Close X
Monday, February 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Thousands Face Empty Homes Tax In Vancouver As Declaration Deadline Passes

The Canadian Press, 08 Mar, 2018 11:57 AM
    VANCOUVER — Nearly 8,500 homes have been declared vacant or underused in Vancouver after the submission deadline passed for the city's new empty homes tax.
     
     
    The figure not only includes properties that were deemed unoccupied for six months or more, but also those that claimed one of the various exemptions to the levy. It also includes about 2,100 homes that will be hit with the tax because no declaration was submitted by Monday's deadline.
     
     
    The tax is the first of its kind in Canada and is set at a rate of one per cent of a home's assessed value. It's aimed at freeing up more units for the city's tight rental market.
     
     
    "Vancouver housing needs to be for homes first, not just treated as a commodity," said Mayor Gregor Robertson in a news release.
     
     
    "We brought in an empty homes tax because Vancouver has a near-zero vacancy rate and many people are struggling to find a place to rent."
     
     
    About 184,000 homeowners — 98 per cent — submitted their declarations on time.
     
     
    Sixty per cent of the empty or underused units are condominiums, 34 per cent are single-family houses and six per cent are multi-family and other types of homes, the city said.
     
     
    Downtown Vancouver is home to 2,250 unoccupied or underutilized homes, by far the largest number. But the West End and Shaughnessy have the highest percentage of vacant units relative to the total number of residential properties in the neighbourhoods, at eight per cent each.
     
     
    Declared vacant and undeclared properties will be issued a vacancy tax bill in mid-March with payment due by April 16, the city said.
     
     
    But the city did not say how many of the 8,481 unoccupied or underutilized homes were granted an exemption. So it's unclear how many homes will receive a tax bill, apart from the 2,132 undeclared units.
     
     
    There are a wide range of exemptions for homes that are left empty for more than six months a year, including if it's a primary residence, if it's undergoing renovations or the owner is in hospital or long-term care.
     
     
    City spokesman Jag Sandhu said specific numbers of exempt or vacant declarations will not be confirmed until audits have been conducted and owners have submitted appeals. The numbers will be released, along with the revenue raised by the tax, in an annual report to council this fall, he said.
     
     
    The provincial government signalled in its budget last month that it intended to introduce a tax on homeowners who do not pay income taxes in B.C. and leave their units vacant. The plan means that some owners of empty Vancouver homes could end up paying both a city and a provincial tax.
     
     
    A 2016 city-commissioned report analyzed electricity use and found about 10,800 Vancouver homes were left vacant for more than a year, most of them condominiums.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Budget Puts B.C. On Path Towards Universal Child Care Program: Carole James

    Parents with children in licensed day care programs in B.C. will see their costs drop under changes introduced in the provincial budget that the government describes as a first step towards providing a universal child care program.

    Budget Puts B.C. On Path Towards Universal Child Care Program: Carole James

    B.C. Unveils Housing Plan That Raises Foreign Buyers Levy And Taxes Speculators

    B.C. Unveils Housing Plan That Raises Foreign Buyers Levy And Taxes Speculators
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is raising its foreign buyers tax and expanding it to areas outside of Vancouver, while bringing in a new levy on speculators, as part of a sweeping plan to improve affordability in the province's overheated housing market.

    B.C. Unveils Housing Plan That Raises Foreign Buyers Levy And Taxes Speculators

    British Columbia To Eliminate Medical Service Plan Premiums In 2020

    British Columbia To Eliminate Medical Service Plan Premiums In 2020
    VICTORIA — A premium long viewed as a financial irritant in British Columbia that is paid by individuals and families for health care will be eliminated on Jan. 1, 2020.

    British Columbia To Eliminate Medical Service Plan Premiums In 2020

    Widow Of Avalanche Victim Sues Guides, Lodge Operator For Negligence

    Widow Of Avalanche Victim Sues Guides, Lodge Operator For Negligence
    VANCOUVER — The widow of an Alberta man who died in an avalanche near Golden, B.C., is suing the guides, their mountain guide association and the lodge operator for negligence.

    Widow Of Avalanche Victim Sues Guides, Lodge Operator For Negligence

    Coquitlam Piano Teacher Charged With Sexual Assault Of 3 Former Students

    Coquitlam Piano Teacher Charged With Sexual Assault Of 3 Former Students
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — Police in Coquitlam, B.C., are looking for potential victims of a piano teacher accused of sexually assaulting his students.

    Coquitlam Piano Teacher Charged With Sexual Assault Of 3 Former Students

    Walmart Partnering With Online Grocery Service To Bring Home Delivery To Vancouver

    Walmart Partnering With Online Grocery Service To Bring Home Delivery To Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — Walmart Canada Corp. says it is partnering with an online grocery service to bring home delivery to Vancouver by the summer, as the brick-and-mortar retailer ramps up its effort in the country to compete with Amazon.

    Walmart Partnering With Online Grocery Service To Bring Home Delivery To Vancouver