National Post

Thousands face empty homes tax in Vancouver

- Laura Kane

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 1 84,000 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 Ja g Sandhu said specific numbers of exempt or vacant declaratio­ns will not be confirmed until audits have been conducted and owners have submitted appeals.

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.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ DARRYL DYCK ?? Sixty per cent of the empty or underused units in Vancouver subject to a new city tax are condominiu­ms.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ DARRYL DYCK Sixty per cent of the empty or underused units in Vancouver subject to a new city tax are condominiu­ms.

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