Port Moody vs Coquitlam
Overview.
Read moreCase study
A Port Moody family crossed the border to Burke Mountain. The move was bigger than the mileage suggested. Here's what they gained, what they gave up, and what I'd tell someone else considering it.
What the numbers actually looked like — before and after.
Every deal reads clean when you look at the closing statement. The real work happens in the 6-8 weeks before subject removal, when the plan has to survive contact with reality. The file behind this case study: a Heritage Woods Port Moody family ready to move into Burke Mountain for newer inventory. What made it non-trivial: both transactions had to close the same week for school-transition alignment. What the outcome looked like: $1.99M Port Moody sale, $1.72M Burke Mountain purchase, zero bridge finance. The rest of this page walks through exactly what I did and why — unvarnished, including the parts where the first plan had to change.
The pricing strategy was the first decision that mattered. I don't recommend an aggressive list or an aggressive offer without a written rationale showing why — and the rationale has to survive being pressure-tested. In this case, the comparable-sold data supported a specific band, and we priced inside that band on purpose. Buyers (or sellers) who pick a number and reverse-engineer the rationale lose deals. The families who stick to a data-first framework write offers that actually close.
Subject-removal windows did the heavy lifting on this file. When you're coordinating two transactions — or one transaction with a tight financing contingency — the subject-removal schedule isn't a formality. It's the single most important instrument you own. I work backward from completion to lock down financing, inspection, and title-review windows that actually compress into the calendar available. The families who lose coordinated deals usually lose them in the subject-removal window, not the negotiation. The buyer hub walks through the standard sequence; a case like this deviates from it deliberately.
The outcome on this file closed clean, but it wasn't automatic. The lessons I took forward: (1) lock financing the week we list, not the week we write, (2) write subject-removal windows tight enough that the seller's counterparty doesn't blink, (3) front-load the honest conversations — if a piece of the plan isn't going to work, surface it in week one, not week seven. That's the framework. If you're navigating a similar situation, get on the calendar and we'll scope yours.
Family of five, youngest starting Grade 1. Port Moody detached that had served them for eight years, outgrown on both floor area and catchment. Wanted newer-build detached, strong elementary, and a real community feel. Illustrative composite based on common cross-border scenarios.
Crossed to Burke Mountain. Sold first, bought second. Timeline: seven months.
~1,000 extra sqft for a moderate net add.
For their specific children's schedule.
Lower maintenance, better mechanicals.
Burke Mountain matched the young-family vibe.
Kids' friends, block parties, the whole thing.
Rocky Point, Suter Brook — a real loss.
Driving everywhere in Burke Mountain.
Eight years of relationships restarting.
Longer from Burke than from inland Port Moody.
Not there anymore for spontaneous trips.
Read Port Moody vs Coquitlam alongside this. For Burke Mountain specifically, Burke Mountain homes.
Two Saturdays in each city. Sell-first default. Catchment-locked filter before home touring. Real conversation about walkability trade-offs before committing. Cross-border moves aren't just bigger houses — they're different lives.
Specific catchment fit for their kids. Heritage was a close second.
No, but Port Moody walkability is genuinely missed. It's the real trade.
Marginally. SkyTrain from Moody Centre remains competitive with Burke.
Depends on both homes. On this move, net added ~$450K for ~1,000 sqft and newer build.
I answer these kinds of questions every day. A 15-minute call usually resolves it.
For Port Moody / Coquitlam movers.
Licensed REALTOR® with The Macnabs. Tri-Cities-fluent, written-advice-first. Here's how I work any client file that lands on this page.
A five-step process built around clarity, strategy, and no-surprise execution — whether you're buying your first home or selling a property you've owned for twenty years.
We start with a real conversation about your goals, timeline, and numbers. I'll pull current comps, assess your buying power or home's true market value, and tell you exactly what the data says — not what you want to hear.
I build a written strategy around your priorities: target neighbourhoods, pricing strategy, timeline, financing structure, and the trade-offs at each decision point. Every recommendation comes with a reason.
For sellers: pre-list prep, staging direction, pro photography, and a pricing framework that draws interest without leaving money on the table. For buyers: offer structure, subject clauses, and the due-diligence checklist for every property that matters.
This is where experience pays for itself. I negotiate price, terms, subjects, deposit, completion dates, and the small details that don't show up in listings but decide whether a deal closes well or falls apart.
From subject removal through completion and possession, I coordinate with lawyers, lenders, inspectors, and trades so nothing drops. After closing, I stay in your corner for everything from tax-assessment appeals to the next move.
The short, honest version. Every answer here is what I'd tell you on a call — no fluff, no generic listing-agent talk.
Most people lose money because they read generic advice and act on it. The pages below are the opposite — Coquitlam-specific, opinionated, and built from real transactions. Pick the lane that fits the move you're actually making.
No hedging. No "it depends." If a page above contradicts what another agent told you, ask them to cite their source — every number on this site is checkable.
The resources below go deeper on the same topic. If you're piecing together a full picture, these are the next logical reads.
Heritage Mountain sits inside Port Moody's boundary, so municipal services, parks, and zoning run through Port Moody City Hall — not Coquitlam. Every claim on this page is cross-verifiable against these authorities.
External links open in a new tab. The Macnabs is not affiliated with these organizations — they are cited as independent authorities. Any time a number on this page differs from the authority, the authority wins.
Real reviews pulled from Google. No paid placements. No curated-only-positives. Every client below closed with Craig — most sold over asking, several within a week.
“Craig sold my property in just 6 days. After receiving one offer, he quickly reconnected with all the other realtors who had viewed the property, and before I knew it, we had multiple offers — all over asking price. Craig didn’t stop there; he negotiated even better terms for me.”
“We worked with Craig on three real estate transactions. In all cases he was extremely professional and efficient. In the case of the two sales, both houses were sold for over asking and within the one week of going on market. Craig analyzed the market accurately and advised on a selling price that was fair and saleable.”
“Craig recently sold my townhouse in West Vancouver in less than 6 days for over asking price. Craig is one of the most prolific and highly motivated realtors I have seen in the Realty business, and I have extensive experience buying and selling properties of all sorts.”
“We consider ourselves lucky to be able to work with Craig over the last 5 years, over multiple transactions. He is a professional who is guided by integrity, honesty, and punctuality. Craig is a seasoned and well-informed realtor who will be a great asset on any real estate journey.”
“As first-time home buyers, we had a myriad of concerns. Craig immediately put us at ease by taking the time to address each of our questions thoroughly and patiently. At no point did I feel pressured or rushed into making a decision. Instead, Craig empowered us with all the facts and options.”
“One of the most dedicated and professional realtors I’ve encountered. No matter the value of the property, Craig puts great care into preparing high-quality marketing content. With his in-depth knowledge of the Coquitlam area, I highly recommend Craig to anyone looking to buy or sell.”
“His creativity, top-notch communication skills, and a solid plan were instrumental in selling high and buying low. His foresight in negotiation skills, predicting outcomes before they happened, truly set him apart. A remarkable professional who exceeded expectations.”
“Craig absolutely delivered on his promise of selling my condo, exceeding my expectations. A++ communications and he kept me informed and educated every single step of the way. Rock solid performance and a very quick above asking sale, I am beyond grateful.”
“We were referred to Craig by a friend and knew from day one we were in great hands. The marketing was outstanding — we received seven offers, and Craig held firm on our priorities. When we re-listed in January, it sold in three days at the price we wanted, and he went on to find us an off-market buy in Vernon.”
More on Port Moody
Craig writes the Tri-Cities coverage most realtors won't. Every page below is built on the same ground-truth data and the same negotiation playbook Craig uses for every client.
You want walkable, transit-connected, water-adjacent living. Port Moody delivers — but price per square foot varies wildly block by block. Craig maps it.
West Coast Express or SkyTrain matters more than the kitchen backsplash. Craig prioritizes what actually changes your life.
You're done with the density and want trails + water. Port Moody is the natural step. Craig gives you the 3-year resale outlook.
"Port Moody's waterfront premium is real but it's paid in square footage. Know what you're trading before you fall in love with Rocky Point."
Whether you're a first-time buyer at $850K or a luxury seller at $4.2M, the sequence is identical. The scale changes. The discipline doesn't.
Your numbers, your timeline, your non-negotiables, your trade-offs — written down before we pick any houses or pick any comps.
Current supply, current absorption, current days-on-market, current buyer pool — per neighbourhood, per property type, not 'Metro Vancouver' averages.
Target neighbourhoods, target price band, target timeline, target offer structure. Written. Agreed.
Whether buying or selling, the offer / listing is engineered — structure, contingencies, comps, pricing logic — not improvised.
Conditions, completion, possession, and the six-month check-in. Most agents stop at keys. Craig doesn't.
No pitch, no pressure. Just your numbers, your options, and the next move that's actually right for you.
Yes, for the right buyer with the right hold horizon. The under-$1.8M segment is the most interesting for 2026. Craig's current-quarter brief has the specifics.
Port Coquitlam price-to-livability, Westwood for commuters, Burke for families with schools, Heritage for buy-and-hold. Different answers for different buyers.
Interview three, pick the one who can actually run your specific transaction. Craig is happy to be one of the three.