surged 32% year-over-year in early 2026, with purchase prices running 8–12% below benchmark. Current gross yields are tighter than Newton's — closer to 3.5–4.2% for detached properties — but the investment case is not primarily a current-yield story. It is an appreciation optionality story tied to the Surrey-Langley SkyTrain corridor.

The planned Fleetwood and Guildford SkyTrain stations are driving rezoning applications along the corridor now, in advance of station openings. City of Surrey rezoning coordination documents show active application activity for mid-rise and higher-density residential uses within 400–800 metres of planned station nodes. Properties within these zones carry land value that is not fully reflected in current single-family assessed values — which are based on existing use, not rezoning potential. Investors purchasing ground-oriented properties in these corridors today are acquiring a rental income stream now and a rezoning or land assembly optionality play over a five-to-ten-year horizon. For a neighbourhood-level orientation to Fleetwood, see our comparison of Clayton Heights and Fleetwood.

Ground-oriented attached housing — townhouses and duplexes — in Fleetwood and nearby Walnut Grove also offers a middle path: better cash-flow profiles than City Centre condos (no strata fee inflation risk at the same scale), and better appreciation positioning than Newton detached properties that are farther from the SkyTrain corridor. For investors who want income stability with mid-term upside, this segment is currently the most strategically interesting in the Surrey market. Broader neighbourhood context for Fleetwood families and tenant profile is available in the Surrey neighbourhood guide for families.

Investor Checklist: Evaluating a Surrey Rental Property in 2026

  1. Calculate gross cap rate using realistic current market rent, not optimistic or listed rent, divided by the total purchase price including closing costs. See our BC closing costs guide to budget acquisition costs accurately.
  2. For strata properties, obtain and review the full Form B disclosure including the depreciation report, contingency reserve fund balance, and any disclosed or pending special levies before making an offer.
  3. Deduct strata fees, estimated property tax, insurance, vacancy allowance (typically 3–5% in Surrey's current market), and maintenance reserve to arrive at net operating income.
  4. For properties near planned SkyTrain stations in Fleetwood or Guildford, review City of Surrey rezoning application records to assess whether the property sits within an active rezoning corridor.
  5. Check BC Assessment records to confirm current assessed value relative to purchase price — a large purchase-price-to-assessment gap can signal either a negotiating opportunity or a market pricing anomaly worth investigating.
  6. Model a five-year total return scenario, not just current yield, factoring in projected appreciation by neighbourhood, mortgage paydown, and estimated exit costs.
  7. Confirm legal suite status and RTB compliance for any property relying on secondary suite income. Unregistered or non-conforming suites expose investors to rental income risk and potential remediation costs.
  8. Run the mortgage stress test calculation for the investment property at 5.25% or two percentage points above your contracted rate, whichever is higher, to confirm qualification headroom.

What We Commonly See

Investors anchor to gross yield and skip the strata fee analysis. In our experience, the single most common mistake Surrey condo investors make is calculating yield on gross rent without deducting strata fees. A $450,000 condo generating $2,200 per month looks like a 5.9% gross yield. Once a $600 monthly strata fee is deducted, the net yield falls to approximately 4.3% — and that is before vacancy, maintenance, or property tax. In older City Centre buildings with special levy exposure, the real net yield can be 2.5–3.0%.

The SkyTrain premium is being priced in inconsistently across Fleetwood. What often happens is that properties within 400 metres of a planned station command a visible premium already, while those 600–800 metres away — still within a walkable or cycling distance — have not yet repriced. That inconsistency creates a window for investors who understand the station node boundaries from City of Surrey rezoning documents.

Sellers mistake a buyer's market for a landlord's market. A common mistake is assuming that because purchase prices have softened, rental income has softened proportionally. It has not. Surrey's vacancy rate remains low and tenant demand is structural — driven by immigration, affordability constraints on home purchase, and population growth. The price correction has widened the yield spread, which is the opposite of a negative signal for long-term rental investors. The current market conditions for buyers are explained further in the Surrey and White Rock buyer's market analysis.

Questions and Answers

Q: Are Surrey City Centre condos still worth buying for rental income in 2026?

Selectively. Newer buildings with well-funded contingency reserves and strata fees under $400 per month can produce acceptable net yields. Buildings over 20 years old with underfunded depreciation reports present special levy risk that erodes net returns materially. Read the full Form B before making any offer.

Q: What does a 4.5% cap rate mean in practical terms for a Surrey investor?

At current five-year fixed mortgage rates, a 4.5% cap rate on an investment property typically produces near-breakeven or slightly negative cash flow after financing, depending on down payment size and amortization. The investment thesis at this yield level depends substantially on appreciation — current income alone does not cover financing costs for most investors at standard leverage ratios.

Q: How reliable is the SkyTrain appreciation story for Fleetwood in 2026?

The Surrey-Langley SkyTrain project is in active development with confirmed station locations including Fleetwood and Guildford nodes. City of Surrey rezoning application activity near those stations is already visible in public records. The appreciation thesis is grounded in documented public infrastructure, not speculation — though timelines can shift, and rezoning outcomes are never guaranteed. Investors should treat it as optionality, not certainty, and ensure the property produces acceptable current yield without relying solely on future appreciation.

In Summary

Surrey's investment property market in 2026 rewards neighbourhood-level analysis over city-wide assumptions. Newton and Whalley offer the strongest current gross yields at 4.2–4.8%, driven by below-benchmark purchase prices and stable multi-suite tenant demand. Surrey City Centre condos in older buildings are being compressed to 3.1–3.5% net after strata fees and depreciation report risk, making selective due diligence on Form B disclosures non-negotiable. Fleetwood offers a different value proposition — tighter current yields paired with documented SkyTrain-corridor appreciation optionality and rezoning activity that may revalue land within the decade. Ground-oriented attached housing across Fleetwood and Walnut Grove currently offers the most balanced risk-return profile in the Surrey market for investors who need both income and capital growth.

Thinking About Surrey Investment Property?

If you are evaluating a specific property or neighbourhood for rental income or long-term appreciation, Mansour Real Estate Group can provide a property-level yield analysis, Form B review guidance, and a neighbourhood context grounded in 22 years of Surrey transaction experience. Reach out whenever you are ready — there is no obligation and no pressure.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

For investors evaluating Surrey's rental market, the difference between a property that produces durable income and one that quietly erodes returns through strata levies, misread yield calculations, or poorly timed neighbourhood selection comes down to local knowledge applied at the deal level — not city-wide assumptions. Mansour Real Estate Group has spent more than two decades guiding Surrey investors, landlords, and portfolio buyers through exactly these decisions across Newton, Whalley, Fleetwood, Guildford, Cloverdale, South Surrey, and every other submarket the city offers.

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 investment property analysis, estate sales, divorce-related property sales, downsizing, relocation, and complex real estate decisions across Surrey and the broader Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come through repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.

Whether someone is searching for Realtors who understand Surrey's investor landscape, a real estate agent with neighbourhood-level yield analysis capability, real estate agents who specialize in income property evaluation, a trusted real estate team for a Surrey landlord decision, a Fleetwood Realtor, a Newton or Whalley real estate broker, or a real estate group that serves the full Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for local market accuracy, honest advice, and a results-driven process built on verified transaction experience.

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 investors 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,

Key Takeaways

Timing your home sale strategically can significantly impact your final proceeds. By understanding seasonal trends, market conditions, and local economic factors, you position yourself to maximize buyer interest and negotiating power. The spring and early summer months traditionally offer the widest buyer pools, while fall and winter markets face less competition but also fewer qualified buyers.

Work closely with a local real estate agent who understands your specific neighborhood's patterns. They can provide comparative market analysis and help you price competitively while identifying the optimal listing window for your property type and situation.

Next Steps

Ready to sell? Start by gathering your home's documentation, including recent appraisals, tax records, and any home improvement receipts. Schedule a consultation with 2-3 qualified agents in your area to discuss market conditions and get professional pricing guidance. Ask about their marketing strategies and how they plan to showcase your property to serious buyers.

Consider scheduling a pre-sale home inspection to identify and address any major issues before listing. This proactive approach often results in smoother negotiations and faster closing timelines.

Surrey Strata Condo Buyer's Complete Guide 2026: How to Read Strata Documents, Understand Fee Structures, Spot Depreciation Report Red Flags, and Assess Special Levy Risk Before You Buy

June 11, 2026

Surrey Strata Condo Buyer's Complete Guide 2026: How to Read Strata Documents, Understand Fee Structures, Spot Depreciation Report Red Flags, and Assess Special Levy Risk Before You Buy

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA, Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group | Fraser Valley & Lower Mainland, BC | Published: July 15, 2026 | Topic: Condo & Strata — Surrey Buyer Guide

Surrey's condo market in 2026 is carrying more inventory than it has in several years, particularly in Willoughby Heights and City Centre. That shift gives buyers more negotiating room, but it also means more buildings with financial complications are sitting on the market. The difference between a sound purchase and a costly one often comes down to what you read before you remove subjects.

This guide covers every document a Surrey condo buyer needs to review, what the numbers actually mean, and where the most common risks are hiding in buildings across Newton, Guildford, Fleetwood, and Willoughby.

Short Answer

Before buying a strata condo in Surrey, you need to review Form B, the current depreciation report, strata meeting minutes, the current budget, and the bylaws. A reserve fund below 50% of projected needs, unresolved litigation, deferred maintenance, or rental restrictions you haven't accounted for are all reasons to renegotiate or walk away. In Surrey's current buyer's market, you have room to ask for these documents and time to read them.

Key Takeaways

  • Form B must be requested before subject removal and reviewed carefully for financial and legal flags.
  • A depreciation report funded below 50% signals near-term special levy risk in Surrey buildings.
  • Surrey buildings from 1995–2005 frequently show deferred maintenance in roofing and plumbing systems.
  • Special levies in Surrey averaged $8,000–$15,000 over 2024–2026, catching underprepared buyers off guard.
  • Strata bylaws govern rental restrictions; some Surrey complexes prohibit rentals or cap investor units at 20%.

Who This Applies To

  • First-time condo buyers in Surrey, Willoughby, Guildford, or Newton
  • Investors purchasing a rental unit in a Surrey strata complex
  • Buyers downsizing from a detached home into a Surrey condo
  • Buyers evaluating resale condos in buildings constructed before 2010
  • Anyone purchasing a condo near Surrey Central or King George SkyTrain stations

When This Advice May Not Apply

Presale condos involve a different disclosure process and timeline. If you are purchasing a brand-new, never-occupied unit directly from a developer, some of these documents may not yet exist. See our guide on presale condos in Surrey for that context. Legal and tax implications vary by situation — consult a BC real estate lawyer and accountant before finalizing any purchase.

Definitions

Form B (Information Certificate): A document prepared by the strata corporation disclosing current fees, any outstanding levies, litigation, bylaw amendments, and financial summaries. Required under BC's Strata Property Act before subject removal.

Depreciation Report: A 30-year capital reserve study required every 3–5 years under the Strata Property Act, forecasting repair and replacement costs for all major common property components.

Reserve Fund: The strata corporation's savings account for major future repairs. Expressed as a funding percentage against projected 30-year needs.

Special Levy: A one-time charge assessed against each unit when the reserve fund cannot cover a major repair. Requires a 3/4 vote of strata owners unless approved at an annual general meeting.

Data Used in This Article

  • BC Strata Property Act (SBC 1998, c. 43) — current legislation, reserve fund and depreciation report requirements
  • Fraser Valley Real Estate Board market data, 2025–2026 — Surrey strata inventory, sales-to-active ratios, days on market
  • Real Estate Services Act (BC) — strata disclosure obligations
  • Mansour Real Estate Group transaction experience — Surrey condo buyer inquiries and post-purchase observations, 2024–2026

How We Evaluate This

When reviewing strata documents for a buyer client, our starting point is always the reserve fund funding percentage and the most recent depreciation report. Those two numbers tell us more about a building's near-term financial health than the list price or strata fee level. A building with a $650/month strata fee and a fully funded reserve is often a safer purchase than one with a $380/month fee and a reserve sitting at 35%.

From there, we work through meeting minutes for the past 24 months, looking for patterns: repeated maintenance deferrals, unresolved water intrusion, contractor disputes, or contentious owner votes. Those minutes are often more revealing than the formal financial statements.

How to Read Form B Before You Remove Subjects

Form B is provided by the seller's strata corporation, typically through the seller's lawyer or listing agent. Under BC's Strata Property Act, it must be current and accurate. Many Surrey condo buyers receive it the day before subject removal without understanding what to look for.

The critical sections are: current monthly strata fee and what it covers, any outstanding or approved special levies (even if not yet collected), pending litigation involving the strata, bylaw amendments made in the past 12 months, and the current reserve fund balance. A reserve fund balance alone tells you little without the depreciation report, but a very low balance — under $5,000 per unit — in a building over 15 years old warrants immediate scrutiny.

Pay attention to the litigation field. Surrey strata complexes with ongoing Human Rights Tribunal complaints, Civil Resolution Tribunal disputes, or insurance claims against contractors are carrying risk that may not resolve before or after your purchase. In some cases, lenders will decline financing for units in litigation-active buildings.

If the Form B is incomplete, information is missing, or the strata corporation cannot produce a current depreciation report, those are grounds to extend your subject removal period or renegotiate the purchase price. In Surrey's current buyer's market — where the City Centre condo market has been softening — sellers are generally in a weaker negotiating position than they were in 2021 or 2022.

How to Assess a Depreciation Report for Special Levy Risk

A depreciation report is the most important document a Surrey condo buyer can request. It forecasts what the building's major components will cost to repair or replace over 30 years and models three funding scenarios: a "zero balance" model, a "threshold" model, and a "full funding" model. Most strata corporations target the threshold model, which maintains a minimum positive balance throughout the forecast period.

The number to focus on is the current funding percentage: what the reserve fund holds today relative to what the depreciation report projects it should hold. A building funded at less than 50% of projected needs is at elevated risk of a special levy within the next 5 to 10 years. Surrey buildings constructed between 1995 and 2005 — many in Newton, Guildford, and parts of Fleetwood — frequently appear in this category because reserve contributions were historically low and maintenance was deferred during periods of rising condo values.

Look at the top five capital cost items in the report: roofing, exterior envelope (cladding, windows, balconies), plumbing systems, elevator equipment, and parking structure. Any item flagged as "past due" or projected for replacement within 5 years of the report date should prompt a direct conversation about whether the reserve fund can absorb that cost without a special levy.

Also check the report's age. Depreciation reports are required every 3–5 years under the Strata Property Act. A report dated before 2021 in a Surrey building over 20 years old is stale — actual repair costs have risen significantly since then, and the funding gap is likely wider than the report shows. Request an updated report or budget accordingly.

In Willoughby Heights, newer buildings are presenting a different pattern. Phase 2 completions from 2018–2022 are starting to see their initial reserve fund contributions plateau while first-round maintenance costs emerge. Builder incentives have ended, and some strata corporations in those buildings are running thin on reserves. The risk is not deferred maintenance — it is that contributions were simply never set high enough for the building's actual cost profile.

Understanding the True Cost of Strata Ownership in Surrey

Most buyers look at the strata fee as a single number. The better approach is to understand what it covers and what it doesn't. Surrey strata fees generally include: a contribution to the operating fund (day-to-day maintenance, landscaping, utilities for common areas), a contribution to the reserve fund (future capital repairs), building insurance, and sometimes water or heat in older buildings. They do not include your unit's property tax, your personal contents insurance, or your individual hydro and gas bills unless the building has a shared utility arrangement.

A realistic monthly carrying cost calculation for a Surrey condo should include: strata fee, property tax (divided by 12), unit insurance, utilities, and mortgage payment. For a two-bedroom unit near Surrey Central, that total can range from $3,200 to $4,400/month depending on building age, strata fee level, and purchase price. Buyers who calculate only the mortgage payment are often surprised by how quickly the other costs accumulate.

When evaluating strata fees, compare them against the reserve fund funding level — not just against other buildings. A building with a higher monthly fee that is fully funded is almost always preferable to a building with a lower fee that is running a depleted reserve. The lower-fee building will eventually charge you more through a special levy; the higher-fee building already has. For a full picture of what homeownership costs at closing, see our guide on closing costs for home buyers in BC.

Buyers with CMHC-insured mortgages should be aware that lenders conduct appraisal scrutiny on strata complexes with underfunded reserves, active litigation, or recent special levies. In some cases, lenders will decline to finance a unit in a building flagged during appraisal — not because of the unit's value, but because of the building's financial condition. This is a real risk in Surrey's older strata inventory. You may also want to review how the mortgage stress test affects what you can afford before finalizing your budget.

Bylaws, Rental Restrictions, and What Investors Must Know

Strata bylaws in BC are set by each individual strata corporation and can be amended by a 3/4 vote of owners. They govern rental restrictions, pet policies, short-term rental rules, renovation approvals, and move-in and move-out fees. For Surrey condo buyers intending to rent out their unit — either now or in the future — bylaw review is not optional.

Some Surrey strata complexes prohibit rentals entirely, and others cap investor-owned rental units at 20% of total units. Once that cap is reached, a buyer who purchases with rental intent may be told they cannot rent immediately. The BC Strata Property Act was amended in 2022 to limit strata corporations' ability to impose new rental restrictions going forward, but complexes with pre-existing rental restriction bylaws are generally still permitted to enforce them. Verify the rental restriction status in Form B and confirm it against the current bylaws, not just the listing description. If you are purchasing near a SkyTrain corridor — King George, Surrey Central, or Gateway stations — investor unit concentration and rental cap status vary significantly building to building.

Surrey Condo Buyer Checklist

  1. Request Form B, the current depreciation report, the last two years of meeting minutes, the current operating budget, and the current bylaws before writing your offer or as a condition of your offer.
  2. Calculate the reserve fund funding percentage using the depreciation report's projected needs versus current balance. Flag anything below 50%.
  3. Check the depreciation report date. If it is older than 3–4 years, ask for a more recent one or factor in a wider funding gap.
  4. Review meeting minutes for the past 24 months. Look for repeated deferred maintenance items, water intrusion discussions, elevator service calls, or owner disputes about fees.
  5. Confirm rental restriction status in the bylaws directly — do not rely on the listing agent's summary or MLS listing notes.
  6. Identify all capital items flagged for replacement within 5 years in the depreciation report and ask whether the reserve fund can cover them without a special levy.
  7. Calculate your full monthly carrying cost: strata fee + property tax + unit insurance + utilities + mortgage payment.
  8. Confirm with your lender whether the building's financial condition triggers any financing conditions or appraisal flags before subject removal.
  9. Review the strata's insurance certificate for coverage gaps and deductible levels — some Surrey buildings carry very high deductibles that could become your cost if a unit-level incident triggers a building claim.
  10. Have a BC real estate lawyer review the strata documents and advise on anything flagged before you remove subjects.

What We Commonly See

In our experience working with Surrey condo buyers, the most frequent post-purchase regret comes from buyers who received the strata documents but didn't read the depreciation report. They focused on the strata fee and the unit itself and assumed the building was financially healthy. The report was there — they just didn't know what the numbers meant until a special levy notice arrived.

A common mistake is treating the reserve fund balance as an absolute number rather than a ratio. A reserve fund showing $400,000 sounds reassuring. But if the depreciation report projects $1.2 million in capital needs over the next 10 years for a 60-unit building, that balance represents roughly 33% funding — a meaningful shortfall that will likely require either increased monthly contributions, a special levy, or both.

What often happens with investor buyers near the SkyTrain corridor is that they assume rental is permitted because the listing says "investor-friendly." That phrase reflects the agent's description of the neighbourhood, not the strata's bylaws. In several buildings near King George and Surrey Central stations, rental caps were hit years ago. A buyer who closes without confirming bylaw status may be legally unable to rent for months or longer while waiting for a vacancy in the rental cap.

Older buildings in Newton and Guildford — particularly those built between 1995 and 2005 — often show deferred roofing and exterior envelope costs in their depreciation reports. The numbers look manageable on paper, but when contractors are actually engaged, costs routinely exceed depreciation report estimates by 20–40% due to inflation in labour and materials. In our experience, buyers in these buildings should budget for a special levy within 5 years unless the reserve fund is fully funded at the time of purchase.

Questions and Answers

What is the minimum reserve fund funding percentage I should accept when buying a Surrey condo?

There is no legislated minimum, but most experienced practitioners treat 50% as a threshold below which special levy risk is elevated. Under 30% in a building with major components approaching end-of-life is a serious red flag that warrants either price adjustment or walking away.

Can a strata corporation surprise me with a special levy after I purchase?

Yes. Special levies are approved by a 3/4 vote of owners after purchase and typically require 30 days' notice. If the building's depreciation report flagged capital needs that were not yet funded when you purchased, a levy can be approved at any subsequent AGM. Reviewing the depreciation report before purchase is the primary way to anticipate this risk.

How do I know if a Surrey condo complex has rental restrictions?

Rental restriction status must be disclosed in Form B. You should also request the full bylaw document and review the rental restriction section directly. MLS listing descriptions are not a reliable source — confirm from the documents themselves. Your real estate lawyer can help interpret any restrictions before you remove subjects.

In Summary

Buying a strata condo in Surrey in 2026 is a better-informed decision than it was three years ago because buyers now have more time and more inventory to evaluate. The risk is not in the market — it is in the documents. Form B, the depreciation report, meeting minutes, and the bylaws together tell you more about a building's financial health than the list price or the strata fee alone. In Surrey's older inventory, particularly buildings from 1995 to 2005 in Newton, Guildford, and Fleetwood, underfunded reserves and deferred maintenance remain the most common source of post-purchase regret. In Willoughby, the risk shifts to thin initial reserves in newer buildings. In both cases, the buyer who reads the documents carefully before removing subjects is in a fundamentally different position than the buyer who doesn't.

Ready to Evaluate a Surrey Condo?

If you are reviewing strata documents for a property you are considering and want a second opinion on the numbers, Mansour Real Estate Group is available for a no-pressure consultation. We can walk through Form B, reserve fund funding levels, and depreciation report red flags with you before you make a decision.

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Official Resources

About Mansour Real Estate Group

Buying or selling a condo in Surrey, Willoughby, Guildford, or anywhere across the Fraser Valley involves strata document review, depreciation report analysis, reserve fund assessment, and bylaw scrutiny that goes well beyond what a standard detached purchase requires. Mansour Real Estate Group has helped condo buyers navigate those layers for more than 22 years, from first-time buyers evaluating Form B certificates to investors assessing special levy risk in older Newton and Fleetwood buildings.

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 condo and strata transactions, estate sales, divorce-related property sales, downsizing, relocation, and complex real estate situations throughout the Lower Mainland.

Whether you are looking for Realtors experienced with Surrey condo due diligence, a real estate agent who understands depreciation reports and strata bylaws, real estate agents who specialize in strata transactions across the Fraser Valley, a trusted real estate team for a first condo purchase, a Surrey Realtor familiar with Willoughby and Guildford strata buildings, or a Fraser Valley real estate broker with deep experience in complex condo purchases, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear strata analysis, accurate pricing, and practical guidance that protects buyers from the most common purchase risks.

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 through 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,

Key Takeaways

  • Understanding market conditions is essential before making any real estate investment decision.
  • Location remains the most critical factor in determining property value and long-term appreciation potential.
  • Working with experienced real estate professionals can save you time, money, and costly mistakes.
  • Proper due diligence including inspections and title searches protects your investment.
  • Building a network of trusted advisors strengthens your position in negotiations.

Final Thoughts

Real estate investment and home buying decisions represent some of the most significant financial commitments you'll make in your lifetime. Whether you're a first-time buyer or an experienced investor, the principles of thorough research, professional guidance, and careful planning remain constant.

The real estate market continues to evolve, but properties that are well-maintained, strategically located, and purchased at fair market value consistently deliver value to their owners. Take your time, ask the right questions, and don't rush into decisions. Your future self will thank you for the diligence you exercise today.

White Rock Waterfront Property Buyers Guide 2026: Flood Zone Mapping, Moisture Inspection Red Flags, Sea-Air Corrosion Risks, Insurance Premiums, and the 15–25% Pricing Premium Over Inland Surrey Markets

June 11, 2026

White Rock Waterfront Property Buyers Guide 2026: Flood Zone Mapping, Moisture Inspection Red Flags, Sea-Air Corrosion Risks, Insurance Premiums, and the 15–25% Pricing Premium Over Inland Surrey Markets

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker | Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: July 14, 2025 | White Rock, BC · Fraser Valley

White Rock's waterfront and semi-waterfront homes attract serious buyer interest every year, and for good reason. The combination of beach access, ocean views, and a walkable village lifestyle is genuinely rare in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. But buying in this segment without understanding its specific risks — flood zone exposure, salt-air corrosion, marine moisture, and elevated insurance costs — can turn a lifestyle purchase into a costly one.

This guide is built for buyers actively evaluating White Rock waterfront or semi-waterfront properties in 2026. It addresses the inspection protocols, flood mapping realities, insurance mechanics, and pricing premium dynamics that don't appear in a standard listing description but determine whether a property is worth what it's listed for.

Short Answer

White Rock waterfront properties trade at 15–25% premiums over comparable inland Surrey homes, but carry real costs that narrow that advantage: flood zone exposure, salt-air corrosion requiring specialized inspections, marine moisture risk, and annual insurance premiums that can run $2,000–$5,000 higher than inland properties. Semi-waterfront positions within 200 metres of the shoreline capture 60–70% of that premium at lower absolute prices and reduced risk exposure — often the more defensible purchase for buyers who understand the math.

Key Takeaways

  • White Rock oceanfront properties command 15–25% premiums over inland Surrey comparables, with semi-waterfront capturing 60–70% of that premium at lower prices.
  • Salt-air corrosion causes $10,000–$50,000 in premature component failure; standard inspectors often lack the coastal-specific protocols to catch it early.
  • Provincial flood zone designations can restrict insurance availability, raise annual premiums by $2,000–$5,000, or require specialized flood policies.
  • Marine humidity creates elevated mold, foundation, and drainage risk; drainage system upgrades typically cost $15,000–$30,000 when deferred.
  • Semi-waterfront properties avoid the highest corrosion exposure, oceanfront property tax, and special assessments — while retaining most of the lifestyle value.

Who This Applies To

  • Buyers actively evaluating White Rock oceanfront or semi-waterfront detached homes
  • Buyers comparing White Rock waterfront pricing against inland South Surrey or White Rock alternatives
  • Out-of-area buyers relocating to White Rock without prior coastal property experience in BC
  • Buyers considering luxury waterfront properties above $2 million in White Rock
  • First-time buyers attracted to White Rock without full awareness of coastal due diligence requirements

When This Advice May Not Apply

This guide addresses residential detached properties in the White Rock oceanfront and semi-waterfront zones. It does not apply to strata waterfront units, rural Gulf Island properties, or commercial marine-adjacent real estate. Insurance availability and flood zone designations change — always verify current status directly with a licensed BC insurance broker before completing a purchase.

Data Used in This Article

  • BC Assessment Property Records — White Rock Residential Comparables 2024–2026 (official/primary)
  • Insurance Bureau of Canada — Flood Risk and Coastal Property Coverage 2026 (industry body)
  • Professional Home Inspectors Association of BC — Coastal Property Inspection Standards (industry body)
  • BC Flood Plain Maps and Hazard Atlas — White Rock District (official/primary)
  • Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver — White Rock Neighbourhood Market Data (industry body)
  • Mansour Real Estate Group — Internal Transaction Database and Waterfront Segment Analysis 2024–2026 (internal/professional experience)

Understanding the 15–25% Waterfront Premium

BC Assessment data for White Rock from 2024–2026 confirms that direct oceanfront properties consistently trade at 15–25% above comparable detached homes in inland Surrey neighbourhoods. That gap reflects beach access, unobstructed ocean views, and the lifestyle scarcity that comes with limited supply along the White Rock shoreline.

What the premium does not reflect is the ongoing cost of ownership. Coastal corrosion, higher insurance, drainage maintenance, and more frequent exterior repairs all add carrying costs that inland properties don't carry. Buyers who calculate only the purchase price premium without modeling annual cost differences sometimes find the gap wider than expected after the first few years.

Semi-waterfront properties — typically within 200 metres of the shoreline, with ocean views or walk-to-beach access but without direct beach frontage — capture approximately 60–70% of the oceanfront premium at meaningfully lower absolute prices, according to BC Assessment comparables analysis. They also carry lower property tax assessments, reduced corrosion exposure, and broader insurance options. For buyers whose priority is the White Rock lifestyle rather than direct beach ownership, this segment often represents the more defensible value position. The broader White Rock lifestyle and market context helps frame where semi-waterfront sits within the community.

Flood Zone Mapping and What It Means for White Rock Buyers

The BC Flood Plain Maps and Hazard Atlas designates portions of White Rock's lower shoreline area as floodplain. A property's flood zone classification directly affects what insurance is available, at what cost, and whether some coverage types are excluded entirely.

According to the Insurance Bureau of Canada's 2026 coastal coverage guidance, flood insurance for designated-zone properties can add $2,000–$5,000 annually to carrying costs. Some standard home insurers decline to renew flood coverage for properties in higher-risk coastal zones, requiring buyers to source specialized flood policies through surplus-lines or government-backed programs. This is not a hypothetical risk — it affects specific parcels in the White Rock waterfront zone, and buyers should verify flood designation status for any specific address before removing subjects.

The flood designation also affects financing. Some lenders treat flood-zone properties differently for appraisal purposes or require proof of flood coverage as a mortgage condition. Buyers should confirm lender requirements early in the process, not after an accepted offer. For a broader look at how financing constraints interact with property-specific risks in this market, see our White Rock and Surrey spring market report.

Salt-Air Corrosion: What Standard Inspectors Miss

Salt air is the most underestimated maintenance factor in White Rock waterfront ownership. According to the Professional Home Inspectors Association of BC's coastal inspection standards, marine salt particles accelerate corrosion of metal fasteners, HVAC components, exterior railings, window frames, and exposed siding at rates significantly higher than inland properties. The deterioration is often invisible at surface level until structural or mechanical failure occurs.

A standard home inspector completing a routine pre-purchase inspection may not be trained to assess coastal-specific corrosion patterns. What looks like minor surface rust on railings may indicate fastener failure throughout. An HVAC unit that appears functional may have internal corrosion reducing its remaining useful life by half. The cost of premature replacement for these components — railings, HVAC systems, exterior cladding, roofing fasteners — typically runs $10,000–$50,000 when multiple systems fail in sequence.

Buyers should specifically request an inspector with documented coastal property experience. Before the inspection, ask directly: have you inspected oceanfront or near-ocean properties in White Rock or similar BC coastal environments? The inspection report should explicitly address corrosion patterns, estimated remaining component life, and any observations about accelerated salt-air deterioration. This applies whether the property is a newer build or a well-maintained home from the 1980s — both carry coastal maintenance realities that require specialist eyes. Understanding what a thorough pre-purchase inspection covers is addressed in detail in our home inspection guide for Surrey and White Rock.

Moisture Intrusion and Marine Humidity Risk

Proximity to saltwater creates persistent moisture conditions that inland properties simply don't face. Marine humidity penetrates building envelopes differently than rain-driven moisture, and White Rock's oceanfront zone sits near a saltwater aquifer that elevates ground moisture levels for lower-level foundations and crawl spaces.

Pre-purchase moisture meter readings across multiple points — exterior walls, below-grade spaces, window sills, and structural members — should be part of every waterfront property inspection. Elevated readings don't always indicate active leaks; they can indicate chronic moisture accumulation from envelope gaps or inadequate drainage. Drainage system upgrades and envelope remediation for coastal properties typically cost $15,000–$30,000 when deferred, according to the cost ranges documented in our internal transaction database from waterfront sales in 2024–2026. Mold testing is advisable for any property showing elevated moisture readings, particularly in below-grade spaces and interior wall cavities near the building perimeter.

How We Evaluate This

When Mansour Real Estate Group works with buyers evaluating White Rock waterfront or semi-waterfront properties, the analysis starts before the offer, not during. We review the property's BC flood zone designation, obtain the BC Assessment comparables to benchmark the premium accurately, and assess whether the inspection history — or absence of one — warrants additional specialist review.

Our approach separates the lifestyle value of a waterfront position from its total cost of ownership. A property trading at a 20% premium over inland Surrey is priced correctly if the premium reflects genuine scarcity and view quality — but only if the buyer also models insurance costs, anticipated maintenance cycles, and the long-term corrosion and moisture exposure profile of that specific property. Semi-waterfront positions are evaluated on the same framework, with attention to how much of the lifestyle value they genuinely capture relative to direct oceanfront listings at the time of purchase.

Buyer Checklist: White Rock Waterfront Due Diligence

  • Verify the property's BC flood plain designation using the BC Flood Plain Maps and Hazard Atlas before making an offer
  • Contact a licensed BC insurance broker to confirm flood coverage availability, annual cost, and any exclusions specific to that address
  • Hire a home inspector with documented experience in BC coastal properties — request confirmation of coastal inspection protocols before booking
  • Require moisture meter readings across all below-grade spaces, exterior walls, and window sills as part of the inspection scope
  • Review corrosion condition of all metal components: railings, HVAC exterior units, roof fasteners, and window frames
  • Obtain drainage assessment and confirm current drainage system condition; budget for $15,000–$30,000 in upgrades if drainage shows signs of deferred maintenance
  • Pull BC Assessment comparables for both direct oceanfront and semi-waterfront properties to benchmark whether the listing price reflects actual premium positioning
  • Confirm lender requirements for flood-zone properties before subject removal — some lenders require proof of flood coverage as a mortgage condition

What We Commonly See

Buyers underestimating insurance costs. In our experience, out-of-area buyers frequently assume White Rock waterfront insurance costs are comparable to their previous inland property. The actual difference — $2,000–$5,000 annually in flood premium alone — catches many buyers during the financing stage rather than before the offer, when the leverage to renegotiate still exists.

Standard inspections missing corrosion patterns. What often happens is that a buyer completes a standard home inspection, receives a report that identifies no major structural concerns, and then encounters $20,000–$30,000 in HVAC replacement or railing remediation within the first two years. The inspector was qualified — but not for coastal conditions. The failure is in the inspection scope, not always the inspector's general competence.

Semi-waterfront as an afterthought rather than a strategy. A common mistake is treating semi-waterfront properties as consolation purchases for buyers who couldn't afford direct oceanfront. In the White Rock market, semi-waterfront at 200 metres from the shoreline often delivers 80–90% of the lifestyle experience at 60–70% of the premium. Buyers who evaluate semi-waterfront deliberately — rather than defaulting to it — frequently end up with stronger long-term financial positions. The South Surrey and White Rock comparison covered in our neighbourhood comparison guide adds useful context for buyers weighing location within the broader area.

Definitions

Flood Plain Designation: A provincial classification under BC's Flood Plain Maps and Hazard Atlas that identifies land within a defined flood risk zone. Designation affects insurance availability, mortgage conditions, and development permits.

Salt-Air Corrosion: Accelerated oxidation and material degradation caused by airborne marine salt particles. Affects metals, fasteners, HVAC systems, and coated surfaces at rates significantly higher than non-coastal environments.

Semi-Waterfront: Properties within approximately 200 metres of the shoreline with ocean views or walk-to-beach access, but without direct beachfront ownership.

Envelope Integrity: The performance of a building's outer shell — walls, roof, windows, and foundation — in preventing moisture, air, and thermal transfer. Critical in coastal environments due to marine humidity exposure.

Questions and Answers

Is flood insurance mandatory for White Rock waterfront properties?
Not legally mandatory, but many lenders require it as a mortgage condition for flood-designated properties. Even where not required, purchasing without it in a designated flood zone is a significant financial exposure. Confirm availability and cost with a BC insurance broker before finalizing any offer.

How much more does it cost to maintain a White Rock waterfront home versus an inland Surrey home?
Based on Mansour Real Estate Group's transaction data from 2024–2026, waterfront buyers should budget for elevated annual maintenance costs driven by corrosion remediation, drainage upkeep, exterior repainting cycles, and insurance premiums — typically $5,000–$15,000 above comparable inland properties depending on age, condition, and flood zone status.

What is the difference between semi-waterfront and oceanfront pricing in White Rock right now?
According to BC Assessment comparables analysis for 2024–2026, semi-waterfront properties capture approximately 60–70% of the oceanfront pricing premium at lower absolute price points. A property trading at a 20% premium over inland Surrey comparables at the oceanfront level might trade at a 12–14% premium at the semi-waterfront level — with meaningfully lower insurance and maintenance exposure.

In Summary

White Rock waterfront properties carry real premiums and real costs that buyers need to model before making an offer. The 15–25% pricing premium over inland Surrey reflects genuine lifestyle scarcity, but flood zone exposure, salt-air corrosion, marine moisture, and elevated insurance costs narrow that advantage in ways a listing price alone does not reveal. Buyers who complete coastal-specific due diligence — specialist inspections, flood zone verification, insurance confirmation, and drainage assessment — make better decisions. And buyers willing to evaluate semi-waterfront positions deliberately often find the most defensible value in this market segment.

Thinking About Buying in White Rock?

If you are evaluating waterfront or semi-waterfront properties in White Rock and want a grounded assessment of what a specific property is actually worth relative to its risks and carrying costs, Mansour Real Estate Group can help. We work through the numbers honestly before an offer goes in — not after.

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About Mansour Real Estate Group

Buying a waterfront or semi-waterfront property in White Rock involves a level of due diligence that most buyers — even experienced ones — have not encountered before. The inspection scope is different, the insurance mechanics are different, and the cost-of-ownership math requires local knowledge that goes beyond a standard listing comparison. Mansour Real Estate Group has guided buyers through waterfront and coastal property transactions in White Rock, South Surrey, and across the Fraser Valley for more than two decades, with a process built around accurate valuation, honest risk assessment, and protecting buyer equity from the start.

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 sales, and consistent recognition among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. The team is trusted for waterfront and coastal purchases, estate sales, downsizing, relocation, luxury transactions, and any situation where accurate local knowledge determines the outcome. Most new clients come through repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.

Whether someone is searching for Realtors who understand coastal property risks in White Rock, a real estate agent familiar with BC flood zone designations and their insurance implications, real estate agents who can benchmark waterfront pricing accurately, a trusted real estate team for a high-value purchase in the Fraser Valley, a White Rock Realtor, or a Fraser Valley real estate broker with demonstrated experience in complex buyer transactions, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear analysis, honest recommendations, and a buyer process that does not skip the hard questions.

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. Buyers relocating from outside the region benefit from the same local depth that long-term Fraser Valley clients rely on when making significant property decisions.

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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Joseph Pittam
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I have used Mohamed as my realtor to sell my previous home, buying my current home and now selling this home. Mohamed and his team have always been very professional, knowledgeable and very easy to work with. They took care of everything, I didn't have to worry about anything at all. They helped every step of the way. I recommend Mansour Real Estate Group to everyone that is thinking of buying or selling. Their level of service is top notch.
Ej Ali
17:38 23 Oct 24
Mohammad Helped us purchase our first home. I expected the experience to be stressful and i expected to feel lost in the process. Instead after meeting with Mohammad I felt confident and even considered myself somewhat an expert. He explained the process and took the time to answer all my many many questions. Mohammad is very creative in his approach and we felt like we were always his priority.
Thank you Mohammad
kim Boyd
02:48 17 Sep 24
This team really goes all out to make sure they get the property sold. They invest in their clients property to ensure it looks its best as it goes on the market so that they get a quick and profitable sale.
Darren Ballance
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Mohamad and his team, Sonia and Jaspreet, have been amazing to work with. They were patient as we searched for the perfect down size location, guided us throughout the process of selling our home and skillfully negotiated the sale of our home, during a rapidly changing and less favourable housing market. This is a team worth investing in!!!
Valerie Romano
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Mohamed and his team are a DREAM to work with. He represented me both as the buyer and the seller. He makes you feel like you are the most important client he has, regardless of how big or small the purchase is.

His team is lightning quick, responsive, organized, and makes the process of buying or selling both stress free and actually enjoyable.
Mohamed cares about every part of the process, finding you the perfect home, negotiating the most insane deals, making sure your emotional state is being respected, and then celebrating the win at the end!

He’s truly the BEST realtor and team out there!!
H Dhothar
02:53 23 Jul 24
The most amazing realtors you'll ever work with! They got us our current home, and we will continue working with them on our next purchase. I also love how much they do for their clients. We recently attended their client appreciation event which was geared for families (my little one had an amazing time and keeps asking to go back). Thanks Sonia, Mo and Jaspreet! We can't wait to work with you again soon.
Nicole Desjardins
22:57 18 Jun 24
I was referred to Mansour Real Estate Group by my daughter and son in law. They recommended them since they had such a great experience while buying their last home.
Moving is certainly an exciting and stressful event
in someone's life.
Having a team support along the way through all the steps is a definite plus for any buyer/seller.
I truly appreciated their professionalism, accuracy and availability while working with them.
I recommend Mansour Group to all real estate seekers!
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Julie and Kevin L
15:54 22 Apr 24
We recently worked with Mohamed and his team to help us sell our investment property in Abbotsford. We knew nothing about the market in Abbotsford, let alone selling, but Mohamed was very knowledgeable and gave us a thorough package to walk us through the steps to make a good sale. He was very clear and concise in his communication, was professional and patient with us when we had questions, and always supported us in consideration with our own interest. He doesn't dilly dabble, and gets the job done! At the end, we were able to sell our property over asking and more than we expected!! Whether you are a first time or repeat home buyer, seller, etc, Mohamed is awesome to work with. We highly recommend him and his team. He will fight and represent you with his negotiating skills. We only have good things to say about Mohamed and his team and are so glad they helped us. Thanks Mohamed!