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Thinking of Downsizing in 2026 - Part II

Downsizing in 2026: How to Prepare Your Home Without Overdoing It

If 2026 is your target year to downsize, preparation is your biggest advantage. What you do before you list often has a greater impact on your outcome than what you do once the sign goes up.

The biggest mistake downsizers make? Waiting too long to prepare — then feeling rushed.

Declutter early, but with intention

Start where buyers won’t see — and where stress quietly builds:

  • Garages
  • Storage rooms
  • Spare bedrooms
  • Filing cabinets and paperwork

This isn’t about purging everything. It’s about identifying what truly needs to come with you — especially items tied to your lifestyle.

Decide what’s worth keeping close

This is the moment to separate:

  • Daily-use items
  • Seasonal gear you actively enjoy
  • “Just in case” items that haven’t been used in years

If you ski every winter, bike weekly, or paddle all summer, you’ll want a future home that accommodates that without friction. If you travel all winter, your storage needs will look very different.

Downsizing works best when your next home supports your life — not when it forces constant compromises.

Focus on updates that buyers actually value

You don’t need a full renovation. In Vernon’s established neighbourhoods, buyers respond best to:

  • Fresh, neutral paint
  • Updated or well-maintained flooring
  • Good lighting
  • Minor repairs completed

Homes that feel clean, bright, and well cared for consistently outperform those that feel dated or deferred.

Get a planning conversation early

A no-pressure review 12–18 months out helps you:

  • Decide what updates are worth doing
  • Avoid unnecessary spending
  • Time your sale more confidently

Preparation creates options — and options create leverage.

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Thinking of Downsizing in 2026 - Part I

Downsizing in 2026: Start With the “Why” — and the Lifestyle You Actually Live

If you’re considering downsizing in 2026, the most important work doesn’t start with listings, floor plans, or even price ranges. It starts with understanding why you want to downsize — and how you actually live day to day in the Vernon and the North Okanagan area.

Downsizing done well isn’t about giving things up. It’s about right-sizing your home to fit your next chapter.

Clarify the real motivation behind your move

Local downsizers often share similar goals, but they don’t all need the same type of home. Ask yourself:

  • Are you looking for less maintenance and yard work?
  • Do stairs feel less appealing than they once did?
  • Are you traveling more and want a “lock-and-leave” lifestyle?
  • Are you freeing up equity for retirement or family?

Your answers shape every decision that follows — especially what type of home will work best.

Lifestyle matters more than square footage

Many people focus on “smaller,” but the real shift is toward simpler living. In the Okanagan, that often means prioritizing:

  • One-level or main-floor living
  • Fewer exterior responsibilities
  • Proximity to shopping, medical services, and recreation
  • Quiet communities with strong resale demand

A 1,400 sq ft home that’s well designed can feel far more livable than a poorly laid-out 2,000 sq ft house.

Storage: the piece most downsizers underestimate

This is where many downsizing plans quietly fall apart.

Before choosing your next home, take an honest look at what you actually use and enjoy:

  • Are you a pickleball player who travels south all winter?
  • Do you ski SilverStar or Sovereign Lake, bike year-round, paddle or kayak Okanagan or Kal Lake?
  • Do you own multiple bikes, skis, or seasonal gear?
  • Do you have a boat, side-by-side or travel trailer?

Many downsizers quickly realize that off-site storage units are inconvenient, costly, and frustrating over time. Repeated trips across town to grab gear often take the joy out of the lifestyle they were trying to preserve.

In this market, smart downsizers look for:

  • Oversized garages
  • Secure storage lockers
  • Ground-level storage rooms
  • Space that keeps their lifestyle close by, not locked away

Give yourself emotional breathing room

Downsizing is both practical and emotional. Starting early in 2026 gives you time to:

  • Let go gradually
  • Talk through concerns
  • Avoid rushed decisions

The goal isn’t to move fast — it’s to move well.

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The True Cost of Home Ownership


The True Cost of Homeownership: What You Pay Beyond the Mortgage

When many new Canadian homebuyers calculate whether they can afford a new home, they focus almost exclusively on one number: the monthly mortgage payment. It’s the figure lenders use for the mortgage stress test, the number real estate agents discuss during showings, and the benchmark buyers use to determine their budget.[ratehub]​

However, the mortgage is only the starting line. Homeowners also pay for property taxes, insurance, utilities, strata special levies, surprise repairs, and ongoing maintenance. According to housing cost breakdowns from Ratehub, these non-mortgage expenses can easily add $1,500 or more per month on top of the mortgage, depending on the home and location. When you factor in these costs, a $3,000 monthly mortgage can quickly push total housing expenses well beyond $4,500 per month.[ratehub]​

So while qualifying for a mortgage answers one question, “Can a bank trust you with this loan?”, it doesn’t answer the more important one: “Can you comfortably maintain this lifestyle?”

In today’s market, about one in four Canadian homebuyers report experiencing at least some post-purchase regret. While most homeowners remain satisfied, research shows that regret often emerges when the true cost of ownership—such as maintenance, repairs, and ongoing living expenses—was higher than expected. To reduce the risk of buyer’s remorse, it’s critical for homebuyers to plan not just for the mortgage payment, but for the full cost of living in the home.ratehub+1

The Predictable Ongoing Costs

Property Taxes
Property tax bills have been rising in many Canadian cities as municipalities work to fund infrastructure and services. In 2024, the median year-over-year change in property tax rates among 24 major Canadian cities was about 4.9 percent, with some regions experiencing even greater increases.[zoocasa]​

Property taxes aren’t fixed. Reassessments and rate changes happen regularly, and as neighbourhood values rise, so do tax bills even when the rate stays the same.[zoocasa]​

Home Insurance
As of 2026, home insurance premiums in Canada have entered a “new normal.” Record weather-related losses in recent years, combined with higher rebuilding and replacement costs, continue to push insurers to raise rates and reassess risk across many regions.[ca.investing]​

In some provinces, home insurance premiums have increased sharply over the past decade, with upward pressure emerging nationwide. As insurers recalibrate risk at the postal-code level, homeowners can see their premiums rise $100–$200 per month in a single year—even without making a claim or changing coverage.[ca.investing]​

Condo and Strata Fees
For buyers entering the condo market, monthly fees typically range from $0.60 to $1.00 per square foot, depending on the building and amenities. These fees are mandatory and are used to fund day-to-day operations as well as long-term reserve funds for major repairs.[ratehub]​

By contributing regularly, owners help reduce the risk of large, unexpected special assessments later on.[ratehub]​

Utilities
Homeowners should budget between $250 to $600 monthly for utilities including electricity, heating, water, internet, and phone services, with costs varying based on your home’s size and location. These expenses often come as a surprise to first-time buyers, particularly those transitioning from apartment living where some utilities may have been included in rent. Larger homes naturally require more energy for heating and cooling, while properties with outdoor spaces may see higher water usage during warmer months.[ratehub]​

The "Commuter Tax"
There’s also what might be called “the commuter tax.” Moving to suburban markets for a cheaper house can increase gas and transit costs that often negate the mortgage savings. That apparent price difference can disappear quickly if you’re spending hundreds of dollars more each month on commuting.

Routine Maintenance
Beyond emergencies, Canadian homes require ongoing care: lawn service, gutter cleaning, pest control, HVAC servicing, snow removal, and seasonal tasks. These aren’t luxuries for many households—they’re practical solutions to time constraints and property upkeep in Canada’s demanding climate. Collectively, these services can add $200–$400 monthly to ownership costs.[ratehub]​

The Irregular—but Inevitable—Expenses

Major System Replacements
This is where many Canadian homeowners get caught off guard. Maintenance and repairs aren’t a matter of if but when—and rising labour and material costs have made these repairs significantly more expensive in recent years.[ca.investing]​

According to Statistics Canada and industry cost reports, home repair and maintenance costs have increased materially since 2018, driven by construction inflation and labour shortages. As a result, homeowners are commonly advised to budget 1%–2% of their home’s value annually for maintenance and long-term repairs.ratehub+1

Major system replacements can add up quickly:

  • Roof replacement: $8,000–$15,000+

  • HVAC (furnace or heat pump): $5,000–$12,000

  • Water heater: $1,200–$2,500

  • Foundation repairs: $4,000–$15,000+

These aren’t hypothetical expenses—they’re inevitable over time, with uncertain timing and rising costs.

Use the inspection as a planning tool. A 15-year-old furnace or aging roof signals $8,000–$15,000 in likely expenses within the first few years. That’s not a deal-breaker—it’s a budget roadmap. Buyers who understand these timelines can plan strategically instead of scrambling when systems fail.

Canada’s climate makes this worse. The “freeze-thaw” cycle wears down roofs, driveways, and foundations faster than in many milder climates, shortening the effective lifespan of key components. A roof that might last 25 years in a gentler environment may need replacement years sooner in parts of Canada.

Newer isn’t maintenance-free. Newer builds offer a temporary reprieve, but systems still age, warranties expire, and eventually every home requires major capital improvements.

Emergency repairs happen at the worst times. An HVAC failure during a cold snap, a burst pipe in winter, or ice dam damage to the roof—these scenarios happen when it’s least convenient and most expensive. Without liquid reserves, a single emergency can derail finances entirely.

Ownership Costs That Creep Up Over Time

Here’s what surprises many first-time Canadian buyers: the so-called “fixed costs” of homeownership aren’t actually fixed.

While a locked-rate mortgage provides payment stability for your term (typically 5 years in Canada), the other components—taxes, insurance, and condo fees—can climb significantly year over year due to inflation, climate risk, and local policy changes. A mortgage payment that felt comfortable at closing can feel tight three years later, even without lifestyle changes.[zoocasa]​

The “2026 Renewal Wall” presents a significant challenge for Canadian homeowners. Approximately 60% of all outstanding mortgages in Canada are expected to renew in 2025 or 2026, with many owners facing substantial payment increases. Unexpected costs go beyond just maintenance and repairs. Many homeowners will experience sticker shock when their mortgage payments reset at higher rates upon renewal.collectorhq+1

The same gradual creep affects utilities, maintenance services, and every other aspect of homeownership.[ratehub]​

Planning Smarter: How Canadian Homeowners Can Stay Ahead

Create a Dedicated House Repair Fund
Separate from emergency savings, this fund exists solely for home maintenance and repairs. Treat it like a non-negotiable monthly bill—set up automatic transfers so it happens without thinking about it.

The old rule of saving 1% of your home’s value annually for repairs is proving insufficient for some homeowners, particularly those with older properties or homes experiencing extreme weather. Aim for 2% if possible. For a newer home with recent updates, less might suffice. For an older property or one with systems nearing end-of-life, you’ll likely need to plan for greater costs.[ratehub]​

Don’t Drain Your Savings at Closing
Cash reserves protect against surprises and prevent forced debt when repairs arise. If possible, keep a liquid emergency repair fund after closing rather than putting every available dollar into the down payment or immediate renovations. That breathing room matters more than most buyers realize.[ratehub]​

Invest in Preventative Maintenance
Annual furnace servicing, gutter cleaning, and seasonal inspections catch small problems before they become expensive emergencies. A modest service call that prevents a major system failure is almost always worthwhile.

Create a seasonal maintenance calendar: HVAC checkups in spring and fall, gutter cleaning before winter, roof inspections after major storms. Consistency prevents costly surprises.

Leverage Canadian Tax Advantages
Consider leveraging Canadian tax advantages to build these reserves. First-time buyers should keep their FHSA (First Home Savings Account) open after purchase, or use the tax refund generated by it to seed their repair fund. The tax benefits you received while saving for the down payment can continue working for you as a homeowner.[ratehub]​

Know Your Home’s Systems and Timelines
Understanding when major systems were last replaced helps predict future expenses. A 15-year-old water heater isn’t an emergency today, but it signals a likely expense within the first few years of ownership. Planning beats scrambling.

Why Homeownership Still Makes Sense

Long-Term Equity Building
Mortgage payments build equity with every payment. Unlike rent, ownership creates a forced savings mechanism that compounds over decades. In most markets, homes appreciate over time, multiplying the wealth-building effect.[ratehub]​

Stability and Control
Homeowners control their living environment. Want to renovate the kitchen, paint the walls, landscape the yard, or install solar panels? Ownership provides autonomy that renting does not. That control has both lifestyle and financial value.[ratehub]​

Predictability vs. Rent Volatility
While ownership costs rise gradually over time, rent increases can be sudden and dramatic. A fixed-rate mortgage provides a level of predictability that the rental market cannot match.ratehub+1

Yes, taxes and insurance increase, but the principal and interest portion—typically a majority of the total payment—remains locked for your term. Renters face volatility on 100% of their housing costs.ratehub+1

Lifestyle Benefits
Beyond finances, homeownership offers intangible benefits: deeper community roots, stability for families, space for hobbies, and the pride of building something that’s truly yours. These benefits have real value, even if they don’t appear on a balance sheet.

The key is ensuring the financial foundation supports the lifestyle, not undermines it.

A Better Way to Think About Affordability

The true measure of affordability isn’t what a lender will approve—it’s what allows you to sleep well at night when the furnace fails or your mortgage comes up for renewal.

The smartest buyers calculate affordability as “mortgage plus carrying costs” from the start. This might narrow the price range slightly, but it creates breathing room and peace of mind that makes a house feel like a home.[ratehub]​

Homeownership remains one of the most powerful wealth-building tools available to Canadian families, but only when approached with financial realism rather than maximum leverage. Having an honest conversation about what affordability truly looks like isn’t about limiting dreams—it’s about making sure those dreams don’t become financial nightmares.[ratehub]​

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