B.C. Property Tax is Increased For Foreign Buyers

As of August 2, 2016, foreign buyers of residential property in the Vancouver area will have to pay an extra 15 percent tax. The new tax, which was unveiled this week by the government of British Columbia (B.C.), is part of provincial plan to slow the foreign speculation that many blame for making the region’s homes the most unaffordable in Canada.

Last month, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver said its benchmark price for detached properties in Vancouver had risen above $1.5 million.

The additional tax on the purchase of a home selling for $2 million to a foreign national will amount to an additional $300,000 in taxation. Currently, all B.C. residents pay a one per cent tax on the first $200,000 of their purchase, two per cent on the remaining value up to $2 million, and three per cent on any portion above that.

The B.C. government stated that the revenue from the additional tax would be used to fund housing, rental and support programs, adding that the new rules aim to make housing more affordable for middle-class buyers.

However, the opposition party in the B.C. legislature, the New Democratic Party of B.C., has criticized the tax, suggesting it unfairly singles out foreign people instead of foreign money.

"It penalizes new immigrants who are working and living here, but don't have citizenship yet . . . I fear we're going to be back in six months fixing this problem" said NDP member of the B.C. legislature David Eby.

Nonetheless, the government's plan clearly states that the defintion of a foreign national is someone who is not a Canadian citizen or permanent resident. Consequently, new permanent residents settling in the Metro Vancouver Area will not see the tax applied to their purchase of a home.

 

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