Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Makes Changes To Speculation Tax After Criticism From Homeowners

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Mar, 2018 11:58 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is trying to more directly target urban areas with changes it announced Monday to a proposed tax on property speculation after some municipalities demanded exemptions and the Opposition accused the New Democrats of grabbing family assets.
     
    Finance Minister Carol James is also adjusting the tax rate after first announcing details of the levy in the budget last month.
     
    The changes would create a number of exemptions and shift which areas of the province would be covered by the tax.
     
    Under the details announced by James, the tax would apply to properties in Metro Vancouver, Kelowna, West Kelowna, Nanaimo-Lantzville, Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission and the Capital Regional District around Victoria on southern Vancouver Island, excluding the Gulf Islands and Juan de Fuca.
     
    The speculation tax is intended to improve housing affordability in areas where the need is most acute, while exempting rural cabins and vacation homes, James said.
     
    "We have a responsibility as a government to ensure that hard working British Columbians can afford to call this province home," she added.
     
    The changes are due to be introduced in legislation this fall.
     
    "Over 99 per cent of British Columbians will not pay the tax," said James. "Only those who hold multiple properties and leave them empty in our province's major cities will be asked to contribute."
     
     
     
     
    In 2018, the rate for all properties subject to the tax would be set at 0.5 per cent of a property's assessed value, regardless of whether the owner is foreign, Canadian or from B.C.
     
    Starting in 2019, the tax rate would be set at two per cent for foreign investors and extended family members.
     
    For Canadian citizens and permanent residents who do not live in British Columbia, the tax rate would rise to one per cent of a property's assessed value next year.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
    B.C. residents with second properties are also eligible for tax credits valued up to $400,000, said James. The tax credit is meant to offset the tax of $2,000 on a property valued under $400,000.
     
    James said people who rent out their second property for at least six months of the year will not have to pay the speculation tax.
     
    "The speculation tax focuses on people who are treating our housing market like a stock market," she said.
     
    James said the government estimates the tax will generate about $200 million in revenue next year.
     
    Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson said the minority NDP government appears to be taking a trial and error approach to tax policy, which does not inspire confidence.
     
    "They seem to think they can attack speculation with a tax that is not about speculation," he said.
     
    Green Leader Andrew Weaver said the changes "go a long way" to dealing with his party's concerns about the tax.
     
    "In particular, the government's policy must target speculation and empty homes in our urban centres without undue adverse effects on rural areas and on British Columbians who aren't speculators," he said in a news release.
     
    "They make it much more targeted and limit the effects on British Columbians with vacation homes."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Komagata Maru’s 103rd Anniversary: Read The Statement By Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

    Komagata Maru’s 103rd Anniversary: Read The Statement By Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
    Prime Minister Of Canada On The Anniversary Of The Komagata Maru Incident

    Komagata Maru’s 103rd Anniversary: Read The Statement By Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

    Hungry Sea Lion Drags Little Girl Into Water At Richmond, B.C., Wharf In A Dramatic Video

    Hungry Sea Lion Drags Little Girl Into Water At Richmond, B.C., Wharf In A Dramatic Video
    VANCOUVER — The man who shot heart stopping video of a sea lion snatching a little girl off a Vancouver-area wharf says at first he froze.

    Hungry Sea Lion Drags Little Girl Into Water At Richmond, B.C., Wharf In A Dramatic Video

    Traffic Moving After Truck Fire Closed Coquihalla Highway For A Full Day

    Traffic Moving After Truck Fire Closed Coquihalla Highway For A Full Day
    Northbound traffic on the Coquihalla Highway, 25 kilometres south of Merritt, was allowed by the accident site at about 6 a.m. and southbound traffic began flowing 90 minutes later.

    Traffic Moving After Truck Fire Closed Coquihalla Highway For A Full Day

    Eight Revenue Agency Workers Fired For Roles In Privacy Breaches: CRA

    Eight Revenue Agency Workers Fired For Roles In Privacy Breaches: CRA
    OTTAWA — The Canada Revenue Agency says eight of its employees were fired in the last fiscal year after violating taxpayers' privacy.

    Eight Revenue Agency Workers Fired For Roles In Privacy Breaches: CRA

    NDP Holds Courtenay-Comox, Focus Shifts To Absentee Ballots In B.C. Recount

    NDP Holds Courtenay-Comox, Focus Shifts To Absentee Ballots In B.C. Recount
    VANCOUVER — ElectionsBC is turning its attention absentee ballots cast in British Columbia's tight election race after recounts in two ridings upheld the original outcome of the May 9 vote.

    NDP Holds Courtenay-Comox, Focus Shifts To Absentee Ballots In B.C. Recount

    Metal Thieves Suspected By Police After 175 Bronze Vases Stolen From Surrey Cemetery

    Metal Thieves Suspected By Police After 175 Bronze Vases Stolen From Surrey Cemetery
      The RCMP say a mother who was visiting her son's grave on April 26 noticed the bronze vase at his gravesite had been stolen.

    Metal Thieves Suspected By Police After 175 Bronze Vases Stolen From Surrey Cemetery