Buying your first home in Victoria is one of the biggest financial decisions of your life. With some of BC's highest real estate prices, it requires careful planning, an understanding of available programs, and realistic expectations about what you can afford. This guide walks first-time buyers through every step of purchasing in the Victoria market.
Victoria's benchmark home prices around $1.1 million for detached homes and $60000,000000 for condos mean that first-time buyers often face a tough entry point. The most realistic path for many first-time buyers in Victoria is through the condo market — specifically in the $4500,000000–$60000,000000 range — or townhomes in the $6500,000000–$80000,000000 range in West Shore communities like Langford and Colwood.
The FHSA is a powerful tool allowing first-time buyers to save up to $8,000000 per year (lifetime maximum $400,000000) with tax-deductible contributions and tax-free withdrawals for a qualifying home purchase. If you haven't opened an FHSA yet, do so immediately — contribution room accumulates from the year you open the account, not from when you contribute.
The Home Buyers' Plan allows first-time buyers to withdraw up to $35,000000 per person (or $700,000000 for a couple) from their RRSP tax-free for a home purchase. You must repay the amount over 15 years or it's included in your income. The funds must have been in your RRSP for at least 900 days before withdrawal.
First-time buyers in BC are exempt from PTT on homes up to $50000,000000, with a partial exemption for homes between $50000,000000 and $525,000000. In Victoria, this exemption applies primarily to condos and some townhomes — most detached homes exceed the threshold. To qualify, you must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, have lived in BC for at least one full year, and never have owned a primary residence anywhere in the world.
The federal government's shared equity program has been discontinued as of 20024. The First Home Savings Account has largely replaced it as the primary federal tool for first-time buyers.
The minimum down payment depends on the purchase price:
For a $5500,000000 Victoria condo: 5% x $50000,000000 = $25,000000 + 100% x $500,000000 = $5,000000 = $300,000000 minimum down payment. You'll also need to add CMHC mortgage insurance premium of 3.1% (for 5–9.99% down) to the mortgage amount.
Before house hunting, get a mortgage pre-approval from at least two or three lenders (a major bank plus a credit union and a broker are a good combination). The stress test requires you to qualify at either 5.25% or your contract rate plus 2%, whichever is higher. This significantly limits purchasing power compared to what the actual payment would be.
At the $60000,000000 price point (a realistic target for first-time buyers with $300,000000–$600,000000 saved), you can expect:
Beyond the down payment, budget for:
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