Back to Bills

Repeal Speculation and Vacancy Tax

Full Title:
Speculation and Vacancy Tax Repeal Act

Summary#

  • This bill would end British Columbia’s Speculation and Vacancy Tax (SVT), a provincial tax on empty and under‑used homes in certain urban areas.

  • It keeps the rules in place to audit, bill, and collect any SVT that was owed for years before the repeal takes effect.

  • Ends the provincial SVT going forward, starting on a date set by the provincial cabinet.

  • Stops future annual SVT declarations for property owners in affected areas. Declarations for past years still apply.

  • Lets the Province continue audits, appeals, penalties, and collections for any SVT owing from earlier years.

  • Leaves other governments’ rules unchanged. Municipal empty homes taxes (like Vancouver’s) and the federal Underused Housing Tax are separate and would still apply.

What it means for you#

  • Homeowners in affected areas (e.g., Metro Vancouver, Capital Region, Nanaimo, Kelowna, West Kelowna, Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission, UBC/UEL, and nearby communities named in regulation):

    • No provincial SVT on vacant or under‑used homes after the repeal date.
    • No more yearly provincial SVT declaration after the repeal date.
    • If you owed SVT for a past year, you still must file, respond to audits, and pay any balance. Interest and penalties can still apply for those years.
  • Owners with second homes or part‑time use:

    • No provincial SVT going forward on homes used seasonally or part‑time in the SVT areas.
    • City vacancy taxes (where they exist) and the federal Underused Housing Tax may still apply.
  • Renters:

    • No direct change to your lease or tenant rights from this bill.
    • Any effects on the number of homes offered for rent would depend on owner choices and local market conditions.
  • Real estate agents, property managers, and builders:

    • Less SVT‑related paperwork for clients going forward.
    • Any ongoing SVT audits or appeals for earlier years can continue until resolved.
  • People in audits, appeals, or collections now:

    • Your case can continue under the former SVT rules for the years before repeal.
    • Prior assessments and decisions remain valid and enforceable.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

  • Repealing the SVT would end the provincial revenue it brings in.
  • The Province may save some administration costs once wind‑down is complete.
  • Municipal vacancy taxes and federal taxes are unaffected; this bill only ends the provincial SVT.

Proponents' View#

  • Reduces red tape: ends the yearly declaration most owners in SVT areas must file, even when they owe nothing.
  • Fairness: stops penalizing owners who keep a second home, are between tenants, or face life events (renovation, illness, estate issues).
  • Investment and housing supply: removing the tax could make B.C. more attractive for investment in housing and reduce carrying costs on new units.
  • Avoids double‑taxing: in cities with their own empty homes tax, owners would no longer face both city and provincial vacancy charges.
  • Limited impact of the SVT: supporters say the tax has not meaningfully lowered prices or rents and targets only a small share of homes.

Opponents' View#

  • Rental supply: the SVT encourages owners to rent out empty homes; repealing it could lead to more vacant units and tighter rental markets.
  • Housing affordability: removing a tool that discourages speculation may add pressure on prices in high‑demand areas.
  • Revenue loss: the Province would give up a dedicated revenue stream that has helped fund housing initiatives.
  • Targeted and low‑burden: most local residents are exempt each year; keeping a brief annual declaration is a small step if it frees up homes.
  • Consistency across regions: the provincial tax covers many communities beyond the few cities with their own vacancy taxes; repeal would leave uneven coverage.