Vancouver Luxury Single-Family Market: May 2026 Data — Two Tiers, Two Strategies

Vancouver's luxury single-family market closed May with 1,259 active listings and 59 recorded sales. That produces a blended sales ratio of five percent which indicates a Buyer's Market by any measure. But that single number obscures something important.

Where a property sits relative to the four million dollar mark determines which market a buyer or seller is actually operating in. The data from the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing tells two different stories this month, and conflating them leads to poor decisions on both sides of a transaction.

Vancouver Luxury Detached Market Overview May 2026 — 1,259 listings, 59 sales, 5% ratio
May 2026 ILHM Vancouver Luxury Detached With A Market Snapshot

Three headline numbers frame the month. Active inventory reached 1,259 homes. Sales came in at 59. The median accepted sale price settled at $3.205 million, down $145,000 from April. Days on market averaged 24, which is 140 percent higher than one year ago. Each of these figures looks different depending on which tier you are examining.

Below $4 Million: Activity Is Real, but Selective

The entry tier of the luxury detached segment is not inactive. Buyers are present and transacting illustrating they are simply concentrating in a narrow band. The highest sales ratio in May sat in the $2.5 million to $2.7 million range, where the ratio approached fourteen percent. That is a meaningful level of absorption for this segment.

As price increases toward four million, the ratio drops steadily: nine percent in the $2.7 to $3.0 million range, seven percent between $3.0 and $3.5 million, and approximately four percent in the $3.5 to $4.0 million range. The market remains active, but buyer conviction narrows as price rises.

Below $4M Vancouver Luxury Detached — Sales Ratio by Price Band May 2026
Below $4M: Sales ratio by price band where buyers are concentrating between $2.5M and $2.7M

The median accepted offer came in at approximately 94.7 percent of list price. That gap reflects negotiating room, but it also reflects the cost of mispricing. Listings that opened too high relative to comparable sales did not move. Those that opened with precision did.

For sellers in this tier, the implication is direct: price is the primary variable. Not staging, not presentation, not timing. A property priced accurately for current conditions sells. One priced to a prior cycle's expectations sits and accumulates days on market, which itself becomes a price signal to buyers.

Above $4 Million: Deep Buyer's Market, Meaningful Leverage

The upper luxury tier tells a different story. Sales volume is thin. The sales ratio drops to an estimated two to three percent, placing this segment well inside Buyer's Market territory by any standard measure. Properties at this level are sitting considerably longer than one year ago, and the inventory relative to demand is substantial.

For qualified buyers above four million, this represents one of the most favourable entry points Metro Vancouver has offered in years. Negotiations on price, subject clauses, and possession terms are all more accessible than they were in 2023 or 2024. The combination of higher inventory, longer days on market, and reduced competing offers creates genuine leverage.

Vancouver Luxury Detached — Below $4M vs Above $4M comparison May 2026
Two tiers compared: sales ratio, median price, days on market, and buyer leverage

Sellers in the upper tier face a more patient market. Presentation matters here as buyers at this price point expect a property to be in exceptional condition and to reflect its value clearly. But even a well presented home requires price discipline. Overpriced listings in this tier are not generating the showings needed to produce offers. The market is providing clear feedback; the sellers who are responding to it are the ones transacting.

What This Means in Practice

The two-tier structure of this market has direct implications depending on your position.

If you are a buyer below four million, the active price bands are around $2.5 to $2.7 million. Inventory is available and competition exists, but it is not acute. A well prepared offer at current market pricing is likely to succeed without the escalation clauses that characterized 2021 and 2022.

If you are a buyer above four million, the data supports taking your time. Work with an advisor who tracks the full picture of what has sold, what has not, and how long specific properties have been sitting. That context shapes offer strategy in ways that list price alone cannot.

If you are a seller below four million, pricing to the current median, not to a comparable from 18 months ago, is the single highest leverage move available. A property correctly priced for May 2026 conditions will find a buyer. One priced to aspirational benchmarks will generate showings but not offers.

If you are a seller above four million, realistic expectations and a defined timeline matter more than they have in recent years. The buyers who are active in this tier are informed, patient, and have alternatives. Meeting them at market is the most efficient path to a completed transaction.

Request the Full June (May 2026 data) ILHM Report

The complete analysis and the ILHM Luxury Market Report for Metro Vancouver, is available upon request at hiatt.com.

Bruce Hiatt is an Elite Member of the Institute for Luxury Home Marketing, serving buyers and sellers across Metro Vancouver's luxury detached and attached segments.