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  Market Intel July 27, 2025
— Market Reports · July 27, 2025

Interest Rates and the BC Housing Market: Are Buyers Still on the Sidelines in 2025?

📉 From Pause to Pivot: Interest Rates and Market Momentum In June 2025, the Bank of Canada made its first rate cut since 2020—a modest but symbolic 25 basis points. It was a sign that...


📉 From Pause to Pivot: Interest Rates and Market Momentum

In June 2025, the Bank of Canada made its first rate cut since 2020—a modest but symbolic 25 basis points. It was a sign that after two years of aggressive tightening, policy is finally shifting to support growth. But the real estate market, particularly in British Columbia, has responded with cautious optimism rather than unbridled enthusiasm.

Many hoped that falling rates would unleash a wave of pent-up demand. Instead, what we’re seeing is a slow reawakening, with buyers still sitting on the sidelines—waiting for clearer signals that the market has turned.

Why the hesitation? Because interest rates are only part of the story. In BC, affordability, inventory, and buyer confidence remain deeply intertwined with macroeconomic and policy forces that extend far beyond borrowing costs.


🔢 Where Rates Stand Now (Mid-2025)

Rate TypeCurrent (June 2025)Peak (2023–2024)
Bank of Canada Overnight4.50%5.00%
5-Year Fixed Mortgage4.85%–5.25%5.75%–6.20%
5-Year Variable Mortgage6.00%–6.25%6.75%–7.00%
Stress Test Rate~6.85%~8.00%

Source: Bank of Canada, Ratehub, CMHC

Rates are easing, but remain well above pre-pandemic norms. Even with cuts, today’s borrowers still face materially higher monthly payments than they would have just a few years ago.


🧠 Buyer Psychology: It’s Not Just About Interest Rates

There’s a key dynamic at play: after two years of rising rates and falling values, buyers have shifted their mindset. They’re no longer rushing to get in before prices climb — they’re waiting, analyzing, and, in many cases, renting.

Top Buyer Concerns in 2025:

  • “Will prices drop again in the fall?”
  • “What if I lock in now and rates fall further?”
  • “How do I qualify under the current stress test?”
  • “Are pre-sale delays a risk with financing timelines?”
  • “Should I buy now or wait for more government policy clarity?”

Even with rate relief, buyers need more than cheaper credit—they need a sense of market stability and direction.

“We’re seeing mortgage pre-approvals pick up, but actual offers are still lagging. Everyone is waiting for someone else to move first.”

David Kwan, Mortgage Broker, Greater Vancouver


📉 The Affordability Equation Remains Unfavourable

Even with lower mortgage rates, affordability remains stretched. In Vancouver, Victoria, and many parts of the Fraser Valley, buyers still face extreme price-to-income ratios.

RegionMedian Household IncomeAvg. Home Price (May 2025)Price-to-Income Ratio
Vancouver Westside~$90,000~$2.2M (detached)24.4:1
Surrey (Fleetwood)~$95,000~$1.24M (detached)13:1
Langley (City)~$88,000~$887,000 (townhouse)10:1
Chilliwack~$82,000~$775,000 (detached)9.4:1

Result: Even modest rate relief isn’t enough to dramatically improve access — especially for first-time buyers and middle-income families.


🏘️ What’s Happening in the Market Now?

✅ Listings Are Up, But Sales Are Tepid

  • Greater Vancouver saw a 9% increase in new listings in May 2025 vs. the same month last year.
  • Sales activity is up 5% month-over-month, but still 15% below the 10-year average.
  • Detached homes in outlying suburbs (Maple Ridge, Abbotsford) are selling better than downtown condos.

✅ Prices Are Stabilizing, Not Surging

  • Average prices in most markets are flat, with some modest appreciation in Langley, Burnaby, and Surrey.
  • Downtown Vancouver condos remain soft, particularly in the resale market.

⚖️ Who’s Most Affected by the Rate Cycle?

GroupHow Rates Affect ThemCurrent Outlook
First-Time BuyersStress test + down payment hurdleSlightly better with rate relief, but affordability still a barrier
Move-Up BuyersMay hold off due to locked-in low rates on current homeLow listings due to rate lock-in effect
InvestorsROI squeezed by higher borrowing costs + low cap ratesMany sidelined or shifting to cash buys
Pre-Sale BuyersCompletion financing more expensiveSome facing qualification risk at closing

“The biggest bottleneck isn’t just affordability—it’s liquidity. Move-up buyers aren’t listing, which means inventory stays tight, even when demand is there.”

Simone Khoury, Sales Director, Tri-Cities


🧱 Why Rates Alone Won’t Fix the Market

While interest rates are the most visible headline, they are not the only bottleneck. Other systemic challenges are holding the market back:

  • Permit backlogs delaying new construction
  • Labour shortages slowing build-outs
  • Local zoning resistance in high-demand municipalities
  • Renters unable to transition to ownership despite savings due to stress test criteria

Even with borrowing costs falling, the housing system itself isn’t keeping pace with the underlying demand.


🔮 What to Expect Heading Into Fall 2025

The second half of the year will be critical. If inflation continues to moderate, another rate cut is likely by Q4 — which could finally trigger more robust buyer activity.

However, don’t expect a dramatic surge. More likely is a slow grind back to normalized sales volumes, led by:

  • End-users in stable employment positions
  • Buyers in transit-connected suburban nodes (Langley, Brentwood, Surrey Central)
  • Investors with cash or long-term holds, seeking pre-sale opportunities

📌 Final Takeaway

In 2025, interest rates are falling—but buyer confidence is still rebuilding. The BC real estate market is no longer being driven solely by low borrowing costs. It’s being shaped by the interplay of affordability, policy, supply chain realities, and long-term demographic pressure.

The next move won’t belong to the Bank of Canada—it will belong to the buyer who sees through the noise and acts decisively, based on strategy and fundamentals.


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