Kamloops and Okanagan real estate winners and losers of 2025

If you’re lucky enough to own a single-family home in the Central Okanagan you made $22,000 in 2025, but if you own a townhouse you’re out of pocket $70,000.

Numbers released by the Association of Interior Realtors put the price of a single-family home in the Central Okanagan at $1,045,700, up $22,000 from $1,023,700 in December 2024.

Townhome owners, however, took a considerable loss with the benchmark townhome now going for $675,700, down almost 10% from $746,400.

Those who forked out for a condo in the Central Okanagan saw the benchmark decrease a touch, dropping to $470,600 from $475,500 in 2025.

Figures from the real estate report Kelowna Rennie Advance, which uses a different geographical boundary, show that single-family and townhome sales in the Central Okanagan are 15% and 17% below the decade average, respectively, while condo sales lag 30% below the 10-year average.

However, the Rennie report does note that the Central Okanagan is the only major BC market to record a year-over-year sales increase, with sales down 12% in Vancouver and largely stagnant in Greater Victoria.

Single-family homeowners in the Southern Interior saw the biggest drop in the value of their home, with the benchmark price dropping to $708,300 from $760,100.

Townhome owners in the Southern Interior fared better with the value of their property increasing $3,200 to $503,100, and condo owners made $900 with their digs increasing to $416,400.

Single-family home owners in Kamloops saw a $7,600 increase in the value of their homes, with the benchmark price now at $655,700.

Townhome owners lost $4,000 with their Kamloops property now valued at $503,300, and condo owners came out the best, seeing their apartments go up in value by more than $25,000.

The benchmark price for a condo in Kamloops is now $375,800.

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Ben Bulmer

After a decade of globetrotting, U.K. native Ben Bulmer ended up settling in Canada in 2009. Calling Vancouver home he headed back to school and studied journalism at Langara College. From there he headed to Ottawa before winding up in a small anglophone village in Quebec, where he worked for three years at a feisty English language newspaper. Ben is always on the hunt for a good story, an interesting tale and to dig up what really matters to the community.

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