sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

sa国际传媒 speculation tax revenue tops $75M, mostly from non-sa国际传媒 owners

Vancouver properties contributed $14.5M to government coffers
homes-sales-home-housingrichardnewsteadmomentgetty-7
The speculation tax is an annual tax based on how owners use residential properties in areas in sa国际传媒 most affected by housing shortages

The province’s speculation and vacancy tax raised $75.2 million in 2023, according to a Wednesday release from sa国际传媒’s Ministry of Finance.

Of that amount, $14.5 million came from City of Vancouver properties, including properties owned by sa国际传媒 residents, foreign owners, “untaxed worldwide earners” and others who were subject to the tax.

The sa国际传媒 government said the majority of revenue came from non-sa国际传媒 residents.

“More than 99 per cent of property owners who live in sa国际传媒 remained exempt from the tax in its sixth year,” the province said in a Dec. 18 release.

In Vancouver, the top exemptions claimed were “principal residence” and “occupied by a tenant.” Other possible exemptions relate to properties recently acquired or inherited, those under construction or renovation, or those vacant due to death, separation or divorce. 

“Principal residences and residences occupied by a tenant remained the top two exemptions claimed by property owners in 2023,” said the government’s release. “This suggests that the tax continues to encourage the use of residences for long-term housing.”

The speculation tax is an annual tax based on how owners use residential properties in areas in sa国际传媒 most affected by housing shortages. The sa国际传媒 government says it has the effect of turning more vacant units into homes, although Canadian citizens who regularly occupy their sa国际传媒 properties can be ensnared as well, despite their homes not being “empty.”

In the Metro Vancouver Regional District, the tax was imposed on 3,391 non-exempt properties. In the City of Vancouver, there were a total of 679 non-exempt properties and 1,341 non-exempt property owners.

The province said its data is accurate as of Oct. 1, 2024 and includes data from owners with declarations as well as owners who have paid the tax without declaring.

During the recent provincial election campaign, Premier David Eby said he intended to double the tax if re-elected.

The tax rate is currently two per cent of a property's assessed value for foreign owners and untaxed worldwide earners, and 0.5 per cent for Canadian citizens or permanent residents of sa国际传媒 who are not untaxed worldwide earners.

[email protected]