Homeowners must apply for exemption for B.C. speculation tax — or they'll pay it by default

British Columbians in urban areas will have to apply for an exemption to the province's new speculation and vacancy tax — or else they'll automatically pay by default.

Declaration notices will be sent to homeowners in the Lower Mainland, Greater Victoria, Kelowna and Nanaimo in the coming weeks. They'll have until March 31 to fill out the exemption form.

The speculation tax was introduced to prevent housing speculation in B.C.'s overheated real estate market and help turn vacant properties into rentals. The tax targets vacant or underutilized properties, and homeowners who live at their properties — or rent them out — will be exempt.

In a release, the Ministry of Finance said more than 99 per cent of British Columbians will be exempt. However, owners still must register to claim their exemption.

It means that, of the 1.6 million households that will receive the letter, only about 32,000 homes will be taxed, according to ministry estimates.

For 2018, the tax rate is 0.5 per cent of the property's assessed value for all properties subject to the tax. For 2019 and subsequent years, the tax rate is two per cent for foreign owners and satellite families, and 0.5 per cent for Canadian citizens or permanent residents of Canada who are not members of a satellite family.

Satellite families are those families where the majority of the combined income is earned outside of Canada.

Criticism of roll-out

There has been some criticism from the Opposition Liberals about the tax.

Greg Kyllo, the B.C. Liberal MLA for Shuswap, called the roll-out of the tax "terrible."

Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press
Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press

"If we think about the senior citizen that may miss the notice in the mail, to find out they're going to get hammered by this new tax, come July 1, and then have to try to go through all of these challenges to apply for a rebate ... I don't think the NDP have thought this through at all," Kyllo said.

Horgan on defensive

Premier John Horgan rejected the claims, saying Opposition MLAs were making "a tempest in a teapot."

"The Liberals particularly are forgetting the crisis we find ourselves in was of their own making," Horgan said at a news conference Thursday.

Mike Mcarthur/CBC
Mike Mcarthur/CBC

Horgan also reassured British Columbians that if they filled out the form erroneously, they won't be punished.

"There are not going to be penalties on people who make a mistake," Horgan said.

"If you find yourselves advised that you're speculating in the real estate market and you're not, that can be resolved by a phone call and a conversation with the Ministry of Finance."

Forms necessary

UBC associate professor Tom Davidoff, who specializes in real estate, said it's hard to envision what the program would have looked like otherwise.

"It's very hard to have a tax where you don't require people to fill in any kind of form," said Davidoff. "An alternative route would have been to try to pre-screen some people."

The province estimates it will take, on average, 10 to 20 minutes for a residential property owner to complete the declaration.