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Parksville Qualicum Beach benchmark home price nears $900K

Increase of 1 per cent compared to same time in 2023
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Once again, the benchmark price for a single-family home in Parksville Qualicum Beach is close to $900,000.

According to stats released this month by the Vancouver Island Real Estate Board (VIREB), that number is up one per cent year-over-year from the same period a year ago.

In PQB, the price sits at $899,000. Nanaimo’s year-over-year benchmark price rose by one per cent to $815,800. The cost of a benchmark single-family home in Port Alberni was $531,800, up one per cent over the previous year. In Campbell River, the benchmark price was $705,700 last month, up four per cent from the previous year. The Comox Valley’s year-over-year benchmark price rose by five per cent to $842,100. In the Cowichan Valley, the benchmark price was $775,800, a one per cent decrease from July 2023. For the North Island, the benchmark price of a single-family home dropped by two per cent to $431,300.

VIREB recorded 737 unit sales board-wide and 4,559 active listings (all property types) on the MLS® System in July 2024.

According to a news release, in the single-family category (excluding acreage and waterfront), 363 homes sold in July, down 11 per cent from one year ago and up one per cent from June. Sales of condo apartments last month came in at 87, decreasing by nine per cent year over year and up six per cent from June. In the row/townhouse category, 99 units changed hands in July, up 16 per cent from one year ago and nine per cent from June.

Active listings of single-family homes were 1,596 in July, up from the 1,092 posted one year ago, according to the release. VIREB’s inventory of condo apartments was 455 last month, up from 312 in July 2023. There were 342 row/townhouses for sale last month compared to 262 the previous year. With an absorption rate of 16 per cent and approximately six months of inventory, the VIREB housing market is in balanced territory and edging slightly towards a buyers’ market, the release stated.

As VIREB CEO Jason Yochim noted in recent media releases, the market has behaved differently this year. VIREB’s typical spring and summer market never truly launched. Buyers and sellers are both holding back, despite interest rate reductions and higher inventory.

“Inventory has risen considerably, and it’s been five years since active listings in the VIREB area were at this level, so buyers have more choice and more time to wait,” Yochim stated last month. “The same holds true for sellers, so there seems to be a waiting game going on.”

The board-wide benchmark price of a single-family home was $784,200 in July 2024, up two per cent from one year ago and down slightly from from June. In the apartment category, the benchmark price was $414,300 last month, up one per cent from the previous July and one per cent from June. The benchmark price of a townhouse in July was $540,800, down two per cent from one year ago and a slight decrease from June.



Philip Wolf

About the Author: Philip Wolf

I’ve been involved with journalism on Vancouver Island for more than 30 years, beginning as a teenage holiday fill-in at the old Cowichan News Leader.
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