British Columbia seller guide for Surrey and Langley homeowners | Surrey City Centre, Fleetwood, Cloverdale, Willoughby, and Walnut Grove focus | Published March 26, 2026 | Written for owners comparing condo and detached selling strategies in spring 2026
Selling a condo in Surrey or a detached home in Langley in 2026 requires two different playbooks. Condo sellers are usually competing against more similar inventory, more new construction, and more document-sensitive buyers. Detached sellers are usually dealing with stronger family-driven demand, sharper neighbourhood comparisons, and a different kind of pricing pressure. Both can sell well, but the strategy is not the same.
This matters because the Fraser Valley is still operating in a buyer-favouring environment overall, yet not every segment is equally soft. In February 2026, Surrey apartment benchmark prices were down 8.8 per cent year over year, while Surrey detached benchmark prices were down 9.6 per cent. In Langley, apartment benchmark prices were down 8.4 per cent year over year, townhouse benchmark prices were down 6.7 per cent, and detached benchmark prices were down 6.9 per cent. Those numbers do not tell the whole story, but they do show how segment behaviour can diverge.
The Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, works in exactly these kinds of conditions, where sellers need segment-specific guidance rather than broad market talk. With over 22 years of experience and more than $780 million in completed residential sales, the team is often trusted when pricing, preparation, and buyer psychology differ meaningfully by property type across Surrey, Langley, and the broader Fraser Valley.
At a surface level, both are still real estate sales. But buyers do not evaluate them in the same way.
A detached buyer is usually comparing:
A condo buyer is usually comparing:
That difference changes how you price, how you prepare, and what kind of buyer questions you need to answer before they become objections.
In condo-heavy pockets, buyers often have more direct substitutes. That is especially true in places like Surrey City Centre and parts of Willoughby, where resale units can be compared against nearby pre-sales, recently completed buildings, and investor-owned inventory.
That does not mean condos are unsellable. It means condo buyers can be more selective, and condo sellers usually have less room for pricing optimism.
This is also where new construction matters most. Developers can offer incentives, newer finishings, and a “never lived in” appeal. Resale sellers have to respond by showing value clearly, not just by existing in the same neighbourhood.
Detached homes in Surrey and Langley still benefit from a more limited supply story. Buyers looking for a yard, more bedrooms, room for children, or long-term family use are not always cross-shopping condos and detached homes. They are usually competing inside a tighter lane.
That is part of why detached homes often hold emotional and practical appeal even in softer conditions. In places like Fleetwood, Cloverdale, Walnut Grove, and parts of Langley Township, family demand still matters. School access still matters. The ability to find a comparable lot and layout still matters.
Detached sellers are not immune from pricing pressure. But they are often operating in a segment where the alternatives are less interchangeable than in a condo building or tower corridor.
The February 2026 municipal market data from the Fraser Valley Real Estate Board shows the reset has reached all property types, but not at the exact same pace. Surrey benchmark prices were down 9.6 per cent year over year for detached homes, 7.6 per cent for townhomes, and 8.8 per cent for apartments. Langley benchmark prices were down 6.9 per cent for detached homes, 6.7 per cent for townhomes, and 8.4 per cent for apartments.
That supports a pattern many sellers are already feeling. Apartments are still under pressure. Townhomes in some Langley pockets have held relatively firmer because they sit in the middle of the market, where family buyers still need space but cannot always stretch to detached prices. Detached homes continue to draw attention where the neighbourhood, layout, and school story are strong.
The point is not that one category is “good” and one is “bad.” The point is that the pricing and buyer psychology are different enough that they should not be handled with the same assumptions.
Condo and townhome buyers in British Columbia expect paper clarity. They are not only buying the unit. They are buying into the strata corporation.
Before listing, strata sellers should usually be ready with:
Under provincial guidance, Form B is used to disclose information about the strata lot and strata corporation, and a summary of the strata corporation’s insurance coverage must be included. The most recent depreciation report, if any, must be attached to the Form B. In strata corporations with five or more strata lots, depreciation reports are now required on a five-year cycle under B.C.’s updated rules. ([bc.gov.ca](https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/housing-tenancy/strata-housing/renting-buying-selling/buying-and-selling-strata/paperwork-for-buyers-and-sellers/form-b-information-certificate), [bc.gov.ca](https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/housing-tenancy/strata-housing/operating-a-strata/repairs-and-maintenance/depreciation-reports), [bclaws.gov.bc.ca](https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca/civix/document/id/complete/statreg/98043_06))
Sellers often underestimate how much these documents affect confidence. A buyer can live with a smaller balcony more easily than they can live with uncertainty about a building’s finances.
Condo staging is usually about clarity, scale, and function.
The main job is to help buyers feel that the space lives well, not just looks nice in photos. That often means:
A condo buyer often decides quickly whether a space feels efficient. Anything that makes the unit feel smaller, busier, or less practical usually hurts value.
Detached-home staging is often more about lifestyle and flow than pure compression.
The goal is usually to help buyers imagine:
Detached buyers tend to be more sensitive to landscaping, curb appeal, and room count logic. They are often buying a broader lifestyle package, not just square footage.
Condo pricing should usually lean harder on very recent, very local comparables. In many cases, buyers are comparing within the same building or a cluster of nearby buildings that feel interchangeable. That means small pricing mistakes show up quickly.
For condos, the most important pricing checks often include:
Detached pricing still needs discipline, but it often involves more adjustment for lot, layout, orientation, updates, and school catchment. Detached homes are less interchangeable, so judgment matters more.
This is one of the better uses of AI-assisted pricing scenarios behind the scenes. Not as a replacement for local knowledge, but as a way to compare active competition, recent sales, failed listings, and absorption by property type and micro-neighbourhood.
Condo sellers often overlook how much building-level information affects value. Detached sellers often overlook how quickly buyers compare their property against newer or better-prepared homes nearby.
In both cases, the mistake is the same: assuming broad market headlines will carry the listing. Buyers still make decisions at the property level.
In many Surrey and Langley pockets, condos are facing more direct competition from similar resale units and nearby new construction. That can make them feel softer, especially when pricing is not sharp.
Detached homes can still benefit from family demand, school catchments, and limited land supply, but they still need to be priced carefully.
Most expect Form B, a depreciation report if one exists, insurance summary, recent AGM minutes, and a clean understanding of strata finances and rules.
Because buyers there can often compare resale product with newer attached inventory and recently completed buildings in a relatively tight geographic area.
No. A condo usually needs to feel larger and more efficient. A detached home usually needs to feel functional, livable, and complete as a family space.
Yes. Buyers often use strata paperwork to decide whether a building feels low-risk or uncertain.
Yes. But it usually needs sharper pricing, strong presentation, and good building-level documentation.
Property-type-specific pricing and preparation matter most. The market does not reward condo and detached sellers in exactly the same way.
Selling a condo in Surrey and selling a detached home in Langley are not the same task in 2026. Condo sellers are often competing in a tighter field of similar inventory, with stronger document expectations and more pricing sensitivity. Detached sellers are still dealing with careful buyers, but often inside a more differentiated segment where family demand, lot utility, and catchments matter more.
That is why strategy has to follow property type. The sellers who do best are usually the ones who understand not just what the market is doing, but how their specific category is being judged by buyers right now.
If you are deciding whether to sell a condo, townhome, or detached house this spring, the most useful first step is understanding the exact lane your buyer is shopping in. That usually tells you far more than the broad headline market ever will.
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.