Fresh supply added depth to the market this week.
The market is working, but still filtering hard.
Buyer market.
Signal of the Week
9 new listings - 3 sales (median sold $927, 000)
Market pulse
These charts show where the market stood at the date of issue - inventory, then sales momentum.
Inventory
98.0 current
High 136 · Low 5.00
98 homes on market
Supply is running below last year, which keeps fresh, well-priced listings more competitive.
Sales
3.50 8-week avg
High 5.38 · Low 1.50
3.5 sales/week
Demand is present, but absorption remains light relative to available supply.
Sales that explain the market
Sales happened - but they did not come easily.
Buyers are still active, but they are choosing carefully. The right listings still move, while others need more time or a sharper number.
One listing cleared quickly while another took the long road. Buyers are active, but the board is not clearing quickly. That tells you buyers are present without much urgency. Pricing and presentation remain the difference between momentum and drift. 1 sold over ask while 1 sold under ask. Median sold price was $927,000. Price moves are doing more of the market’s talking right now. That tells you buyers are not accepting stretch pricing automatically. Price discipline is likely to matter more than marketing spin. A visible price cut showed up on the board this week. 1 visible price cut landed this week. Median cut: $80,000. Largest cut: $80,000.
New listings
The week usually reveals itself through new listings first. That matters because not every active week is an easy one. From there, everything else is just response.
If you want the tone of the week, start with what hit the board. That matters because not every active week is an easy one.
If I’m trying to get a fast read on the week, I start here.
6-4576 Timberline Crescent - $1,399,000 Worth watching early - detached launches often tell you fastest whether buyers are prepared to act or just compare. Detached launches like this tend to tell you fastest whether buyers are ready to act or still compare. Also new this week 1591 11th Avenue - $1,140,000 37 PARK Crescent - $1,779,000 2 Piedmont Drive - $1,595,000 2-300 CANYON Trail - $575,000 B-6 Alpine Trail Lane - $939,900 See all listings →What I’m seeing
On paper the week held together. 9 new listings arrived while 3 sales closed. Supply is opening up faster than deals are getting finished. 1 sold over ask while 1 sold under ask. Taken together, this was a market that stayed active, but only rewarded listings that were positioned correctly. A visible price cut showed up on the board this week.
More listings does not automatically mean more sales. It usually shifts more power toward comparison and away from urgency. The sharper listings tend to separate earlier. The sharper launches should keep separating from the pack. That is usually when clarity starts beating optimism. This week added evidence more than it added a new direction. The market is working, but it is still making listings prove themselves. If the tone changes, it will likely show up first in pricing behaviour.
That is the practical takeaway for me.
This is a local read on the market, built from what actually showed up on the board this week.
If you want the blunt version on Fernie, I’m always happy to talk through what I’m seeing.
Where sellers blinked
If there was softness this week, it showed up here. That is often the clearest sign of comparison-driven demand. That is why price cuts can matter even in a week without dramatic sales volume.
A visible price cut showed up on the board this week.
If there was softness this week, it showed up here. This is one of the better places to see whether sellers are still pushing - or starting to listen.
- 1 visible price cut this week
- Weekly cut rate: 1.0% of active listings
- Median reduction: $80,000
Pressure on the board
- 35 active listings are currently trading below original list
- Reduced active share: 35.7% of the current active board
- Expired / cancelled this week: 12 (9 expired, 3 cancelled)
- 4-week average: 0.5 cuts/week
- 12-week average: 0.9 cuts/week
This week’s cuts to watch
- 101-4559 Timberline Crescent $479,900 → $399,900 - cut $80,000 (16.7%) - 269 DOM
That usually means sellers are getting feedback more quickly. Sellers who adjust decisively may avoid longer periods of drift.
The wider backdrop
Fernie is its own market, but I still keep an eye on the broader financing backdrop because buyers do feel it.
- BoC rate: As of 2026-04-03, the Bank of Canada policy rate was 2.25%, which matters most for variable-rate borrowers and helps shape borrowing confidence.
- Bond yields: Canada’s 5-year bond yield remains the main fixed-mortgage watch, and it had moved higher versus about a month earlier.
- Oil / inflation mood: Oil was rising into the week, so it was keeping inflation concerns a bit alive.
This keeps the backdrop tied to the week ending 2026-04-03, not today’s headlines.
What matters next
Whether buyers keep acting on the sharp listings first.
If the clean listings move early, demand is still there underneath this. If they do not, the next push likely comes from sellers getting sharper on price rather than from buyers suddenly disappearing.
Data notes. Data sourced from MLS activity for the week ending Apr 2 2026. Numbers reflect the Fernie market unless otherwise noted.