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7 Low-Stress Things to do Now if you Want to Buy in 2026

Chris Holm

Whether buying or selling, hundreds of clients in the Armstrong and North Okanagan area have relied on Chris Holm since 2007...

Whether buying or selling, hundreds of clients in the Armstrong and North Okanagan area have relied on Chris Holm since 2007...

Dec 8 8 minutes read

If you are thinking about buying in 2026, winter break can be a useful window. The pace is slower, routines shift, and you usually get a few quiet pockets of time that are hard to find in spring. You do not need to spend this season touring open houses or trying to time the market. You can make real progress by getting clear on your numbers, your priorities, and your timeline.

Below are seven steps we walk buyers through when they want to move forward without turning the holidays into a second job.

Run a sample budget using today’s borrowing costs

Start by building a sample monthly housing payment you can live with. Not a best-case scenario, and not the number an online calculator gives you when you push the down payment slider to a fantasy amount. A realistic payment that works with your current income and your current life.

For most buyers, the most helpful exercise is to pick three monthly payment targets, for example: comfortable, doable, and stretch, and see what purchase prices those payments roughly translate to at current rates. Include property taxes, homeowners insurance, and any HOA or condo fees if you are considering those. This gives you a working range before you ever fall in love with a house.

If you already know your down payment goal, include it. If you do not, pick a conservative number and rerun the math later. The goal right now is a budget you trust enough to build a plan around.

Audit recurring expenses and test-drive your “mortgage swap”

A mortgage payment does not land in your life as a brand-new expense. It replaces things too: rent, storage, certain subscriptions you keep, recurring delivery habits that creep up when schedules are packed.

During a quiet evening, pull up your last two months of statements and identify recurring charges. Do not judge them. Just label them. Streaming platforms, gym memberships, subscriptions, car payments, childcare, student loans, insurance, and the purchases that show up on the same day every month.

Then run a “mortgage swap” test. If your future housing payment is higher than your current rent, what would you change to make room for it without creating stress every month? What stays because it is part of your real life, and what can move because it is mostly convenience or habit?

When buyers do this early, they come into the process calmer. They are not guessing what they can afford. They have already tried it on.

Pull your credit and make a short, specific improvement plan

Credit does not need to be perfect to buy a home, but surprises are expensive. If you want to buy in 2026, give yourself time to fix issues the simple way, without rushing or paying for quick fixes you do not understand.

Pull your reports and look for common issues: errors on accounts or balances, high credit utilization, missed payments that could be corrected or explained, and accounts that are older but still reporting incorrectly.

If you see something that needs work, pick one or two actions and commit to them for the next 90 days. Paying down a card to lower utilization is often more impactful than opening a new line of credit. If you are not sure what matters most, a lender can tell you where your effort will actually move the needle.

This step is quiet and unglamorous. It is also one of the highest leverage moves you can make for your future rate and your loan options.

Make a “non-negotiables vs nice-to-haves” list with everyone involved

This is the step most people skip until they are standing in a kitchen arguing about storage.

Set aside an hour and write two lists: non-negotiables and nice-to-haves. If you are buying with a partner, do it separately first, then compare. If kids or other family members will be part of the move, keep the conversation simple and practical: what matters in daily life.

Non-negotiables are requirements you can defend with real reasons. Think commute limits, number of bedrooms you truly need, school boundaries if that applies, accessibility needs, or a layout that supports work-from-home. Nice-to-haves can be important, but they are flexible: a bigger yard, a certain style, a finished basement, a second living room.

When buyers do this early, they make faster decisions later, because they are not trying to invent priorities in the moment. It also helps us do our job better. We can filter options based on what you actually need, not what sounds good on paper.

Set up a simple homebuying folder

You do not need a complicated system. You just need one place where information lives.

Create a folder, digital, paper, or both, that includes pay stubs, W-2s, tax returns, bank statements, down payment documentation, notes from lender conversations, a running list of neighborhoods or property types you are considering, and questions you want answered before you write an offer.

If you like browsing listings, keep it disciplined. Save properties that match your future criteria and write one sentence about why you saved each one. That note becomes useful later when you look back and realize half of what you saved was based on a photo angle or a renovation you did not actually want to pay for.

Organization is not busywork here. It prevents the process from spilling into every part of your life once you are ready to move.

Pick two or three neighborhoods to learn, not just scroll

Most buyers start with a wide map search. That is normal. The next step is narrowing to a short list so you can learn what “normal” looks like in those areas.

Choose two or three target neighborhoods, towns, or property types and track them for a few weeks. Watch what comes on the market, what goes pending quickly, and what sits. Note the price points for homes that match your needs. Pay attention to HOA fees and property taxes where they apply. If you are considering condos, track building rules and special assessments along with square footage.

This is where working with a local team helps. We can show you what is typical in our market, including patterns that do not show up in listing photos, like which streets have more traffic, where snow removal is slow, or which buildings have stricter rental rules.

The goal is familiarity. Familiarity removes a lot of the panic that shows up when you see a listing you like and feel like you have 20 minutes to decide.

Build a simple 2026 timeline with checkpoints

A 2026 purchase does not need a single “go” date. It needs a few checkpoints.

Pick a rough season you are aiming for, spring, summer, or fall, and then work backward: when you want to have your down payment target in place, when you want to be pre-approved, when you want to start touring seriously, and when you want to be ready to write an offer without scrambling.

Then add two buffers: one for life, travel, school schedules, work deadlines, and one for the market, slow listing weeks, bidding situations, financing details that take time.

This timeline is about reducing decision fatigue. When the steps are scheduled, you don't spend months thinking about buying without moving forward.

Final Thoughts

If you are using winter break to think ahead, we can check your plan and give you real numbers for our market. Share your rough timing, your payment comfort zone, and a couple of areas you are considering, and we will help you translate that into a clear next step.

Share your rough timing, your payment comfort zone, and a couple of areas you are considering, and we will help you translate that into a clear next step.

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