First-Time Home Buyer in Victoria BC 2025
Updated March 2025 · Greater Victoria First Home Guide
Buying your first home in Victoria, BC is one of the most significant financial decisions you'll make — and one of the most challenging in Canada given the region's high prices. The average home in Greater Victoria exceeds $900,000, and even condos start above $450,000 in most areas. But with the right preparation, programs, and strategy, first-time buyers can and do successfully enter the Victoria market every year. This guide walks through everything you need to know.
The Honest Reality: Buying in Victoria requires a meaningful down payment, strong income, and realistic expectations about location. Many first-time buyers find their best options in Langford, Sooke, or Colwood rather than downtown Victoria or Saanich. That's okay — these are great communities with real value.
Step 1 — Know Your Budget Before You Shop
Start with a mortgage pre-approval, not a listing search. Pre-approval tells you exactly how much you can borrow based on your income, debts, and credit score. This prevents wasted time and emotional attachment to homes you can't afford.
Victoria's mortgage qualification math is demanding. Canada's stress test requires you to qualify at your rate + 2% (minimum 5.25%). For a household with $130,000 combined income:
- Maximum mortgage (approximate): $550,000–$600,000
- With 10% down on a $650,000 purchase: mortgage ~$585,000
- Monthly payment at 5.5% / 25 years: ~$3,560
- Monthly payment at stress test rate 7.5%: ~$4,280 (what you must qualify at)
Step 2 — Build Your Down Payment
Down payment requirements in BC:
- Homes under $500,000: minimum 5% down
- $500,000–$999,999: 5% on first $500K + 10% on amount above $500K
- $1M+: minimum 20% down (no mortgage insurance available)
For a $650,000 Victoria condo: minimum down = $25,000 + (10% × $150,000) = $40,000. Plus CMHC mortgage insurance of approximately 3.1% of the mortgage (~$18,600, typically added to the mortgage). Total cash needed at closing: ~$40,000 down + PTT + legal fees.
First Home Savings Account (FHSA)
The FHSA is Canada's newest first-time buyer program, launched in 2023. It combines the benefits of an RRSP and TFSA:
- Contributions are tax-deductible (like RRSP)
- Withdrawals for a first home purchase are tax-free (like TFSA)
- Annual contribution limit: $8,000; lifetime limit: $40,000
- Unused room carries forward one year
- Must open the account at least one year before buying
Every Victoria first-time buyer who expects to purchase within 15 years should open an FHSA immediately. TD, RBC, BMO, CIBC, Scotiabank, and Island Savings all offer FHSAs. The sooner you open the account and start contributing, the larger your tax-free down payment pool grows.
Home Buyers' Plan (HBP)
The Home Buyers' Plan allows first-time buyers to withdraw up to $35,000 from their RRSP tax-free for a home purchase. The withdrawal must be repaid to the RRSP over 15 years (1/15 per year or it counts as income). Both partners in a couple can each withdraw $35,000 for a combined $70,000.
Step 3 — BC Property Transfer Tax and Exemptions
PTT is paid at closing and is one of the largest upfront costs. Standard PTT calculation:
- 1% on first $200,000 = $2,000
- 2% on $200,001 to $2,000,000
First-Time Buyer PTT Exemption
First-time buyers purchasing a home under $500,000 pay zero PTT. On a home between $500,000 and $525,000, a partial exemption applies. To qualify:
- Canadian citizen or permanent resident
- Never owned a principal residence anywhere in the world
- Must occupy as principal residence within 92 days of registration
- Property must be 0.5 hectares (1.24 acres) or less
In Greater Victoria, homes under $500,000 are largely limited to condos in Langford, Sooke, Esquimalt, and parts of Saanich. The exemption saves up to $8,000 — a meaningful amount worth pursuing if your target price qualifies.
Newly Built Home Exemption
First-time buyers purchasing a newly built home under $1,100,000 may qualify for a full PTT exemption. This applies to new condos and townhomes — relevant for Langford and Colwood new construction projects. Savings can reach $18,000–$20,000 on a $900,000–$1,000,000 new build. Confirm eligibility with your notary.
Step 4 — Choose Where to Buy
Victoria's price spread is wide. Here is where first-time buyers realistically shop in 2025:
Best Value Areas for First-Time Buyers
- Langford: New construction townhomes $700K–$950K. Good amenities, growing community, 20–25 min commute to Victoria
- Sooke: Detached homes $650K–$850K. Most space for the money. Rural character. 35–50 min commute
- Colwood/View Royal: Townhomes and condos $550K–$780K. Established communities, reasonable commute
- Esquimalt: Condos and older homes from $450K. Urban location, close to Victoria. Military community
- Central Saanich / Sidney: Condos from $550K. Peninsula lifestyle, ferry access
Step 5 — Choose Your Mortgage
For a first-time Victoria buyer, the mortgage decision has major long-term financial implications:
Fixed vs. Variable
- Fixed rate: Payment certainty for 1–5 years. Currently 5%–6.5% depending on term. Popular with first-time buyers who want predictability
- Variable rate: Fluctuates with Bank of Canada prime rate. Currently lower than fixed for some terms. Historically advantageous but requires risk tolerance
Amortization Period
First-time buyers with CMHC-insured mortgages (less than 20% down) now have access to 30-year amortization (as of August 2024). This lowers monthly payments but increases total interest paid significantly. On a $560,000 mortgage at 5.5%:
- 25-year amortization: ~$3,420/month, total interest ~$466,000
- 30-year amortization: ~$3,065/month, total interest ~$543,000
Step 6 — Assemble Your Team
Victoria first-time buyers need three professionals:
- Realtor: Works for free (paid by seller). Choose someone who specializes in first-time buyers and the area you're targeting
- Mortgage broker or bank advisor: Shops multiple lenders vs. a bank advisor who offers one institution's rates. Brokers are free to buyers
- Notary or real estate lawyer: Handles legal closing, title transfer, PTT payment. Budget $1,200–$2,500
Total Cash Required — Victoria Example
Buying a $700,000 Langford townhome with minimum qualifying down payment:
- Down payment (5% on $500K + 10% on $200K): $45,000
- CMHC premium (3.1% on $655,000 mortgage): $20,305 (added to mortgage)
- PTT (2% model): $11,000
- Legal/notary fees: $1,800
- Home inspection: $550
- Moving costs: $2,000
- Total cash needed: ~$60,350
No-Fee Banking While Saving Your Down Payment
While saving for your Victoria down payment, eliminating banking fees is one of the easiest financial optimizations available. A household paying $25/month in bank fees loses $300/year that could go toward their down payment fund. KOHO provides completely free banking, while EQ Bank's high-interest savings account maximizes the growth of your down payment savings between now and closing day.
Free Banking for Vancouver Island Residents
KOHO works everywhere on Vancouver Island. No monthly fees, no minimum balance. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus when you open your free account.
Open KOHO Free — Code 45ET55JSYA