Why Richmond Centre earns its premium
Richmond Centre is priced around mobility and supply diversity. HOMS Intelligence tracks a Q1 2026 median price estimate of $780K, 22 median days on market, and an 80 Walk Score. Canada Line access gives the area a direct rail link to Vancouver, YVR, and employment along the Cambie and airport corridors. That connectivity supports both owner-occupier demand and rental demand.
The market is not one product type. Condos near the mall and transit carry the highest convenience premium, while townhouses and older low-rise inventory serve buyers who need more space but still want central Richmond access. Richmond Secondary and Cook Elementary add school-pathway relevance, especially for households comparing central Richmond against Vancouver, Burnaby, and suburban townhouse alternatives.
Pacific Gateway proximity matters for workers tied to the airport, logistics, hospitality, and cross-border travel. It also affects rental depth because tenants can use the Canada Line corridor without owning a vehicle. A licensed REALTOR® should verify current MLS comparables and building-specific tenure before relying on neighbourhood-level data.
Where HOMS sees value
We analyse Richmond Centre by separating freehold and leasehold exposure. The leasehold-versus-freehold split can create headline price gaps that are easy to misunderstand. A lower purchase price does not automatically mean better value if lease terms, financing constraints, remaining term, or resale liquidity reduce exit optionality.
For freehold condos, HOMS Intelligence favours efficient layouts, walkable transit access, clean strata history, and buildings where fees are proportional to useful amenities. Townhouses can offer better family utility, but buyers need to test maintenance obligations, strata governance, and replacement-cost risk. Rental investors should model vacancy conservatively even in a tight rental market because carrying cost can move faster than rent.
What to watch
Richmond Centre’s 22 median days on market gives buyers some room to compare inventory, but desirable freehold product near Canada Line stations can tighten quickly. The main diligence items are tenure, strata documents, parking, flood-related insurance considerations, and future supply around the mall corridor.
HOMS Intelligence treats the $780K median as a corridor benchmark, not a substitute for unit-level analysis. In Richmond Centre, tenure and building quality can matter as much as floor area.
Data reflects HOMS Intelligence estimates for Q1 2026. Verify with current MLS data before transacting.
