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Burnaby’s priciest house is listed at $4.58M. The ‘insane’ market will blow that away

The hot market means this house will likely get dozens of offers
priciest house housing real estate Haszard
An “insane” local real estate market means this giant home at 7685 Haszard St. will produce dozens of offers and sell for way over the asking price.

There’s an eight-bedroom, nine-bathroom house for sale near Deer Lake in Buckingham Heights (where else?) that’s on the market for $4.58 million.

That’s the most expensive house for sale in Burnaby right now, but in no way will it only sell for that price.

An “insane” local real estate market means this giant home at 7685 Haszard St. will produce dozens of offers and sell for way over the asking price.

We’re sure that the Gaggenau appliances and legal rental suite are enticing, but that’s not really why it will sell for so much.

It’s just a housing market that has lit on fire so much that sellers are in a frenzy to list their homes.

The Real Estate Board of Greater 鶹ýӳsays the market is heating up so fast that home sales in the region doubled between January and February and have climbed by more than 70 per cent since last year.

The board revealed Tuesday that February sales in the B.C. region totalled 3,727, a 73.3 per cent increase from the 2,150 sales recorded the year before and a 56 per cent spike from the 2,389 homes sold the month before.

The month's sales were so strong that REBGV said they were 42.8 per cent higher than February's 10-year sales average and are helping the market shift in favour of sellers.

Tirajeh Mazaheri, a real estate agent with Coldwell Banker Prestige Realty in Vancouver, characterized the pace of the market as "insane."

"There are so many multiple-offer battles happening and things going for over asking price," she said. "People are scared that the market is going to keep going higher and if they don't get into the market, it will get even worse for them."

She's heard of buyers lining up down the street just to view homes in North 鶹ýӳand of a property in the Shaughnessy neighbourhood that sold for $1.2 million more than asking.

Those who are out looking for homes are having a tough time, added REBGV chair Collette Gerber.

"The supply of listings for sale isn’t keeping up with the demand we’re seeing,” she said in a release.

“Competition amongst homebuyers is causing multiple offer situations and upward pressure on prices."

The total number of homes listed for sale in the region during February was 8,358, a 9.1 per cent decrease compared to the 9,195 in the year prior and 0.6 per cent increase from the month before. 

The region also saw 5,048 new listings in February, up from 4,002 the year prior.

Townhomes, Gerber said, were experiencing the region's most pronounced case of supply outstripping demand. 

For all property types, she said the sales-to-active listings ratio for the month was 44.6 per cent, but townhomes alone had a ratio of 61.8 per cent.

The sales-to-active listings ratio was about 41 per cent for both detached homes and apartments.

Home prices often experience upward pressure when the ratio surpasses 20 per cent over several months.

The MLS home price index composite benchmark for Metro 鶹ýӳreached just over $1 million in February, a 6.8 per cent increase from the year before and a 2.6 per cent jump from the prior month.

COVID-19 and economic measures were fuelling some of the frenzy, said Gerber.

“Low interest rates remain a key driver in today’s market," she said. 

"We’re seeing steady numbers of first-time homebuyers and move-up buyers entering the market."

  • With files from the Canadian Press
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