Port Moody Realtor Selection Guide

Best Port Moody REALTOR® — how to pick: Inlet-side pricing, SkyTrain-corridor demand, and the school catchments that actually move comps.

Port Moody reads differently than the rest of the Tri-Cities. The detached benchmark sits at $1,939,400 (May 2026 GVR®) — the highest in the corridor — held up by Inlet-side family demand, the Evergreen SkyTrain (Moody Centre + Inlet Centre stations), the brewery district, and Heritage Woods Secondary catchment math that shifts pricing block by block. The right agent here knows Heritage Mountain vs Klahanie vs Glenayre at the street level — not as one city — and runs a connected playbook across all of them.

Written for Port Moody, Heritage Mountain, Klahanie, Suter Brook, Newport Village, Glenayre, Ioco / April Road, Port Moody Centre and Moody Centre sellers, downsizers, upsizers and relocators — the families running a coordinated move where the Inlet, the catchment, and the SkyTrain all matter.

Updated June 15, 2026 · Written by Craig Johnston, REALTOR® · Top 1% Team Member — Greater Vancouver REALTORS® · 47+ year Tri-Cities resident · The MACNABS at Royal LePage Elite West

5.0 across 32+ Google reviews Top 1% Team — GVR 47+ years in the Tri-Cities

Quick Answer

Who is the best REALTOR® for Port Moody?

Port Moody is a four-neighbourhood market that lives like one city: Heritage Mountain's executive hillside, Klahanie/Suter Brook/Newport Village's walkable Inlet villages, Glenayre's family streets, and Moody Centre's SkyTrain-and-brewery district. Each prices differently. The right realtor knows the Heritage Woods Secondary catchment math, reads Inlet view premiums honestly, and connects the sale to the next move — whether that's downsizing into a Klahanie townhouse or upsizing back to the Plateau. Craig Johnston, Top 1% Team Member — Greater Vancouver REALTORS® and Top 2% National Team — Royal LePage, specializes in Port Moody move-up families, Heritage Mountain view-premium sellers, and Inlet-village downsizers. 47+ year Tri-Cities resident. Free Strategy Call, written 24-hour plan.

Top 1%Greater Vancouver Team Ranking
Medallion Club Team MemberTeam Member Since 2021
5.0 · 32+Verified Google Reviews
Top 2%Royal LePage Nationally

Source: Royal LePage internal rankings & Craig's verified Google Business Profile. Updated June 2026.

Quick answer

Who is the best realtor in Port Moody?

Port Moody has no single “best” realtor — the strong agents here win on different dimensions: Heritage Mountain view-premium pricing, Klahanie/Suter Brook/Newport Village walkable-Inlet condo expertise, Glenayre family-street fluency, Moody Centre SkyTrain-corridor specialisation, and Heritage Woods Secondary catchment math. The realtors most cited locally are Top 1% Team Member — Greater Vancouver REALTORS® agents with a documented process, real Port Moody comp data per submarket, and verifiable client reviews. Craig Johnston (BCFSA #V99960, Royal LePage Elite West) works Port Moody as part of one connected Tri-Cities practice — Top 1% Team Member — Greater Vancouver REALTORS®, Top 2% National Team — Royal LePage, Medallion Club Team Member, 32+ verified Google reviews — which fits move-up families coordinating across the Inlet, downsizers reading the Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village condo market, and relocators evaluating Port Moody against Burke Mountain or the Plateau.

The Framework

Four questions that tell you if a Port Moody realtor actually knows the corridor — or just lists houses.

Ask these in any first interview. The right answers come back in seconds. Vague answers are the answer.

"How does pricing differ block-by-block between Heritage Mountain, Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village, Glenayre, and Moody Centre?"

Port Moody isn't one market — it's four. Heritage Mountain runs view-premium pricing on larger lots. Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village is walkable Inlet-village condo and townhouse. Glenayre is established family streets with smaller lots and older builds. Moody Centre / Inlet Centre is SkyTrain-corridor density priced by walk-to-station math. An agent who treats Port Moody as one zone will price your home like the wrong one of those four.

"Heritage Woods Secondary catchment math — which streets carry the premium, and what's the dollar delta vs an adjacent catchment?"

Heritage Woods Secondary is one of the most-requested SD43 catchments and the single biggest school-driven pricing variable on the mountain. A Port Moody specialist names the catchment boundary streets, knows which Heritage Mountain Elementary · Eagle Mountain Middle · Heritage Woods Secondary feeder pattern applies, and frames the pricing math against the families willing to pay for it. If they can't answer this off the cuff, they're pricing without the school multiplier.

"If I'm downsizing from a $1.9M Port Moody detached into a $1M Klahanie or Suter Brook townhouse, what's the sequence and the bridge plan?"

This is the most common Port Moody transaction — empty-nesters downsizing within the city, keeping the SkyTrain and the Inlet but trading lot maintenance for walkability. If the agent doesn't have a written sequence — sell first vs buy first vs bridge, with a defined trigger to pivot — they're running two separate transactions and hoping the dates line up. They won't.

"What do you do in week 4 after we close?"

If the answer is "we don't — the deal's done," they don't run Soft Landing. Port Moody is a referral neighbourhood: families stay 10+ years on Heritage Mountain, Glenayre, and Klahanie, talk to each other, and the agent who follows up at 30 days, 90 days, and one year is the one your neighbours will hear about.

Those four questions are how I was trained to be evaluated. Every one of them traces back to a specific step in the Move-Up Protocol — the five-step process every move-up and downsize family I work with runs through, identically, every time.

Heritage Mountain specialist vs. generic listing agent

The difference shows up in the file, not the marketing.

Most Port Moody agents are competent listing agents. Fewer can price a Heritage Mountain view honestly, distinguish Aspenwood from Heritage Mountain Elementary demand, or coordinate a downsize from a Mountain detached into Suter Brook without dropping a date. Here's where the practices actually diverge.

What you should expect Generic listing agent Heritage Mountain specialist (Craig)
View pricing Adds a generic "view premium" of 10–15%. Calls each view honestly: partial inlet, full Burrard Inlet, North Shore mountain backdrop, valley orientation. Each prices differently. Comp set isolates view-matched sales from the last 60–90 days, not generic Mountain comps.
Catchment math "It's a great school area." Names the actual catchment (Aspenwood, Heritage Mountain Elementary, Eagle Mountain Middle, Heritage Woods Secondary) and explains how each shifts buyer demand — including which streets straddle catchment boundaries.
Pricing method Three or four closest comps; sometimes a CMA auto-suggested by MLS. View-matched, catchment-specific comp set, layout-class match, last 60–90 days, drive-by re-confirmed against current active inventory. Three-tier range: high case, mid case, low case.
Sell-and-buy coordination "Sell first, then we'll start touring." Two separate engagements. Equity Map first, then a written sequence decision (sell first / buy first) with bridge plan priced before the listing goes live. Particularly important for Port Moody downsizers moving into Suter Brook / Newport Village / Inlet Centre.
Closing-date strategy Match dates "if possible." Often a 30+ day mismatch. Subjects, possession, and adjustment dates negotiated to compress the gap to under 7 days, ideally same-week. Bridge financing pre-modeled if needed.
Pre-listing prep "Declutter and we'll bring in the photographer." Pre-listing inspection, three-to-five item repair list, staging brief tuned to view orientation, photography style guide (twilight shots when the inlet view earns it), MLS copy review, launch-week showing schedule.
Communication cadence Reactive — calls when an offer comes in. Pre-listing weekly check-in, daily during launch week, scheduled post-close 30 / 90 / 365 follow-up.
Submarket coverage Strong in one neighbourhood; weaker elsewhere. Heritage Mountain · Heritage Woods · Klahanie · Newport / Suter Brook · Westwood Plateau · Burke Mountain · Coquitlam Centre. One agent across the move arc — including across the Coquitlam border when your next home is across town.
Property-type transitions Detached-only, or condo-only. The other side gets handed off. Detached, townhome, condo, half-duplex — coordinated in one file when the move involves a class change (which Heritage downsizes almost always do).
In the first interview

How to read the room in 20 minutes.

You don't need to be a real estate expert to interview one. You need to know what good answers feel like and what bad answers sound like.

Good signs to look for

  • They explain pricing with real logic — comps, catchment, current active inventory.
  • They name your specific neighbourhood and the buyer profile likely to come through.
  • They talk about preparation, presentation, and pre-listing inspection without you bringing it up.
  • They have a written negotiation plan, not just "we'll see what comes in."
  • They ask about your full move — your next purchase, your timing, your downpayment math.
  • Communication feels organized and steady. Calls return same-day. Notes get sent after meetings.

Warning signs to walk away from

  • They promise a price without showing comparable sales or a written range.
  • They lean on generic marketing language ("maximum exposure," "full service," "white-glove").
  • They can't explain how they create urgency or competition in a launch.
  • They feel reactive — only answer when you push, no follow-up between meetings.
  • They don't ask about your next purchase, your bridge plan, or your sequence decision.
  • They talk about the listing, not the outcome. The listing is their product. The outcome is yours.

For a deeper dive into the specific traps that quietly cost sellers money — pricing too high (especially common on view homes), listing in the wrong week, weak photography that flattens the view, no offer-deadline strategy — read the seller mistakes guide. Most of the real damage in a Heritage Mountain sale happens before the listing goes live.

Craig Johnston — Heritage Mountain & Port Moody REALTOR® reviewing strategy at the kitchen table

Strategy first · Then process

The strategy call before the listing photos.

Every Heritage Mountain sequence I run starts with a 45-minute conversation at your kitchen table — not a listing presentation. We map your timeline, your real budget after closing costs, your school-and-commute constraints (Aspenwood pickup, Eagle Mountain dropoff, the Inlet Drive commute), how the view should be photographed, and the bridge-financing fallback if you're downsizing into Suter Brook or upsizing into the Plateau. The listing photos come later, after the plan is set.

The Move-Up Protocol

Five steps. Same order. Every move.

Every dependent transaction I run goes through this sequence. The advantage of a repeatable process isn't that it's clever — it's that nothing slips. The bridge plan exists before the listing is photographed. The Soft Landing call is on the calendar before the keys change hands.

Step 01

Equity Map

Net sale value, true available equity, real next-home ceiling. The numbers that actually drive every following decision.

Step 02

Sequence Decision

Sell first or buy first — written, dated, with bridge financing pre-modeled if relevant.

Step 03

Pre-Listing Prep

Inspection, repairs short-list, staging brief, photography, MLS copy review. Everything before the launch week.

Step 04

Parallel Search

While the listing is live, the buy-side hunt is already running. Subjects-friendly offers ready when the right home appears.

Step 05

Soft Landing

Possession, key handover, utility transfers, contractor coordination. 30-day, 90-day, and one-year follow-up.

Live numbers

Port Moody market snapshot — May 2026

Port Moody runs the highest detached benchmark in the Tri-Cities corridor — pulled up by Heritage Mountain view homes and held steady by Inlet-side family demand. Here's the picture from the May 2026 GVR® release. Knowing these numbers is table stakes for any agent you interview.

Detached benchmark (HPI)
$1,939,400

Port Moody detached HPI, May 2026 GVR® (−5.5% YoY, +0.2% MoM). Highest of the four Tri-Cities cities.

Townhouse benchmark (HPI)
$982,200

Port Moody townhouse HPI, May 2026 GVR® (−3.1% YoY, +2.2% MoM). Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village dominate this tier.

Apartment benchmark (HPI)
$703,000

Port Moody apartment HPI, May 2026 GVR® (−5.7% YoY, −0.1% MoM). Moody Centre & Inlet Centre concrete inventory.

Composite HPI
$1,040,400

Port Moody all-residential composite, May 2026 GVR® (−4.3% YoY, +1.1% MoM).

vs Coquitlam detached
+$285K

Port Moody detached benchmark ($1,939,400) sits ~$285K above Coquitlam ($1,654,000). Inlet, view, and Heritage Woods catchment premiums.

vs Port Coquitlam detached
+$619K

Port Moody detached sits ~$619K above Port Coquitlam ($1,320,700). The corridor's largest city-to-city detached gap.

Source: Greater Vancouver REALTORS® (GVR) MLS® HPI & monthly statistics, Port Moody & cross-city comparisons, May 2026 release. Last refreshed June 2, 2026.

The Difference

Why Port Moody families hire Craig.

01

Four-submarket pricing, not one

Most agents price Port Moody as one zone. I price the four it actually is: Heritage Mountain view homes, Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village walkable Inlet villages, Glenayre established family streets, and Moody Centre / Inlet Centre SkyTrain-corridor density. Each has its own comp set, its own buyer profile, and its own price-per-square-foot logic. Treating them as one market is how Port Moody homes get under-priced.

02

Connected move-up, sell-and-buy, downsize

Most Port Moody sales connect to another Tri-Cities purchase — Heritage Mountain detached families downsizing into Klahanie or Newport Village, Plateau or Burke Mountain move-ups laterally moving into Heritage Woods, or relocators evaluating Port Moody against Coquitlam. I coordinate both sides — timing, financing bridges, concurrent subjects — with one file, one communication line, one set of dates. (The framework: the Move-Up Protocol.)

03

47+ year Tri-Cities resident, not a parachute agent

I've lived in the Tri-Cities for 47+ years and on Burke Mountain for the last nine. I know which streets on Heritage Mountain hold value in a softer market, which Klahanie buildings have current depreciation-report flags, which Glenayre blocks just got SkyTrain noise-mitigation upgrades. Local current-state knowledge is what separates negotiating from stalling.

Port Moody aerial — Burrard Inlet, Heritage Mountain hillside, and Moody Centre SkyTrain corridor
Port Moody (city guide)
Heritage Mountain — Port Moody's executive hillside, Heritage Woods Secondary catchment
Heritage Mountain
Klahanie / Rocky Point Port Moody — inlet-side village, SkyTrain-walkable townhomes
Klahanie & Rocky Point
What clients say

5.0 stars across 32+ verified Google reviews.

Three reviews specifically about pricing discipline, communication, and move-up coordination — the things that separate generic listing agents from a Port Moody specialist who knows the four submarkets, the Heritage Woods catchment math, and the Inlet-village downsize playbook.

★★★★★
"We received seven offers, and Craig held firm on our priorities: no subject to sale and achieving our price. We took the home off the market over Christmas, but behind the scenes Craig continued working. When we re-listed in January, it sold in just three days to buyers he had been nurturing — at the price we wanted."
Jim Turnbull
Sold + Bought · May 2026 · Google Review
★★★★★
"Craig was there with us everyday. Guiding us to our next step we were kept informed daily sometimes multiple times a day as to what was happening… Our home sold in only 6 days with multiple offers."
Gerry & Aline Howitson
Sellers · November 2025 · Google Review
★★★★★
"Craig is a true professional and I would highly recommend him to anyone looking to buy or sell their home. His approach is clear, data-driven and resulted in multiple offers for our sale."
Robert Shin
Seller · July 2025 · Google Review

Read all 32+ reviews on Google →

Meet Craig

Sixty seconds with the realtor who’d be pricing your Heritage Mountain view.

Intro · 60 sec
Craig Johnston, REALTOR® serving Heritage Mountain, Port Moody and the Tri-Cities
About the realtor pricing your Heritage Mountain home

Craig Johnston, REALTOR®

Craig has lived on Burke Mountain for nine years and has been a licensed REALTOR® with The MACNABS at Royal LePage Elite West for 5+ years, focused almost exclusively on the Tri-Cities. He works Port Moody — Heritage Mountain, Heritage Woods, Klahanie, Inlet Centre, Newport Village, Suter Brook — every week, and prepares every Equity Map and view-premium analysis personally rather than handing it off to a junior team member.

His positioning is deliberate: not the agent with the most signs on the road, but the one most Port Moody families call when their move involves a view-premium pricing decision, a school-catchment constraint (Aspenwood vs Heritage Mountain Elementary), a downsize into Suter Brook or Newport Village, or a bridge-financing window that can’t slip. If your move is outside his fit — or another agent is a better match for your specific property — he’ll tell you that on the first call.

  • Top 1% Team Member — Greater Vancouver REALTORS®
  • Medallion Club Team Member (since 2021)
  • President’s Club Team Member
  • Top 2% Team Member — Royal LePage nationwide
  • 5+ years licensed · 9+ years Burke Mountain resident
  • BCFSA Licence V99960
Frequently asked questions

FAQ: Choosing a Port Moody realtor.

Who is the best realtor in Port Moody?

There is no single "best" realtor in Port Moody — strong Port Moody agents win on different dimensions: Heritage Mountain view-premium pricing, Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village walkable-Inlet condo and townhouse expertise, Glenayre family-street fluency, Moody Centre SkyTrain-corridor specialisation, and the Heritage Woods Secondary catchment math that drives a lot of the move-up demand.

My positioning: I work Port Moody as part of one connected Tri-Cities practice. If your move involves your next home being on the Plateau, in Burke Mountain, in Coquitlam Town Centre, or across the Inlet (most Port Moody move-ups and downsizes do), you get one agent for the whole arc instead of a handoff.

Always interview two or three before signing.

What should I look for in a Port Moody realtor?

Six things: ability to price Port Moody's four submarkets distinctly (Heritage Mountain vs Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village vs Glenayre vs Moody Centre), fluency in the Heritage Woods Secondary catchment math, a real comp set tuned per-block (not generic city-wide averages), presentation and marketing depth that does justice to the Inlet and view inventory, communication you can actually rely on, and — critically for move-up or downsize families — a written plan that connects your sale to your next purchase.

Heritage Mountain vs Klahanie vs Glenayre vs Moody Centre — how do they differ?

Four distinct Port Moody markets, each priced differently.

Heritage Mountain — executive detached on the upper hillside, larger lots, view-premium pricing, Heritage Woods Secondary catchment. The highest-priced submarket in the city.

Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village — walkable Inlet villages of condos and townhomes, brewery district + Rocky Point Park steps away, Moody Centre SkyTrain station walkable. The downsizer-from-Heritage-Mountain destination of choice.

Glenayre — established west-side family streets, smaller lots, older builds (1960s–1980s), good elementary catchment. The most affordable detached entry point in Port Moody.

Moody Centre / Port Moody Centre — SkyTrain-corridor density, walkable to Brewers Row, mixed condo and townhome inventory. The walk-to-station premium drives the math here.

Compare in depth: Heritage Mountain Guide · Klahanie Guide · Glenayre Guide · Port Moody Centre Guide.

What schools serve Port Moody?

Port Moody falls within SD43 (Coquitlam School District). The single biggest school-driven pricing variable is Heritage Woods Secondary — one of the most-requested catchments in the entire district, and a primary reason families pay the Heritage Mountain premium. Feeder pattern: Aspenwood Elementary or Heritage Mountain Elementary → Eagle Mountain Middle → Heritage Woods Secondary.

Lower Port Moody (Glenayre, Moody Centre, Klahanie) feeds into a different catchment pattern centred on Port Moody Secondary. Both are strong SD43 schools but the demand profiles — and the resulting pricing math — are different.

Always confirm catchment with SD43 directly before removing subjects, since boundaries can shift.

Full school context: Port Moody Schools Hub.

What are Port Moody home prices right now?

As of the May 2026 GVR® release, Port Moody HPI benchmarks:

Detached: $1,939,400 (−5.5% YoY, +0.2% MoM) — the highest of the four Tri-Cities cities. Townhouse: $982,200 (−3.1% YoY, +2.2% MoM). Apartment: $703,000 (−5.7% YoY, −0.1% MoM). Composite: $1,040,400 (−4.3% YoY, +1.1% MoM).

For context, Port Moody detached sits ~$285K above Coquitlam ($1,654,000) and ~$619K above Port Coquitlam ($1,320,700) at the May 2026 benchmark. Source: Greater Vancouver REALTORS® (GVR) MLS® HPI, Port Moody, May 2026 release (June 2 publication).

Can Craig help if I need to sell my Port Moody home and buy somewhere else in the Tri-Cities?

Yes — that's the most common Port Moody transaction. The three big patterns: downsizing from a Heritage Mountain or Glenayre detached into Klahanie / Suter Brook / Newport Village (keeping the SkyTrain and the Inlet, trading maintenance for walkability); upsizing from a Klahanie townhouse into a Heritage Mountain or Heritage Woods detached; or relocating across to Burke Mountain, the Plateau, or Coquitlam Town Centre.

Every coordinated transaction runs through the same five-step Move-Up Protocol: Equity Map, sequence decision (sell first or buy first), pre-listing prep, parallel search, and Soft Landing the first 30 days after close.

If you're not sure whether to sell first or buy first, that decision deserves its own conversation: Sell First or Buy First →

How does the view premium work in Port Moody?

The view premium concentrates on Heritage Mountain — Burrard Inlet exposure, North Shore mountain orientation, and the upper hillside elevation that pulls all three together. It's real but uneven block by block.

A few rules of thumb based on recent comps. No view (forest backing or interior orientation): baseline. Partial Inlet view (filtered through trees or corner exposure): typically $150K–$300K above the no-view comp on the same street. Full unobstructed Inlet view from an upper Mountain lot: materially higher — in some cases the view alone accounts for 20%+ of the sale price.

The catch: appraisers don't always honour the full premium. Pricing strategy needs to set the high-case range where the comps support it, not where the seller hopes it will land. That's why view homes need view-matched comp work, not generic city-wide CMAs.

Port Moody vs Coquitlam vs Port Coquitlam — which Tri-Cities should I buy in?

Different markets, different buyers. May 2026 GVR® HPI benchmarks:

Port Moody detached ($1,939,400): highest in the corridor. Inlet living, brewery district, two SkyTrain stations (Moody Centre + Inlet Centre), Heritage Woods Secondary catchment. Best for families paying for view, walkability, and the school multiplier.

Coquitlam detached ($1,654,000): the corridor's deepest inventory. Burke Mountain newer construction, Westwood Plateau executive family homes, Town Centre SkyTrain density. Best for buyers who want options across price bands and lifestyles.

Port Coquitlam detached ($1,320,700): the most affordable detached entry. Established family streets, walkable to PoCo Trail and Lions Park, West Coast Express commuter rail. Best for first-detached buyers and value-conscious families.

Compare in depth: Port Moody vs Coquitlam Detached · Coquitlam vs Port Moody vs PoCo vs Burnaby.

Is Port Moody a good place to buy in 2026?

For long-hold families (5–10+ years), Port Moody has held value better through cycles than most Tri-Cities submarkets. The SkyTrain expansion (Evergreen Line opened December 2016), the brewery district, and Heritage Woods catchment demand have all driven structural support under prices — even through the 2026 buyer-favouring market.

Detached down 5.5% YoY (May 2026) but +0.2% MoM — the corridor is finding its floor at the current benchmarks. For buyers with the budget and the 5+ year horizon, the conditions are the most favourable they've been since 2020 — more inventory, more negotiating room, sellers responding to offers.

Deeper read: Is now a good time to buy in Coquitlam & Port Moody? →

Keep exploring Port Moody

Neighbourhood guides, schools, comparisons, and the next steps in your move.

Topical depth on every Port Moody submarket — Heritage Mountain, Klahanie, Glenayre, Moody Centre, Ioco / April Road — plus the comparison and strategy pages every move-up runs through. Open them in tabs as you go.

City pillar

Port Moody City Guide

The full Port Moody market — all four submarkets, Inlet living, SkyTrain corridor, brewery district.

Submarket

Heritage Mountain Guide

Port Moody's executive hillside. View premium, Heritage Woods Secondary catchment, $1.7M–$3.5M detached.

Submarket

Klahanie Guide

Walkable Inlet-side village. Townhomes and condos, brewery district, Rocky Point Park steps away.

Submarket

Glenayre Guide

Established west-side family streets, smaller lots, older builds. Port Moody's most affordable detached entry.

Submarket

Port Moody Centre

SkyTrain-corridor density, walkable to Brewers Row. Mixed condo and townhome inventory.

Submarket

Ioco / April Road Guide

Quiet east-Inlet corridor. Larger lots and detached homes with Inlet exposure.

Listings

Port Moody Detached Homes

Live MLS® search of every detached home currently for sale in Port Moody.

Listings

Port Moody Townhomes

Klahanie, Suter Brook, Newport Village townhome inventory. The downsizer-from-detached destination.

Listings

Port Moody Condos

Moody Centre, Inlet Centre, and Inlet-village apartment inventory.

Luxury

Port Moody Luxury $2M+

The upper Heritage Mountain Inlet-view tier and Ioco acreage-flavour. Honest read on what $2M+ buys here.

Schools

Port Moody Schools Hub

Heritage Woods Secondary, Port Moody Secondary, every elementary feeder. Catchment-by-catchment.

Lifestyle

Brewers Row

The Murray Street brewery district that pulls buyers into Moody Centre. What it actually offers.

Comparison

Port Moody vs Coquitlam Detached

$1.94M Port Moody vs $1.65M Coquitlam. Side-by-side on price, product, schools, family fit.

Comparison

Coquitlam vs Port Moody

Which Tri-Cities city fits your move? Cross-corridor comparison.

Tool

What's My Heritage Mountain Home Worth?

Current Heritage Mountain price ranges with view-tier breakdowns — plus a free same-day Equity Map.

Process

The Move-Up Protocol

The five-step process every Port Moody move-up and downsize family runs through. Read before you list.

Strategy

Sell First or Buy First?

The single biggest sequencing decision in a Port Moody move-up or downsize. With the bridge math.

About

About Craig Johnston

Bio, credentials, methodology, and how the practice is built. The E-E-A-T deep-dive.

Tool

Free Home Evaluation

Same-day Equity Map: net sale value, true equity, real next-home ceiling. Step 1 of every Port Moody move.

Ready when you are

Two ways to start your Port Moody move. Both are honest about whether I'm the right fit.

A 20-minute strategy call gets you a clear read on your view-premium pricing, your sequence options, and an honest answer on whether your move suits my practice. The Equity Map gets you the numbers. Either one is free, and neither commits you to anything.

5.0 across 32+ Google reviews Top 1% Team — Greater Vancouver REALTORS® 47+ years in the Tri-Cities

Or call direct: 604-202-6092

Continue your research

More on Heritage Mountain — built by a Tri-Cities specialist.

Master guide

Heritage Mountain — the complete guide

Hillside detached, view ridges, walkability to Newport Village.

Price bands

What $1.7M / $2M / $2.4M buys

May 2026 GVR data + the honest tier-by-tier read.

View homes

Heritage Mountain view homes guide

Inlet, downtown, Mount Baker exposure — the view-premium math.

Schools

Heritage Woods Secondary catchment

Which addresses are in catchment, why it matters, how to verify.

Choose your local specialist

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