Thursday, January 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Vancouver home sales strong but no record in May

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Jun, 2021 02:11 PM
  • Vancouver home sales strong but no record in May

The super-heated housing market in Metro Vancouver cooled slightly in May but the Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board says sales still remained active.

A statement from the board says 4,268 homes changed hands across the region last month, a 13 per cent drop compared with April.

While May didn't match record-breaking activity seen earlier in the spring, the board says transactions were still 187.4 per cent higher than those recorded in May last year during the pandemic shutdown.

Sales last month were 27.7 per cent above the 10-year sales average for May and the board says listing activity also remained above the long-term average.

The board's economist Keith Stewart says the less intense market means home sellers must work with their agents to ensure property prices are based on current market conditions.

The benchmark price for a detached home is just over $1.8 million, a 22.8 per cent year-over-year increase and a 1.7 per cent lift since April, while Stewart says condo and townhome prices nudged up 1.2 and 1.8 per cent, respectively, in April.

Analysts will also be gauging the revised mortgage stress test that reduces maximum borrowing amounts by approximately 4.5 per cent and are watching average five-year fixed mortgage rates as they climb over two per cent for the first time this year, Stewart says.

"We’ll pay close attention to these factors leading into the summer to understand what affect they’ll have on the current market cycle,” he says in the statement.

Stewart says the seller’s market continues, with board data showing the number of sales to listings remains between 30 and 53 per cent for all types of properties, far above the 12 per cent ratio that generally leads to a dip in prices.

This highlights the need to increase the amount and type of housing available in Metro Vancouver, he says.

“Doing this requires a more disciplined focus on planning, reducing building costs, understanding demographic changes, and expediting the building approval process,” says Stewart.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Some B.C. grocery workers can register for vaccine

Some B.C. grocery workers can register for vaccine
Fraser Health says all workers, whether they are unionized or not, will get information from their employers on how to register and book appointments online, as well as an access code.

Some B.C. grocery workers can register for vaccine

No fines in Quebec for hotel quarantine violations

No fines in Quebec for hotel quarantine violations
The Montreal airport is one of only four in Canada where international flights are permitted to land. The Public Health Agency of Canada says at least 1,098 tickets have been issued and 15 people have been criminally charged for violations of the Quarantine Act since March 2020.

No fines in Quebec for hotel quarantine violations

Canada will take part in TRIPS talks: minister

Canada will take part in TRIPS talks: minister
In theory, a waiver would make it easier for developing countries to import the expertise, equipment and ingredients necessary to make their own vaccines.

Canada will take part in TRIPS talks: minister

AstraZeneca recipients shouldn't regret it: Quach

AstraZeneca recipients shouldn't regret it: Quach
In a statement, Quach says NACI's message wasn't meant to give AstraZeneca recipients vaccine remorse, noting the first dose has similar success at preventing hospitalization and death from COVID-19 as one dose of Pfizer or Moderna.

AstraZeneca recipients shouldn't regret it: Quach

NDP pledges 20 per cent foreign buyers' tax

NDP pledges 20 per cent foreign buyers' tax
The campaign-style promise aims to drive down increasingly unaffordable rental and home prices that have rippled beyond Toronto and Vancouver into outlying towns and cities from Nova Scotia to British Columbia's Fraser Valley.

NDP pledges 20 per cent foreign buyers' tax

Hospital turned away woman sick from shot: friend

Hospital turned away woman sick from shot: friend
Alberta chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, announced Tuesday that the death of the 52-year-old woman was due to a rare blood clot disorder — one of three such fatalities in Canada.

Hospital turned away woman sick from shot: friend