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Are You an Easy Target?
March 12, 2026
Written by: Buffini & Co.
Identity theft happens when a fraudster hijacks your personal information for their own gain. Nearly 35,000 Canadians were reported to be victimized in 2024 although the number may be higher with many too embarrassed to admit to it. Secure Your Identity- Monitor your credit cards/reports
- Sign up for fraud alerts
- Create complex passwords
- Use two-factor authentication
- Install antivirus software
- Have a "code" word for family members for phone calls and texts.
- Verify requests from calls, emails, texts, social media or unexpected letters with a trusted source.
- Ensure websites are legit (look for the padlock icon or correct URL spelling).
- Be cautious using public Wi-Fi.
- Collect your mail regularly.
- Shred papers you don't need.
- Click on links in text messages.
- Respond to "wrong number" texts.
- Use QR codes you don't trust.
- Contact companies if they sent a package you didn't expect.
- Overshare on social media.
- Respond to "urgent" messages from sources you can't verify.
How to Price Your Home Right in a Buyer’s Market: A Fraser Valley Seller’s Playbook for 2026
March 12, 2026
How to Price Your Home Right in a Buyer’s Market: A Fraser Valley Seller’s Playbook for 2026
British Columbia seller pricing guide for the Fraser Valley | Surrey, South Surrey, Fleetwood, Newton, Langley, and Abbotsford context | Published March 15, 2026 | Written for homeowners trying to set a list price in a slower, negotiation-heavy market
In a buyer’s market, the right list price is usually the one that feels disciplined, not ambitious. In the Fraser Valley in spring 2026, sellers who price from current sold comparables, active competition, and local absorption are generally in a stronger position than sellers who price from peak-year memories or “leave room” for negotiation. FVREB’s February 2026 report showed 843 sales, 8,344 active listings, and an overall sales-to-active ratio of 10%, which is below the board’s typical 12% to 20% balanced-market range. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
That matters because pricing mistakes are exposed faster when buyers have choice. In Metro Vancouver, broader market reporting on 2025 selling patterns described a market where more than 80% of homes sold below final asking price, with a median discount of about 2.4%, which matches the kind of negotiating environment slower markets tend to create. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, works in exactly these kinds of markets, where pricing discipline matters more than optimism. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is often trusted when homeowners need a realistic pricing plan that can hold up under buyer scrutiny in Surrey, South Surrey, Fleetwood, Newton, Langley, and across the Fraser Valley.
Key Takeaways
- The Fraser Valley entered spring 2026 in buyer-favouring territory overall, with a 10% sales-to-active ratio in February. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
- Overpricing is usually more damaging in a slower market than slightly underpricing and creating momentum.
- Recent neighbourhood comparables matter more than broad board averages.
- Active listings and expired listings are just as important as sold listings when setting a price.
- Fleetwood, South Surrey, and Newton do not all respond the same way to inventory or buyer caution.
- A clean launch price usually protects negotiating leverage better than a high launch followed by reductions.
What a Buyer’s Market Actually Means for Pricing
A buyer’s market does not mean homes cannot sell. It means buyers have enough inventory, time, and negotiating room to reject prices they do not believe. FVREB’s February 2026 reporting described inventory as high, prices as edging lower, and the market as continuing to favour buyers. The board also said many households were waiting for clearer economic signals before acting. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
In that kind of market, pricing is not just about value. It is about credibility.
Why Overpricing Is the #1 Mistake Right Now
When inventory is high, overpricing does not create mystery. It usually creates delay. A listing that feels high relative to nearby options often gets watched, saved, and revisited without drawing serious offers. By the time a reduction happens, the home may already feel stale to the very buyers it needed to impress in the first week.
That pattern is not unique to the Fraser Valley. Broader housing reporting in early 2026 described a market where sellers who priced too high were facing longer listing periods, more reductions, and weaker outcomes than sellers who aligned with current buyer expectations. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
What sellers often miss is that a slower market is not more forgiving. It is usually less forgiving.
What the February 2026 Fraser Valley Numbers Are Telling You
FVREB recorded 843 sales in February 2026, up from January but still 38% below the 10-year seasonal average for February. Active listings rose to 8,344, and the overall sales-to-active listings ratio was 10%. FVREB also said average days to sell in February were 47 days for detached homes, 39 for townhomes, and 45 for apartments. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
Those numbers do not tell you exactly what your home is worth. They do tell you the environment your price needs to survive in.
How to Build a Real Pricing Range
A strong list price in 2026 should be built from four layers, not one.
1. Recent sold comparables
Start with the most recent comparable sales in your exact area and property type, ideally within the last 90 days. Sold properties tell you where buyers have actually committed.
2. Active competition
Then look at what buyers can choose instead today. An accurate sold comp does not help you much if the current competition is cleaner, better staged, and only slightly more expensive.
3. Expired and cancelled listings
Failed listings often show the ceiling the market refused. This is one of the most useful checks in a buyer’s market because it helps explain which asking prices buyers ignored rather than accepted.
4. Local absorption and segment pace
Finally, layer in how quickly similar homes are actually moving in your micro-market. That is where the pricing decision becomes strategic rather than just arithmetic.
Why Broad Averages Are Not Enough
Board-wide averages help describe the market. They do not price an individual home. A detached home in Fleetwood, a family home in Newton, and a view-oriented property in South Surrey may all sit inside the same broader market but face very different buyer pools and competitive sets.
This is one of the reasons disciplined sellers often outperform hopeful sellers in the same market. They price for the exact segment they are in, not the headline they wish applied to them.
How Pricing Changes by Neighbourhood
Fleetwood
Fleetwood often benefits from family demand and future transit interest, but buyers there still compare hard on layout, school access, renovation quality, and street feel. A Fleetwood home priced off broad Surrey averages instead of true local comparables can still miss the market.
South Surrey
South Surrey can be more price-sensitive because higher-value buyers often have more discretion and more time. Inventory breadth matters a lot here. If buyers have multiple similar options, even a small pricing gap can push them elsewhere.
Newton
Newton tends to respond strongly to practical affordability, family functionality, and comparable value. Buyers are often very aware of what else the same budget can buy nearby, which makes clean pricing especially important.
How AI-Assisted Pricing Helps in a Slower Market
AI-assisted pricing is most useful when it helps structure the decision, not when it pretends to replace judgment.
In practical terms, that means using it to compare:
- active competing listings
- recent sold comparables
- expired listings
- micro-neighbourhood absorption
- likely buyer reaction at different price bands
That kind of structured comparison is especially useful in a buyer’s market because small pricing differences can produce large differences in showing activity and offer quality.
What Happens When Sellers Price for the Peak Instead of the Present
The common pattern is familiar. A seller prices from the best sale they remember, not the best evidence available. The home launches high. Early traffic comes, but mostly from curiosity. Buyers compare it to better-positioned alternatives, then wait. The first price cut comes after momentum is already weaker. The final sale often lands below where the home could have sold if the original price had felt believable.
What makes this harder in 2026 is that buyers have the inventory to wait. FVREB’s current supply picture is giving them that room. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
How Subject-to-Sale Risk Fits Into Pricing
In slower markets, chains of dependent decisions become more relevant. Even when an offer is otherwise strong, a seller may need to think more carefully about how much price, timing, and financing certainty actually matter if the buyer is balancing another property decision at the same time.
That does not mean every subject-based offer is weak. It means a clean list price becomes even more important because it attracts the most serious and best-positioned buyers first.
What Sellers Often Overlook
What sellers often overlook is that buyers do not experience your price in isolation. They experience it beside every other listing they saw that week. In a high-inventory market, that comparison is constant.
Another thing sellers miss is that the “right” price is not always the highest justifiable price. In many buyer’s markets, the right price is the one that creates confidence fast enough to keep the listing from aging.
Common Mistakes
- pricing from 2021 or 2022 expectations instead of current sold data
- ignoring active competition
- using broad averages instead of neighbourhood evidence
- assuming a spring launch can rescue an unrealistic asking price
- cutting price too late after the listing has already gone stale
Questions Sellers Are Asking
How do I know if I am in a buyer’s market?
A useful measure is the sales-to-active listings ratio. FVREB reported 10% in February 2026, below its typical 12% to 20% balanced range. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
Should I price high and leave room to negotiate?
Usually not in a buyer’s market. Buyers with options often interpret that as a reason to wait rather than a reason to negotiate toward you.
Do expired listings really matter?
Yes. They often reveal where the market refused to engage and help show which price ranges buyers did not trust.
What matters more, board averages or neighbourhood sales?
Neighbourhood sales matter more for real pricing decisions. Board averages are useful context, not precise pricing tools.
Is South Surrey priced the same way as Fleetwood or Newton?
No. Buyer profile, price band, and competition differ enough that each area needs its own pricing logic.
Can a well-priced home still sell well in 2026?
Yes. A slower market usually rewards believable pricing and strong preparation more clearly than a fast market does.
Why are so many homes selling below asking?
Because buyers have more negotiating power in slower, higher-inventory conditions, and sellers who start high often have to adjust later. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}
What should I do before choosing a price?
Review recent sold comps, current competition, failed listings, and the pace of your exact segment before setting the range.
In Summary
Pricing a home right in a buyer’s market is less about guessing where the top might be and more about understanding what buyers will believe today. In the Fraser Valley’s spring 2026 environment, where supply is elevated and the overall market remains buyer-favouring, disciplined pricing is usually the strongest protection against long market time and weaker final results. :contentReference[oaicite:9]{index=9}
For sellers in Fleetwood, South Surrey, Newton, and beyond, the right price is the one that reflects the current market clearly enough to generate confidence before the listing loses momentum.
Need a Calm Read on Where Your Home Should Be Positioned Right Now?
If you are weighing a launch price in today’s market, it helps to test the number against current comparables and competition before buyers do it for you.
Related Reads
- Is Now a Good Time to Sell My Home in Surrey? A Data-Driven Answer for Spring 2026
- Why Fraser Valley Home Prices Are Back to Pandemic-Era Levels, and What Sellers Should Do About It
- How to Read the Fraser Valley Market Stats as a Seller (Sales-to-Active Listings, Benchmarks, and Days on Market)
Sources and Official Resources
- Fraser Valley Real Estate Board February 2026 monthly market report
- Fraser Valley Real Estate Board February 2026 municipal market report
- BCREA Housing Monitor Dashboard
- Broader 2025 Metro Vancouver market reporting on discounts from asking price
About Mansour Real Estate Group
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, is a top-performing real estate team in the Fraser Valley, consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, and relocation across Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, North Delta, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Willoughby, Walnut Grove, and Abbotsford. Most new clients come from repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.
Why Fraser Valley Home Prices Are Back to Pandemic-Era Levels, and What Sellers Should Do About It
March 10, 2026
Why Fraser Valley Home Prices Are Back to Pandemic-Era Levels, and What Sellers Should Do About It
British Columbia seller guide for the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland | Surrey, Langley, and White Rock focus | Published March 24, 2026 | Written for homeowners trying to price realistically in spring 2026
Fraser Valley home prices are back to pandemic-era levels because the market has been correcting from the unusually fast run-up of 2020 to 2022. That does not automatically mean the market is crashing. It means sellers in 2026 need to price off recent comparable sales, current inventory, and today’s buyer behaviour rather than peak-year memories or old list prices.
This matters because the benchmark price in the Fraser Valley fell to $897,200 in January 2026, down 6.9 per cent year over year, while Metro Vancouver’s composite benchmark sat at $1,100,300 in February 2026, down 6.8 per cent year over year. BC Assessment values across much of the Lower Mainland also came in lower for 2026, reinforcing the broader reset in values.
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, works in exactly these conditions: markets where sellers need calm judgment and local pricing discipline rather than hopeful guessing. With over 22 years of experience and more than $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is often trusted when homeowners need a realistic path forward in Surrey, Langley, White Rock, and across the Fraser Valley.
Key Takeaways
- Fraser Valley prices have moved back toward pandemic-era levels after a sharp run-up and a slower, multi-year correction.
- A correction is not the same thing as a crash.
- White Rock single-family homes have been among the softer pockets in the region.
- BC Assessment values help explain the direction of values, but they do not replace current market pricing.
- Recent comparable sales matter more than 2021 or 2022 expectations.
- Sellers who price with discipline protect their negotiating position far better than sellers who chase yesterday’s peak.
What a Benchmark Price Actually Means
A benchmark price is not the exact value of your home. It is a statistical estimate of what a typical home in a category is worth, based on a model that adjusts for property characteristics and changing market conditions.
That matters because benchmark prices help track market direction. They are useful for context, but they do not replace neighbourhood-level comparable sales when it is time to set a list price.
What the Current Numbers Are Saying
The Fraser Valley Real Estate Board reported that the composite benchmark price in January 2026 was $897,200, down 6.9 per cent from January 2025 and below $900,000 for the first time since spring 2021. The board also noted that this followed ten straight months of year-over-year price decline.
In Metro Vancouver, Greater Vancouver REALTORS® reported a February 2026 composite benchmark of $1,100,300, down 6.8 per cent from February 2025. That tells us the reset in values is not isolated to one board area. It is part of a broader regional correction.
BC Assessment’s 2026 release for the Lower Mainland said assessed values were generally down from 2025 levels, with many homeowners seeing changes in the range of roughly flat to down 10 per cent depending on property type and location. Those values are based on market conditions as of July 1, 2025, which makes them useful context but not a current pricing guide.
Why This Is a Correction, Not a Crash
To understand the current market, sellers have to separate the correction from the spike that came before it.
From 2020 through early 2022, housing across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland was lifted by an unusual mix of low borrowing costs, urgent demand, lifestyle changes, and very limited supply. Prices moved faster than normal because conditions were not normal.
The market since then has been unwinding part of that spike. Interest rates rose sharply. Borrowing power fell. Inventory increased. Buyers became more selective. That kind of retracing is what a correction looks like.
A crash usually implies disorder, panic selling, and a sudden breakdown in liquidity. That is not what most Fraser Valley sellers are dealing with in 2026. What they are dealing with is a more price-sensitive market that no longer rewards optimistic pricing.
What White Rock Is Telling Us
White Rock has been one of the places where the reset has been easier to see. BC Assessment’s 2026 Lower Mainland release said White Rock single-family homes saw some of the largest year-over-year assessment declines in the region, around 9 per cent. That does not mean every property is down by the same amount. It does mean sellers in White Rock need to be especially careful not to anchor to old expectations.
This is one of the reasons broad averages are not enough. In White Rock, the difference between a view property, an older home with deferred maintenance, and a cleanly updated detached home can be significant even inside the same postal area.
Why BC Assessment Is Useful, but Not Enough
BC Assessment values help homeowners understand how their property was valued for property tax fairness as of a fixed past date. They are useful for context. They are also one of the reasons sellers sometimes realize the market has shifted more than they thought.
But BC Assessment does not price your home for sale.
It does not fully capture what buyers are reacting to today, what nearby active competition looks like, or how much negotiating leverage current inventory has created in your segment. A seller who uses assessed value as a list-price strategy usually ends up behind the market instead of ahead of it.
What Sellers Should Do About It
The most practical response is not fear. It is adjustment.
That means sellers should price from:
- recent sold comparables in the same neighbourhood
- active competing listings buyers will compare against
- expired or cancelled listings that failed to sell
- current inventory and absorption rates for the property type
This is especially important in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock, where different neighbourhoods and price bands are moving at different speeds.
Why Recent Comparable Sales Matter More Than Peak-Year Pricing
One of the biggest pricing mistakes sellers make in a correction is treating the market high as though it is still a useful reference point. It usually is not.
Buyers do not care what a similar home could have sold for in early 2022. They care what similar homes are actually selling for now, what else is available now, and how long they might be able to wait.
This is one of the hardest emotional shifts for long-time owners. A correction can feel personal when it affects a home you have lived in for years. But the market does not price memories. It prices alternatives.
How AI-Assisted Pricing Can Help Without Replacing Judgment
AI-assisted pricing tools are most useful when they are used to structure the right comparison set, not to replace human judgment.
In practical terms, that means using them to compare:
- recent sold properties
- current active competition
- failed listings
- micro-neighbourhood absorption trends
- likely buyer response to small pricing changes
In a market like 2026, where overpricing is often more damaging than underexposure, structured pricing work can protect a seller from losing momentum in the first two weeks on market.
What This Looks Like in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock
Surrey
Surrey sellers need to be very careful about using citywide averages. Fleetwood, Cloverdale, Clayton, Guildford, and South Surrey are not moving the same way. Family-demand pockets can stay active while more discretionary segments soften.
Langley
Langley sellers are often dealing with a split market, especially in attached product. Some segments continue to see respectable absorption, while others face more new construction competition and price sensitivity.
White Rock
White Rock requires even more care at the upper end. Higher price points often mean more patient buyers, which makes overpricing easier to detect and harder to recover from.
What Sellers Often Overlook in a Correction
What sellers often overlook is that corrections do not affect every property equally. Two homes in the same neighbourhood can perform very differently if one is clearly prepared, cleanly priced, and easy to understand while the other is priced off old assumptions.
That is why corrections tend to punish strategy mistakes more visibly. They do not eliminate demand. They make demand more selective.
Common Mistakes Sellers Make When Prices Pull Back
- anchoring to 2021 or 2022 sale prices instead of current sold data
- treating BC Assessment like a list-price tool
- assuming a correction means no buyers are active
- pricing high to “leave room” in a market where buyers already have choice
- ignoring the neighbourhood and price-band differences inside the same city
Questions Sellers Are Asking About Prices in 2026
Are Fraser Valley home prices really back to pandemic-era levels?
Broadly, yes. The Fraser Valley benchmark has moved back below $900,000, which places it back near spring 2021 territory. That does not mean every property is worth what it was in 2021. It means the broader market has retraced to that range.
Does this mean the market is crashing?
No. The current pattern looks more like a correction from the unusual 2020 to 2022 run-up than a disorderly collapse.
Should I wait for prices to rebound before selling?
That depends on your personal timeline, your property type, and your next move. Waiting only makes sense if it fits your life and there is a strong reason to expect a better local outcome.
Can I use my BC Assessment to price my home?
Not by itself. Assessment values are useful for context, but current comparable sales and active competition are much more important for listing strategy.
Why is White Rock feeling softer?
White Rock can be more sensitive at higher price points because buyers often have more discretion and more time to compare.
Are all Surrey and Langley neighbourhoods behaving the same way?
No. Inventory, buyer profile, and property type all matter. One neighbourhood can stay relatively active while another feels much slower.
Can a well-prepared seller still get a strong result in a correction?
Yes. Corrections usually reward disciplined pricing and strong presentation more clearly than fast markets do.
What matters most right now?
Current comparable sales, neighbourhood competition, and realistic pricing matter most.
In Summary
Fraser Valley home prices are back near pandemic-era levels because the market has been correcting from an unusually fast and unusually strong spike. That is not the same thing as a crash. It is a reset that requires sellers to stop looking backward at the peak and start looking carefully at the current evidence.
For sellers in Surrey, Langley, and White Rock, the strongest path forward is still clear: use recent comparable sales, understand your exact segment, and price with discipline from day one.
Looking for a Calm Second Opinion on Where Your Home Fits in Today’s Market?
If you are trying to understand how much of the correction applies to your home, the most useful next step is not guessing from headlines. It is comparing your property to what buyers are actually choosing in your neighbourhood right now.
Related Reads
- 2026 Fraser Valley Market Guide for Sellers: Prices, Inventory, and Timing in Surrey, Langley, and Abbotsford
- Is Now a Good Time to Sell My Home in Surrey? A Data-Driven Answer for Spring 2026
- How to Price Your Home Right in a Buyer's Market: A Fraser Valley Seller's Playbook for 2026
Sources and Official Resources
- Fraser Valley Real Estate Board January and February 2026 market statistics
- Greater Vancouver REALTORS® February 2026 market report
- BC Assessment 2026 Lower Mainland property assessment release
About Mansour Real Estate Group
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, is a top-performing real estate team in the Fraser Valley, consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. With more than 22 years of experience and over $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, and relocation across Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, North Delta, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Willoughby, Walnut Grove, and Abbotsford. Most new clients come from repeat and referral business, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.
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