Is Buying a Presale a Good Idea for a First-Time Buyer in 2026?
The honest 2026 answer for BC first-timers: a presale can wipe out up to $50,000 in tax and lock your price early — but only if your timeline is patient and the price beats resale.
For most BC first-time buyers in 2026, a presale is a good idea if — and only if — you can wait two to three years for keys and the contract price beats today's resale comparables. The upside is real: up to $50,000 in GST wiped out, full property transfer tax exemption, a locked price, and a rare buyer's market where developers are handing out incentives. The catch is a falling-benchmark condo market and a mortgage that isn't approved until completion. Here's the honest breakdown of who should buy and who should wait.
The 2026 backdrop: a genuine buyer's market
The Fraser Valley Real Estate Board's June 2026 numbers tell the story. The benchmark condo price is $476,400 — down 1.5% in a single month and 9.1% year-over-year. Board-wide benchmarks now sit 26% below their 2022 peak, the sales-to-active ratio is around 11% (anything under 12% is a buyer's market), and condos are taking roughly 38 days to sell. The Bank of Canada held its policy rate at 2.25% on June 10 (its fifth straight hold) and is widely expected to hold again on July 15, with the best insured 5-year fixed mortgage back below 4% at 3.94%.
Translation for a first-timer: you have leverage you didn't have three years ago. But leverage cuts both ways on a presale, because your price is set today while your mortgage and the market are settled at completion.
Where a presale genuinely wins for a first-time buyer
The tax stack is the single biggest reason presale beats resale for a qualifying first-timer. On a new home you get access to programs a resale buyer never sees.
| Program (2026) | What it does for a first-timer |
|---|---|
| First-Time Buyer GST Rebate | 100% of the 5% federal GST refunded up to a $1M price (max $50,000), phasing to $0 at $1.5M. Agreements on/after Mar 20, 2025. |
| Newly-Built Home PTT Exemption | Full property transfer tax exemption up to $1.1M fair market value (principal residence, move in within 92 days). |
| FHSA | $8,000/year, $40,000 lifetime — tax-deductible going in, tax-free coming out for a first home. |
| Home Buyers' Plan (HBP) | Withdraw up to $60,000 from your RRSP for a down payment, repay over 15 years. |
Beyond tax, presale gives you a locked price with a small deposit (typically staged — 5% at signing, more over the following months), brand-new everything under the 2-5-10 BC new-home warranty, and — in a market this soft — developer incentives like price credits, décor dollars, and extended or reduced deposits on buildings selling now.
Worked example: a $600,000 presale condo
Say you're a first-time buyer under a $600,000 one- or two-bedroom presale in Surrey, completing in 2028.
| Line item | Without programs | As a first-time buyer |
|---|---|---|
| 5% GST | $30,000 | $0 (100% rebate ≤ $1M) |
| Property transfer tax | $10,000 | $0 (newly-built exemption ≤ $1.1M) |
| Tax eliminated | — | ≈ $40,000 saved |
Your minimum down payment on $600,000 is $35,000 (5% on the first $500K plus 10% on the next $100K), which your FHSA and HBP can largely fund tax-efficiently. One planning note: above a $500,000 price, choose the newly-built PTT exemption, not the first-time-buyer PTT exemption — the first-time version only fully covers homes up to $500,000 and you can't stack both.
Where it can go wrong — read this before you sign
The appraisal-gap risk is the big one in 2026. Your mortgage is approved at completion, not at signing. In a market where the benchmark is sliding 1–1.5% a month, a unit contracted today could appraise below your purchase price in 2028 — meaning your lender funds a mortgage on the lower value and you cover the shortfall in cash. The defence: buy at or below today's resale price per square foot, and keep a financing buffer.
Two more honest cautions. First, timeline: if you need a home in the next 6–12 months, presale is the wrong tool — you're buying a 2027–2028 completion. Second, re-qualification: your income and rates get re-checked at completion, so a job change or a rate spike between now and then can put your financing at risk. A presale rewards patient, stable buyers and punishes rushed ones.
Who should buy — and who should wait
Presale suits you if…
You have stable income, a 2–3 year horizon, want brand-new with warranty, and you're using the FTHB tax stack. The forced-savings deposit schedule fits people still building their down payment.
Wait or buy resale if…
You need to move within a year, your income or employment is uncertain, or the presale is priced above comparable resale units. In a falling market, an existing condo you can appraise and finance today is often the safer first home.
Do this: before you fall for a show suite, pull the resale price per square foot for the same neighbourhood and completion-ready buildings. We only recommend presales priced at or below that resale equivalent — a filter that removes most of what's being marketed right now, and protects you from the appraisal gap.
FAQ
Can a first-time buyer really pay zero GST and zero PTT on a presale?
Yes, on a qualifying purchase. The federal First-Time Buyer GST Rebate refunds 100% of the 5% GST up to a $1M price (max $50,000), and BC's newly-built home exemption removes property transfer tax up to $1.1M fair market value for a principal residence. On a $600,000 condo that's roughly $40,000 eliminated. You must not have owned a principal residence in the year of purchase or the four prior calendar years, and the agreement must be dated on or after March 20, 2025.
Is 2026 a good time to buy a presale, or should I wait?
2026 is a buyer's market — benchmarks are 26% below the 2022 peak and developers are offering incentives. That's favourable if your timeline is 2–3 years. The trade-off is appraisal-gap risk while prices keep sliding, so the discipline is buying below resale value, not just waiting for a lower headline price.
Does using a realtor cost a first-time buyer anything on a presale?
No. On a presale the developer pays the buyer's-agent commission out of its marketing budget, so the price is the same whether you bring your own agent or not — but going direct means no one is advocating for you on price, incentives, and contract terms. Register your agent on your first visit to the presentation centre.
The Bottom Line
For a patient, stable first-time buyer, a 2026 presale is one of the best-value entries into the BC market in years — up to $50,000 in tax gone, a locked price, and a buyer's market full of incentives. It stops being a good idea the moment your timeline is tight or the price sits above resale. Get the price-per-square-foot check and the tax stack right, and a presale can be the smartest first home you'll ever buy.
Want a straight answer on whether a specific project pencils out for you? Book a free 15-min call — buyer-only advice, no developer pitch.
Related reading: How to stack every first-time buyer program on a BC presale · How much cash you actually need to buy a presale · Browse current Surrey presale condos. Sources: CRA & Department of Finance (First-Time Home Buyers' GST Rebate, Royal Assent Mar 12, 2026); gov.bc.ca (newly-built home PTT exemption); FVREB June 2026 statistics; Bank of Canada (June 10, 2026 rate decision).