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These are the two most valuable homes in Surrey

One was previously listed for $27 million

Eagle Bluff Estate. Submitted photo

The typical assessed value of a residential property in the City of Surrey has dropped by about six per cent – from $1,563,000 down to $1,464,000, according to the BC Assessment authority – as a softening real estate market continues to be felt.

But that doesn’t mean all properties are falling in value.

Surrey most valuable home, according to BC Assessment, actually went up slightly, with mansion at 2021 Indian Fort Dr. climbing to $18.3 million – good enough to land at number 116 on the list of the top 500 most valuable homes in B.C.

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The second-most valuable home in Surrey is at 2165 – 123 St., valued at $14 million, good enough for 282 on the list of the top 500 most valuable homes in B.C. The house is known as the Eagle Bluff Estate. The assessed value might be $14 million for this South Surrey waterfront home, but a real estate listing published online had the 1993 house listed for $27.9 million. The 12,000-square-foot house sits on 2.8 gated acres with 300 feet of ocean frontage.

The 2026 property assessments, which reflect market value as of July 1, 2025, were recently announced for property owners of about 1,140,000 properties throughout the Lower Mainland.

The updated property values are now available at bcassessment​.ca in addition to 2026 Property Assessment Notices being mailed to each property owner.  

Overall, the Lower Mainland total assessments have decreased from about $2.01 trillion in 2025 to about $1.92 trillion this year. Almost $24 billion of the region’s updated assessments is from new construction, subdivisions and the rezoning of properties. The Lower Mainland region includes all of Greater Vancouver, the Fraser Valley as well as the Sea to Sky area and the Sunshine Coast. 

“The softening housing market is being reflected in 2026 property assessments,” said BC Assessment Assessor Bryan Murao. “Many homeowners throughout the Lower Mainland can expect some decreases in assessed value with most changes ranging between -10% to 0%.” 

Author

Chris Campbell has devoted his working life to one area – community journalism.

“That’s where you feel the heartbeat of a community,” Campbell says.

That devotion has led to a journalism career spanning 35 years as a reporter and editor in places ranging from Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows to the upper Fraser Valley and all the way to Victoria – with stops in Surrey, Vancouver, Burnaby, New Westminster and the Tri-Cities along the way.

When he’s not obsessing over his beloved Boston Celtics or watching Goodfellas for the 100th time, Campbell is spending time with his adult daughter and travelling the world with his amazing partner.

Campbell says he’s excited to have joined Constellation Media to write for the Surrey Citizen and The Ridge outlets because of the entity’s commitment to mission-driven journalism, and to tell stories that people are talking about on a daily basis.

So if you have a story idea, just let him know.

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