Kelowna Real Estate Market Update: What’s Really Happening in the Central Okanagan (2025–2026 Outlook)
Kelowna Real Estate Market Update: Clarity Without the Noise
If you’ve been following the Kelowna and Central Okanagan real estate market, there’s a good chance you feel conflicted. Headlines suggest one thing. Friends and social media say another. And what buyers and sellers are actually experiencing on the ground doesn’t seem to match either.
Some people believe the market is dead.
Others feel prices never really came down.
Many are frozen, unsure whether now is the right time to buy or sell.
This market update is designed to slow everything down and focus on what actually matters: local data, real buyer behaviour, and realistic expectations for the Kelowna and Central Okanagan housing market.
📺 Watch the Full Kelowna Market Breakdownhttps://www.youtube.com/watchv=Qbp1PH_TT64
High-Level Overview of the Central Okanagan Housing Market
At a glance, the 2025 Kelowna real estate market appears contradictory.
Total sales increased year over year
Total dollar volume moved higher
Average sale prices remained largely flat
Days on market increased slightly
Seller discounts stayed consistent
This wasn’t a hot market.
It wasn’t a broken market either.
It was a selective market, and understanding that distinction explains nearly everything that happened.
Kelowna Home Sales Are Up — But Prices Haven’t Surged
In 2025, real estate activity in the Central Okanagan increased modestly compared to the previous year. More transactions occurred, and more money moved through the system overall.
However, average sale prices barely moved.
For many buyers and sellers, this created confusion. Normally, higher sales activity is associated with rising prices. That didn’t happen here, and there’s a reason for it.
Which Properties Actually Sold in Kelowna?
When sales are broken down by property type, the picture becomes much clearer.
Single-Family Homes Led the Market
The majority of net new activity in 2025 came from single-family homes. This segment saw meaningful growth, while other segments lagged behind.
Condos and Townhomes Lagged
Condo sales dipped slightly
Townhome sales remained largely flat
First-time buyer activity did not rebound in a meaningful way
This tells us something important: the market was not driven by improved affordability.
Instead, it was driven by buyers who already had capacity.
A Bifurcated Market: Where the Real Momentum Was
One of the most important takeaways from the 2025 Kelowna real estate market is how sharply performance diverged by price range.
As prices increased, so did conviction.
Sales over $1M increased significantly
$2M, $3M, and higher price points saw even stronger gains
Ultra-luxury properties outperformed expectations
This is a classic example of a bifurcated housing market.
Capital didn’t leave the Okanagan.
It simply moved up.
Buyers with equity skipped compromised properties and moved directly into single-family and executive homes.
Inventory Levels and Buyer Psychology in Kelowna
Inventory remained elevated throughout the year compared to previous market cycles.
While that created more selection for buyers, demand was significantly lower than during peak years. The result was a market with:
Less urgency
More negotiation
More conditional offers
More selective decision-making
Buyers felt empowered.
Sellers often felt frustrated.
Many sellers continued to anchor their expectations to 2021 and 2022 pricing, while buyers were operating in a very different environment.
Has Kelowna Real Estate Still Been a Good Investment?
This is the question many homeowners hesitate to ask out loud.
The last few years may not have felt like strong wealth-building years, particularly for those who bought near the peak. But zooming out tells a very different story.
Over the last decade, the average single-family home in Kelowna has seen substantial long-term appreciation. For most homeowners, equity growth has been driven by time, not timing.
The number of homeowners who are truly underwater is very small, and largely concentrated in a short window in early 2022.
For the majority of homeowners, equity positions remain strong.
Who Will Drive the Kelowna Housing Market in 2026?
The next phase of the Kelowna real estate market will be driven by a very specific group.
Homeowners who bought between 2018 and 2020
Buyers in their early-to-mid 40s
Households entering peak earning and consumption years
Move-up buyers with significant equity
This group has:
More selection than they’ve had in years
Less competitive pressure
The ability to make strategic upgrades
These buyers are likely to drive demand in the single-family and executive home segments moving forward.
Kelowna Real Estate Forecast for 2026
The outlook for 2026 is intentionally boring — and that’s a good thing.
No major boom expected
No major bust anticipated
Stable interest rates
Elevated inventory
Highly selective buyers
Sales activity tends to recover before prices move meaningfully. This phase of the market is about positioning, not trying to time the bottom.
The strongest opportunities are likely to remain concentrated in specific segments rather than spread evenly across the market.
Should You Buy or Sell in Kelowna Right Now?
There is no universal answer. It depends on your position, your timeline, and your strategy.
This market rewards:
Prepared buyers
Realistic sellers
Clear expectations
Strong advice
If you’re thinking about buying or selling in Kelowna or the Central Okanagan, understanding which segment you’re in matters far more than trying to predict headlines.
Final Thoughts
The Kelowna real estate market is not weak.
The fundamentals remain strong.
The confusion comes from mixed signals — not from instability.
Once you understand where activity is coming from and who is driving it, the market makes sense again.
If you’d like to understand what your home would sell for in today’s market, or you’re considering a move and want to explore current opportunities, you can start that process below.
