![]() | |
Seems fairly accurate at least for the area I live in. Seen a lot of apts in my building and posted for sale under their initial purchase price which is also under the bc assessment value. Not sure if it's an indicator of prices dropping or trying to start a bidding war. However those apts have been sitting for awhile now over 2-3 months now. |
Quote:
But keep in mind, typically Dec-March are the slowest months of the year when it comes to real estate. Generally, once the weather improves, people will start thinking about RE again. |
We just purchased in South Surrey! I've been actively hunting for the last year, prices have been on a definite steady decline, I was just waiting for the right house to come up and it finally did. Looking forward to getting the keys in the next month. Thanks to all who have posted in this thread, when I asked for some detailed info my PM box was very quick full of messages from those willing to help, it is most appreciated and helped me make my decision/learn more about the market. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Prices are definitely lower than last year, I've seen a few units that was just bought late 2017, early 2018 and people are listing them for like $60k under what they paid for it. Not sure what strategy they are going for but there's not enough demand to push it $100k over asking just to break even. |
I've been following DT Condos. They seem to be pretty stable. Only drops of 1 - 5% |
Yea..the drops are definitely more based on location/condition of the home/buyer overpaying last year due to a bidding war or are just rich foreign buyers haha. But the nice ones definitely still sell well |
Good news for buyers. 10% drop year over year. We already know prices are softening in many areas. Similar story over here in Victoria. Lots of for sale signs and properties moving slowly. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/briti...041727?cmp=rss |
Great to see. Hopefully people who want to buy can finally buy soon rather than renting, etc |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Quote:
|
well i did say the comments were not directed at Quote:
|
Excellent sob story. "I inherited a 1.5 million dollar property with a shed on it and I can't afford the taxes. I also live in a basement suite and cant afford vacations." TRY FUCKING SELLING IT AND YOU CAN AFFORD A FUCKING THOUSAND VACATIONS. Lead a horse to water but you cant make it drink. |
Quote:
Quote:
What if it have some special memory that you had and you really don't want to sell it? I am sure there are lot's of special things like that we have in our life and we rather not let go unless we have to. The couple was doing fine till this tax came in. The least the gov could do is exempt the tax on cases like these. I mean honestly with no water, no power and no net who else would rent it? Is pretty common sense yet the gov can't see it. |
sorry if you think we should sympathize for someone who inherited a property that has enough value to be assessed 12k in property tax, the article is not telling us the full story i take it Happy has not wandered around belcarra https://assets.rew.ca/image/upload/e...063235/01.jpeg this is not some remote place 5 hours north of here, it's 15 min from coquitlam centre |
Borrow on the equity then. The lot alone obviously has some value |
Quote:
Cabin like these should really not be paying the vacancy tax coz is not going to get rented out for more than a month of two in the summer. This whole vacancy tax doesn't help at all with the low rental inventory we have is just a cash grab for the gov. If the gov does care about it they would start building rental apartments like a lot of Asian country did already. And find out why people would rather be paying extra tax than to rent out their place. Maybe coz the RTB tenancy law and policy favors tenant too much? I mean I can't even kick a tenant out if they don't pay their rent. It takes months and months to get the ball rolling. Even if RTB rule in favor of the landlord you still can't kick our tenant kick. Instead you have to hire someone to kick them and put their stuff in storage. All of these cost have to be paid by a landlord. Also limiting on how much people can raise their rent? Is their place why can't they raise it how much they want? If it is too much no one will rent it and landlord have to lower their rent? Do you see the gov forcing ISP, cell phone providers limiting on how much they can increase their price? Give landlord more power, more tools to work with to kick out bad tenants and maybe more people are willing to rent their place out. |
|
Quote:
this is not China (yet..sadly), you can't just grease a group of peasants/parcelowners, raze their teardowns and erect 30 towers in a few months. there are codes and permits. back to the example, you're too focused on the new vacancy tax, how it's in rental condition etc... just temporarily remove all that from the equation, my point is why does a retiree living in a basement suite pay so much property tax on a cabin in the first place? how does that make any sense unless there's pretty important details conveniently left out yeah more taxes is never fun, but cue sad piano music because you inherited a massive lot in a quiet community by the water 15 minutes from a major hub, if it's that unfortunate of a predicament she should trade places with the families that squeeze in a studio unit paying 1800/mo that's stuck renting there for good...it's like the small minority wanting to voice their complaint they can no longer keep their hks excsausht when a good chunk can't really bare even the increase in insurance year after year yeah, it's a tax grab, a tax that will go directly to affordable housing that you're saying they're not doing enough about BrokeBack |
https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.5044828 Im actually curious what would happen if rates go down. They should’ve never hiked it 5 times in such a short time lol |
Quote:
Because most of the properties referenced in the article are water access only. Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
BC has the strongest economy in the country and will likely be able to weather the storm. It's never been a better time to be a job-seeker in this province, particularly in the Lower Mainland where mid to senior positions are hard to staff. The issue for the BoC is that they can't make decisions based on one province's economy. People are waiting on the sidelines, but millennials are hitting their mid-30s and hitting their peak earning years. For all of the flack that Andrew Wilkinson took after his "wacky years" comments about renting, he is right that people eventually want stability in their housing situation. Taxpayers are not yet willing to elect governments that will dedicate substantial sums to building subsidized rental housing. Eventually, something has to give - these millennials will either become reluctant owners themselves or they will move en-masse to cheaper areas of the country. If I were a betting person, I would put my money on the former. |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 11:17 PM. | |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
SEO by vBSEO ©2011, Crawlability, Inc.
Revscene.net cannot be held accountable for the actions of its members nor does the opinions of the members represent that of Revscene.net