A Tale of Three Property Types
The April 2026 release from Greater Vancouver Realtors shows total residential sales of 2,110 — down 2.5% from April 2025 and 22.9% below the 10-year seasonal average. The composite benchmark price came in at $1,098,000, a 6.9% year-over-year decline. The headline number is soft. But the property-type breakdown, as reported by Canadian Mortgage Trends, reveals three distinct stories layered inside that single composite.
Detached homes sold 659 units, up 14% year-over-year. Condo apartments sold 1,009, down 10.7%. Townhouses (attached) sold 433, down 2%. The benchmark prices tell a complementary but more cautious story: detached at $1,840,700 (down 8.3% year-over-year, down 0.8% month-over-month), condos at $703,000 (down 7.9% year-over-year, down 0.5% month-over-month), and townhouses at $1,043,400 (down 5.1% year-over-year, down 0.4% month-over-month).
That is the split: detached demand is rebuilding while detached prices are still drifting down — fastest, in fact, among the three segments year-over-year. Condo demand is cooling further while condo prices keep softening. Townhouses are the most resilient on price but are losing demand modestly. Three different curves, one city.
GVR chief economist Andrew Lis flagged the pattern as "consistent across most areas," which matters: if the divergence were geographic, you could explain it away with neighbourhood-specific stories. Broad-based divergence is harder to dismiss. Lis suggested the detached segment may be acting as a bellwether — a leading indicator for buyer sentiment — and that multi-family segments could follow suit if the pattern holds, which would slowly draw down standing inventory unless a wave of new sellers arrives first.
The sales-to-active listings ratio is the cleanest single read on which way prices are leaning. Below 12% sustained tends to apply downward pressure. Above 20% sustained tends to push prices up. Detached at 11.3% sits just below that lower threshold. Condos at 14.7% and townhouses at 15.0% sit comfortably in the middle. Inventory remains elevated overall — total listings of 16,236 are 37.9% above the 10-year average — which is the single biggest reason prices haven't responded to the detached sales pickup yet.
This is the bridge from sales data to balance sheet. The same dynamic showed up nationally in Q4 2025, where outstanding mortgage debt grew faster than real estate values. Vancouver is now showing the same pattern at the property-type level inside a single city.