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BUYER GUIDE

How to Negotiate a House Price in Quebec: 7 Strategies That Work

With a 15% drop in sales in January 2026, Quebec’s real estate market offers buyers more negotiating room than in recent years. Here are 7 concrete strategies.

📅 February 2026⏱️ 10 min read🏠 Buyer guide

🎯 Know the true value before negotiating

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According to the APCIQ, residential sales in Quebec dropped by 15% in January 2026 compared to the previous year. The median price of a single-family home stands at $615,000 (+4%), condos at $428,000 (+2%) and plexes at $841,800 (+8%). Despite rising prices, the drop in transaction volume creates a more balanced market — and more room to negotiate. With a policy rate at 2.25% and 5-year fixed rates around 3.69%, here is how to take advantage of this context.

📊 Strategy 1 — Use recent comparables

Comparables are recent sales of similar properties (same type, same area, comparable size) over the past 6 months. This is the strongest and most objective argument to justify an offer below the asking price.

Search for 3 to 5 recent sales within a 1 km radius

Compare prices per square foot ($/sq ft)

Present this data in your offer to support your price

💡 Tip: use CourtiConnect’s free estimator to get comparables in your area in seconds. Try the estimator →

🏛️ Strategy 2 — Compare price vs. municipal assessment

The municipal assessment is a public indicator of a property’s value. If the asking price significantly exceeds the municipal assessment (for example by 30% or more), it is a signal to negotiate.

⚠️ Caution: the municipal assessment does not always reflect the current market. It is updated every 3 years and may lag behind reality. Use it as one indicator among others, not as your sole reference.

⏳ Strategy 3 — Analyze time on Centris

The number of days a property has been on Centris is a key indicator of the seller’s motivation. The longer a property sits, the more likely the seller is to accept a lower offer.

30 d

Normal timeframe — little room

60+ d

Good negotiating leverage

90+ d

Strong leverage — motivated seller

💡 Did you know? With -15% in sales in January 2026, the average listing time is increasing. More and more properties exceed 60 days on Centris, which favors buyers.

🔍 Strategy 4 — The inspection as leverage

The pre-purchase inspection reveals defects that the seller may not always be aware of. Each identified defect is a factual lever for negotiation. The key: quantify the cost of repairs and request a credit or an equivalent price reduction.

Roof replacement needed — $15,000 to $25,000 in leverage

Cracked foundation — $5,000 to $15,000 in leverage

Outdated plumbing — $3,000 to $10,000 in leverage

Water infiltration — $5,000 to $20,000 in leverage

💡 Advice: check out our complete guide on pre-purchase inspections to know exactly what to look for. Pre-purchase inspection guide →

🤝 Strategy 5 — Offer flexible conditions

Price is not the only negotiable element. Favorable conditions for the seller can offset a lower price offer.

Flexible possession date — Adapt to the seller’s schedule

Offer subject to inspection only — Fewer conditions = more attractive offer

Short financing deadline — Show that you are pre-approved

Higher deposit — Signal of seriousness for the seller

⚠️ Caution: never waive the inspection condition to “win” a negotiation. Hidden defects can cost far more than the negotiated price difference.

📋 Strategy 6 — Defects disclosed by the seller

In Quebec, the seller must complete a seller’s declaration (mandatory form) that lists the known defects of the property. Each disclosed defect is a source of valuable information — and a legitimate negotiating lever.

Read carefully each section of the declaration

Quantify the cost of correcting each disclosed defect

Include these amounts in your offer to justify a lower price

💡 Example: if the seller declares a moisture problem in the basement and the repair costs $8,000, you can legitimately ask for $8,000 less on the price or a credit at closing.

🛑 Strategy 7 — When NOT to negotiate

Knowing when not to negotiate is as important as knowing how to do it. In some situations, an aggressive offer risks losing you the property.

Multiple offers — If several buyers are competing, negotiating downward eliminates you

Seller’s market — When demand exceeds supply, the balance of power is reversed

Recent and well-priced property — If comparables confirm the asking price, negotiating is not justified

Rare dream home — If the property is unique and perfectly matches your criteria, the risk of losing it is too great

⚠️ Golden rule: negotiating aggressively in a multiple-offer situation can cost you the property. A competitive offer with good conditions is better than a low offer that will be rejected.

Estimate the real value before negotiating

Our estimator uses recent comparables to give you a fair price. Negotiate with confidence.

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