Vancouver Homes with Mortgage Helpers
| | |

Listings of Metro Vancouver Homes with Mortgage Helpers updated by the hour

Stan Direct: 604-202-1412
E-mail: ssteam3000@gmail.com

Click the first two links below to view the MLS listings of Vancouver Mortgage Helpers Homes, constantly updated every 1-2 hours. Play with the searches. Sort the listings by clicking the description at the top of each column. Click on the SOLD properties to see their actual selling price. Click on each property address link to view the complete MLS information for each property, the way we see it as Realtors. Open the tabs on the top of each listing to view the cool “Location” feature with Street and Bird’s Eye Views too. Enjoy the full-size Photo Gallery and Multimedia, when available. Don’t forget to check the Mortgage Calculator with the required monthly payments, based on the asking price of each property. Check the Buyer’s Qualifier to find out if you can qualify for the monthly payments, based on your annual income.

Feel free to contact us if you are not very familiar with the whole process of mortgage pre-qualification and purchasing Vancouver Mortgage Helpers Homes. Do you know the difference between legal, unauthorized and non-conforming suites? Do you know how this might affect your financial plans? Are you aware of the risks? Do you know the banks’ requirements for granting the financing?

View the full set of screenshots at Flickr 

If you are interested in having access to all links, click on the “VIP Insiders Access Registration” button. In the “Notes” box, include the code “mortgage helpers”. If you have any specific requests, type them in the “Notes” box as well. The provided information is at no cost and obligation-free. This is not a subscription to a mailing list or a newsletter. It will grant you access to MLS information shared with other users.

Alternatively, you can send us a voice or a text message to 604-202-1412 with your name, email address, phone number and a code “mortgage helpers”

Vancouver Mortgage Helpers Homes Real Estate Board of GV

REBGV Whistler Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Squamish Mortgage Helpers Homes

REBGV Sunshine Coast Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV West Vancouver Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV North Vancouver Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Vancouver East Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Vancouver West Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Burnaby Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV New Westminster Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Coquitlam Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Port Moody Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Port Coquitlam Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Pitt Meadows Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Maple Ridge Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Mission Mortgage Helpers Homes
REBGV Richmond Mortgage Helpers Homes

Vancouver Mortgage Helpers Fraser Valley Real Estate Board

FVREB North Surrey Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Surrey Mortgage Helpers
FVREB South Surrey White Rock Mortgage
FVREB North Delta Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Tsawwassen Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Ladner Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Langley Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Chilliwack Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Cloverdale Mortgage Helpers
FVREB Abbotsford Mortgage Helpers

Share this page

Similar Posts

  • | | | |

    This is how Canada’s new GST cuts on home sales up to $1.5 million for first-time buyers will work

    Prime Minister Mark Carney is fulfilling one of the key promises the Liberal party made during the recent federal election campaign, specifically relating to eliminating the federal five per cent Goods and Services Tax (GST) on home prices for first-time homebuyers. “My government has a mandate to bring down costs. We are delivering this mandate by cutting taxes — so Canadians keep more of their paycheques to spend where it matters most,” said the prime minister, with the specific plans for the GST cuts now released following King Charles III’s speech from the throne on Tuesday. This will be applied as a rebate — the First-Time Home Buyers’ GST Rebate. For first-time buyers only, there will be zero GST applied on new homes sold at up to $1 million. For new properties bought at a price of between $1 million and $1.5 million, there will be a reduced GST for first-time buyers and their new homes. This means that for homes priced at up to $1 million, first-time buyers will save up to $50,000 by not having to pay the GST. Buyers with new, more expensive homes will be eligible for a reduced GST rebate, which falls incrementally from home prices of $1 million to $1.5 million. For example, a home price of $1.1 million would be eligible for a 20 per cent rebate of $40,000, a home price of $1.25 million would be eligible for a rebate of $25,000, and a home price of $1.4 million would be eligible for a rebate of $10,000. A “new home” purchase is defined as property bought from a new home by a builder, a self-built home or a self-contracted new home, or an acquisition of shares of a co-operative housing corporation. Individuals are eligible for the rebate if they are adults and Canadian citizens or permanent residents. As well, they must not have lived in a home that they owned or that their spouse or common-law partner owned in the calendar year or in the four preceding calendar years. This existing ownership status consideration exists both within and outside Canada. At least one of the purchasers in a sale must be a first-time buyer for use as their primary residence, with this individual required to occupy the home following the sale. The sale agreement must be made between May 27, 2025 and Dec. 31, 2030. Homes that have yet to be built under the agreement must begin construction before 2021, with substantial completion by no later than the end of 2035. For rebates for owner-built homes, an eligible individual — at least one of the owner-builders who qualify as a first-time homebuyer — can recover up to $50,000 of the GST or the federal part of the rebate. Construction on the property must begin on or after May 27, 2025, with substantial completion by the end of 2036. And as for the rebate through the co-operative housing corporation share acquisition, an individual can similarly claim up to $50,000. The acquisition and construction timelines are the same for this option. This amounts to an adjustment, expansion, and refinement of Carney’s promise made during the election campaign to eliminate the GST on “new and substantially renovated” home sales up to $1 million for first-time buyers. Conservative party leader Pierre Poilievre vowed to axe the GST for new homes up to $1.3 million, accounting for the higher home prices in markets such as Metro Vancouver and Greater Toronto. Carney’s policy move is endorsed by the Canadian Home Builders’ Association (CHBA), which states that they have been advocating for such changes for a long while, and that these regulations have not changed since the introduction of GST in 1991. They say the federal government at the time originally committed to adjusting the GST New Housing Rebate thresholds every two years to reflect changes in housing prices and protect housing affordability over time. But these thresholds have not been changed for about 35 years now. Prior to this week’s policy details announcement, the federal government offered a smaller rebate amount of up to $6,300 or 36 per cent of the GST payment that would be required for a home that costs $350,000 or less. If the home costs more than $350,000, the rebate is gradually reduced, with the rebate reaching zero for a home price of $450,000 and over. “For years, CHBA has been advocating for a change to the GST thresholds on new construction homes to help address housing affordability challenges in regions across the country, and this measure is a very positive step forward for Canadians,” said Kevin Lee, CEO of CHBA, in a statement. “Previously, without details around the implementation of this measure, Canadians wishing to enter the housing market were holding out on buying a new construction home, which results in fewer home starts, so it is encouraging that today first-time buyers can have the confidence to move forward.” But Lee suggests the rebate thresholds should be more expansive to provide a greater number of homeowners with relief. CHBA wants to see the zero GST threshold increased to new home prices of $1.5 million, with the gradual reduction kicking in for prices between $1.5 million and $2 million, which would expand the eligibility for first-time homebuyers in Metro Vancouver and Greater Toronto, where there are higher home prices. They are also urging the federal government to expand the rebate to all new homes

    Share this page
  • | | | | | | | | | | | |

    Metro Vancouver rents remain depressingly high despite B.C. price drop

    British Columbia is tied for the largest annual decline in apartment rents in all of Canada, but Metro Vancouver renters may not be seeing the savings when it’s time to pay. According to the latest Rentals.ca and Urbanation report, which looks at numbers from June 2025, the country’s average asking rent for all residential properties declined 2.7 per cent year-over-year. It was the ninth consecutive month of annual rent drops. B.C. and Alberta experienced the biggest annual decline in apartment rents at 3.1 per cent. However, four of the top five most expensive cities to rent in the top Canadian markets list remain in the Metro Vancouver area. Alen Szylowiec/Shutterstock “Asking rents for purpose-built and condo rental apartments declined the most over the past year in B.C. and Alberta, each decreasing by 3.1 per cent, to an average of $2,472 and $1,741, respectively,” said Rentals.ca in its report. “Ontario and B.C. were the only provinces to record a two-year decrease in apartment rents, declining 3.6 per cent and 3.1 per cent, respectively.” According to Rentals.ca, North Vancouver is the most expensive municipality in Canada to rent for the fourth consecutive month, with the average asking rent for a one-bedroom rental reaching $2,602 per month and a two-bedroom rental coming in at $3,567 per month. Vancouver, Coquitlam, Burnaby, and Toronto round out the other five most expensive places to rent in the country. Rentals.ca The report also shows that among Canada’s six largest cities, Vancouver experienced the second-largest annual decline in apartment rents in June, dropping seven per cent. However, the asking rent for a one-bedroom is $2,529 per month, and for a two-bedroom, it is $3,388 per month. “Despite the dip in rents during the past year, average asking rents in Canada remained 4.1 per cent higher than the level from two years earlier ($2,042) and 11.9 per cent higher than the level from three years earlier ($1,899),” added Rentals.ca Volodymyr Kyrylyuk/Shutterstock Several other B.C. cities also cracked the 50 priciest Canadian markets to rent, including New Westminster at number 17, Victoria at number 19, Langley at number 21, Surrey at number 26, and Nanaimo at number 31. Average asking rents in Canada remain 5.7 per cent higher than two years ago and 12.6 per cent higher than three years ago. Are you a renter who’s seeing a drop in the asking rent price? Are you experiencing challenges finding a rental within your budget? Let us know in the comments or get in touch at [email protected] .

    Share this page
  • |

    Developer reimagines Capilano Mall with 3,100 homes, 40 storey towers, and new park

    There will be 11 towers in total and the range of tower heights will vary between 12 and 40 storeys. A massive new redevelopment is planned on North Shore as Capilano Mall is reimagined with more than 3,000 housing units in eleven 12-to-40-storey tower buildings. A new community centre and a 1.5-acre park are also…

    Share this page
  • | | | | |

    Vancouver swamped by unsold condos as supply outpaces demand

    Open this photo in gallery: A condo tower under construction in downtown Vancouver, on Feb. 9, 2020. DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press In Metro Vancouver, supply has most definitely outpaced demand. The number of newly built, unsold condo units in the Vancouver region is expected to increase by 60 per cent by year’s end. That will bring the total of new units sitting empty to 3,493 – a 60 per cent increase from the 2,179 homes that sat empty and unsold by the end of 2024. These are multifamily units that have an occupancy permit and are move-in ready. Ryan Berlin, head economist and vice-president of Rennie Intelligence, part of Rennie Marketing, a Vancouver-based real estate marketing firm that represents some of the country’s largest developers, said 2025 will close with the “highest level of unsold condo inventory” that the region has seen in many years. It’s a bleak situation for developers, hampered by trade wars, an uncertain interest rate, rising costs and regulations designed to thwart a previous market that was driven by speculation and investment. Those days are over. “Right now, the market is out of gas. Nothing is working for developers. It’s not really working for buyers. So, we’re just kind of stagnating right now,” said Mr. Berlin. The story is all about the missing investor – a key player in the housing market. And they’ve run for the exits. Mr. Berlin has long kept statistics on investors, and from 2020 to 2023 they represented half of Rennie Marketing’s buyers. By 2024, they made up one-quarter of buyers. This year, only seven per cent of buyers are investors, he said. The investor buyer has kept the condo market going for decades. Willing to put up the deposit far in advance of the completed building, the investor enables the developer to obtain financing to construct. Once completed, the investor finds tenants for the unit, and investor landlords became a significant source of housing in the rental market. When lucrative rents were achievable, and borrowing money was cheap, the investor could easily cover costs, known as positive cash flow. But the conditions flipped, and with dropping rents and rising interest rates, many of them entered significant negative cash flow, said Berlin. “It’s not very palatable,” he said. There are other factors. Mr. Berlin said that the capital gains inclusion rate may no longer be on the table, but it created enough fear that people sold off properties. The federal anti-flipping tax, which treats gains on the sale of a house within one year as business income, has also curtailed investor buying. The federal temporary foreign buyer ban has reduced foreign money investment. Short-term rental restrictions have also put a dint in the investor market, particularly in tourist-driven markets like Kelowna. Developers were already dealing with high construction costs and soaring municipal fees. And policies that made sense in a hot market rife with speculation – which defined 2015 and 2016 – are restricting the market even more. “If somebody has money to invest in something and they look at this market, they’ll go, ‘Wow, I’m really being squeezed. Maybe I’ll just put it into a GIC.’ “It’s not to judge any of these policies as being good or bad overall for society, like a sort of net utility,” said Mr. Berlin. “But certainly, for investors … this real imbalance got created between risk and reward. The opportunity for reward diminished and the risks increased.” The dire situation has some developers asking for relief, such as easing up on the requirement that they provide social housing within a rental or strata tower, such as around transit-oriented areas and within some parts of the massive Broadway Plan area of Vancouver. Developer Tony Hepworth, president of Pennyfarthing Development, said six-storey wood-frame buildings are far more realistic than concrete towers. And the requirement to provide 20 per cent social housing in residential towers isn’t viable for most developers in this market. “We haven’t seen it yet, and not in Vancouver, but other municipalities have started dropping their requirement for affordable housing, from 20 to 10 per cent. I think they are going to have to drop it,” he said of Vancouver. “Talking to my colleagues, and some of them are bigger developers than we are, and we are saying that we can’t see how these big towers can go ahead, whether condo or rental at the moment.” Commercial broker Ian Brackett, from Goodman Commercial, said the cost to build a below-market rental unit is about double the actual value of the unit once completed. It means the market rate units elsewhere in the building must be significantly higher, and renters can only pay so much. “It has become very obvious that insisting on 20 per cent below market has become too much of a burden and is rendering many projects unfeasible,” said Mr. Brackett. “The question becomes, would renters and the city as a whole be better off having more housing built even if it is all at market rates, if the alternative is to have nothing built? Twenty per cent of nothing is zero.” The city said in an e-mail response that it is open to making policy changes to address the increasingly challenging market. “City staff certainly appreciate that market conditions are difficult for development at this time,” said Matt Shillito, director of special projects. “The market is dynamic with many different

    Share this page