These days, Coal Harbour is especially quiet. The brochures still include champagne shots and expansive views, and the sales offices still glow at night, but the foot traffic has decreased in a way that seasoned agents claim they have never seen before. Interest rates make up a portion of it. The general cooling that affected Canadian housing after 2022 is partly to blame. However, anyone strolling through the city’s upscale skyscrapers can sense something different beneath them—something more structural and subdued. Questions are now being asked about the money that used to flow freely.
Vancouver’s luxury market existed in a paradox for many years. The city was renowned for its opaqueness and high cost. Through numbered companies, family trusts, and offshore intermediaries, pre-sale condos in Yaletown and mansions in Shaughnessy were being traded, and the individuals behind the paper were hardly ever identified. The extensive three-year provincial investigation known as the Cullen Commission concluded that billions had been laundered through the province annually, with real estate carrying a large portion of the burden. It also came to the somewhat awkward conclusion that the primary cause of high prices was not money laundering. It was in low supply. However, the regulatory response was already underway, and the perception had solidified.
The most useful tool was the Land Owner Transparency Registry, which was introduced in late 2020 and made publicly searchable in 2021. Its idea sounds boring, but it’s anything but. The names of the true beneficial owners must now be filed by anyone holding land in British Columbia through a corporation, trust, or partnership. a threshold of ten percent. searchable by parcel by the public. penalties that increase with the value of the property. It’s the kind of rule that doesn’t make headlines after the first month, but you can see its impact in listing data, conversations at notary offices, and suddenly cautious pre-sale contracts.

In a cinematic sense, what has transpired since is not dramatic. No single crash or panic sell-off has occurred. It is more akin to draining. Listings have a longer lifespan. Developers now soft-pitch domestic buyers instead of heavily relying on international marketing campaigns. Quiet cancellations have been reported in a number of large pre-sale projects when it became difficult to respond to questions about the source of funding. Realtors who once worked with a certain type of client inform you, almost casually, that those clients have moved on to Dubai, Lisbon, or wherever the next opaque corridor opens.
It is more difficult to precisely define the price effect. The majority of the visible work on the benchmark numbers is being done by macro forces, such as borrowing costs and federal foreign-buyer measures. However, in the ultra-luxury segment, turnover has slowed and the difference between asking and selling prices has grown. Some appraisers believe that valuations from 2021 are no longer applicable. No one wants to be the first to publicly state that the ceiling may have quietly decreased by 10 to 15 percent at the top.
The cultural shift is also difficult to ignore. Ten years ago, the empty penthouse was considered a feature rather than a bug in Vancouver. These same penthouses now appear to be liabilities. It’s still unclear if the city will have a more transparent market or just a more covert version of the previous one. You get the impression that the reckoning is ongoing as you watch this play out. It has only ceased to act as though it is not taking place.


