If your Coquitlam, Port Moody, or Port Coquitlam listing is sitting in 2026's buyer's market, there's almost always a fixable reason. Here's how to diagnose it — and what actually gets a stalled home sold.
In brief
In a buyer's market like the Tri-Cities in 2026, the most common reason a home isn't selling is price — it's positioned above what today's buyers will pay. Presentation, photography, and exposure matter too, but nine times out of ten a stalled listing is a pricing-and-positioning problem you can fix.
There's a difference between a home that's simply taking a little longer in a slower market and one that has genuinely stalled. The first is normal in 2026. The second almost always traces back to a short list of causes — price, presentation, exposure, or condition — and each one is fixable. This page walks through how to tell which is holding your sale back.
96–99%
Tri-Cities Market Sale-to-List
97%
Sebastian's Avg Sale-to-List
36
Sebastian's Avg Days on Market
Tri-Cities market sale-to-list ratio updates weekly from local MLS data; Sebastian's figures reflect his recent sold listings. A correctly priced, well-presented home still sells close to asking — even in a buyer's market.
As of April 2026, Metro Vancouver — including the Tri-Cities — is a buyer's market. The sales-to-active-listings ratio sat around 13.5%, total inventory was the highest since 2015 (roughly seven-plus months of supply), and the composite benchmark price was down about 6.9% year over year, according to Greater Vancouver REALTORS®.
Translation for a seller: there are more homes competing for fewer, more selective buyers, and last year's sale prices are no longer a reliable guide. Even well-presented homes take longer than they did in 2021–2022. Townhomes remain the tightest, most seller-friendly segment, while condos are the softest — Port Coquitlam apartments were averaging the longest days-on-market in the region.
So part of a longer wait is just the market. But if your home has had little traffic, no offers, or a string of "we'll keep looking" feedback, the market isn't the whole story — and the sections below help you find the part you control.
| Indicator (April 2026) | Reading | What it means for your sale |
|---|---|---|
| Sales-to-active listings | ~13.5% | Buyer's market (under ~12% is a strong buyer's market) |
| Months of inventory | 7+ months | Buyers have plenty of choice — your price has to compete |
| Benchmark price, year-over-year | down ~7% | Comparable sales from a year ago are too high to price from |
| Slowest segment | Condos / apartments | Townhomes still lean seller-friendly; condos sit longest |
Overpricing is the single most common reason a home doesn't sell. Buyers shop in price brackets — "under $1.3M," "$700K–$800K" — so if you're priced just into the bracket above where your home truly sits, you're being compared against larger or nicer homes and you lose every time.
Timing makes it worse. A listing gets the most attention in its first two to three weeks. Launch too high and you burn that window showing the home to the wrong buyers; by the time you reduce, the listing already looks stale. In a market where prices are easing, chasing the market down with small cuts almost always nets less than pricing correctly from day one.
There's also the appraisal reality: even a buyer willing to overpay needs their lender's appraisal to support the price. If it doesn't, the deal can fall apart at financing — another reason an aspirational price backfires.
| Your price vs. market value | How buyers respond | Likely outcome |
|---|---|---|
| At or just below market | Strong showing traffic, competitive interest | Sells near asking, shorter days-on-market |
| 3–5% above market | Fewer showings, "let's wait and see" | Sits, then needs a reduction |
| 8%+ above market | Compared to better homes one bracket up | Goes stale; a large cut is needed later |
In the current market, typical days-on-market run roughly four to eight weeks depending on type and price, with townhomes fastest and condos slowest. Use the table below as a rough yardstick — the high end of detached (especially in upper Port Moody) runs longer.
Watch the stale-listing cliff: once a home has been active past about 30–45 days, buyers and their agents start to assume something is wrong with it, and you get lowball offers or none at all. That perception is exactly why an overpriced launch is so costly — you can spend your best weeks going nowhere.
| Property type | Typical days on market | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Townhome | ~28–30 days | Tightest segment; still leans seller-friendly |
| Detached | ~31–41 days | Longer at the high end (e.g. Port Moody) |
| Condo / apartment | ~33–53 days | Slowest segment; Port Coquitlam condos longest |
Buyers shop online first, so in practical terms your photos are your listing. Dark, cluttered, or phone-shot images kill click-through before anyone books a showing — and in a market this full of choice, a weak photo set means buyers simply scroll past to the next home.
Once they're inside, the first impression is made in seconds. Clutter, bold personal décor, pet odours, and visible deferred maintenance all make a home feel like work. Decluttering, depersonalizing, a deep clean, and fixing the cheap, obvious things usually return far more than they cost. If your listing has amateur photos or hasn't been staged or tidied for sale, that alone can be the reason it isn't moving.
A simple diagnostic: no showings at all points to price or exposure; showings but no offers points to price-versus-condition or presentation. Either way, your listing should be syndicated to REALTOR.ca and the major portals with professional photography, a floor plan, and an accurate, keyword-rich description.
Ask your agent for two things in writing: the showing feedback from buyers' agents, and the online view and save analytics. If views are high but showings are low, it's the price. If showings are decent but feedback is lukewarm, it's condition or presentation. A good listing agent brings you this data and a plan — not just a "let's be patient."
Condos are the softest segment in 2026: more resale inventory plus completing presale units means apartment sellers are competing hard on price. On top of that, strata red flags scare buyers off — a pending special levy, a thin contingency reserve fund, ongoing litigation, or a missing or outdated depreciation report will all stall a sale or invite lowball offers.
Get ahead of it: have your Form B information certificate, recent strata minutes, budget, and depreciation report ready before you list, so a buyer's due diligence doesn't grind the deal to a halt. Note too that BC's depreciation-report rules tighten for Metro Vancouver stratas by July 1, 2026 — buyers and their agents are paying closer attention to these documents than ever.
Work from the diagnostic. No showings in two weeks? The problem is price or exposure — fix those first. Showings but no offers after three to four weeks? It's price relative to condition. When a reduction is the answer, make one meaningful move that drops you into the next buyer search bracket, rather than bleeding out in repeated $5,000–$10,000 cuts that always keep you a step behind the market.
Relisting (withdrawing and coming back with a fresh MLS number) can reset the visible days-on-market, but it isn't a magic eraser — buyers' agents can still see the history, so it only works when paired with real changes: a better price, new photography, or staging. And waiting only makes sense if you have a concrete, fixable reason to expect demand to improve — not just hope. With BC sales forecast to stay soft through 2026 and recover in 2027, "wait it out" is rarely the strongest play for a seller who needs to move now.
If your home isn't selling, work through these in order. Most stalled listings turn around once two or three of these are fixed.
Why is my house not selling when others nearby are?
Usually price relative to condition. The homes selling are the ones priced inside the right buyer bracket and presented well. Compare your price, photos, and condition honestly against the listings that did sell — not against what you hoped to get.
How many showings should my listing get in the first week?
It varies by price and type, but a well-priced Tri-Cities home in 2026 should typically draw at least a handful of showings in week one. Very few or none usually signals the price is too high or the online photos aren't pulling buyers in.
Does relisting reset days on market in BC?
Withdrawing and relisting with a new MLS number resets the visible days-on-market, but buyers' agents can still see the prior history. It only helps when paired with real changes — a better price, new photography, or staging — not as a standalone trick.
How much should I drop my price if my home isn't selling?
Enough to move you into the next lower buyer search bracket in one decisive step, rather than small repeated cuts. The right amount depends on current comparables — a fresh comparative market analysis from the last 30–60 days will show you the number.
Is 2026 a bad time to sell in the Tri-Cities?
It's a buyer's market with more inventory and softer prices, so it's harder than 2021–2022 — but well-priced, well-presented homes are still selling. If you need to move, pricing correctly and presenting strongly matters far more than trying to time the market.
Should I take my home off the market and try again later?
Only if you have a concrete, fixable reason to expect demand to improve. BC sales are forecast to stay soft through 2026 and recover in 2027, so "wait it out" rarely beats fixing the price, photos, and presentation now — especially if you need to sell to buy your next home.
Do I need to lower my price, or just wait for the right buyer?
If you're getting showings but no offers, it's a price-versus-condition issue, not a missing buyer. "The right buyer" still won't overpay when they have seven months of inventory to choose from. Adjust price or presentation rather than waiting indefinitely.
I'll give you a straight, no-obligation read on your price, presentation, and competition — and a clear plan to get it sold. That's a conversation, and it's free.
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Read the forecastThis page is general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice, and figures are current as of May 2026 and subject to change. Every home and situation is different — confirm specifics with a qualified real estate lawyer, accountant, or the relevant authority (BC Government, CRA) before acting. Sebastian Czarkowski is a licensed REALTOR® (BCFSA), not a lawyer or tax advisor.