Toronto Star

Vancouver to tax absentee owners

City imposing 1% yearly fee and potential daily fines on empty houses next year

- NATALIE OBIKO PEARSON

VANCOUVER— Want to keep your million-dollar luxury pad in Vancouver empty? Get ready to pay $10,000 annually in extra taxes. Lie about it? That’ll be $10,000 a day in fines.

Canada’s most expensive property market, suffering from a near-zero supply of rental homes, announced the details of a new tax aimed at prodding absentee landlords into making their properties available for lease.

The empty-home tax will take effect by Jan.1, and will be calculated at 1 per cent of the property’s assessed value, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson told reporters at city hall.

“Vancouver is in a rental-housing crisis,” Robertson said. “The city won’t sit on the sidelines while over 20,000 empty and underoccup­ied properties hold back homes from renters.”

The measure is among efforts to make housing more accessible and affordable in Vancouver, ranked the world’s third-most-livable city, and has drawn attention for its sky-high prices fomented by global money flows. Public scrutiny has focused on absentee landlords, particular­ly from overseas, who are accused of sitting on investment properties where windows remain dark throughout the year.

In August, the provincial government imposed a 15-per-cent tax on foreign buyers, and last month the federal government tightened mortgage insurance eligibilit­y requiremen­ts.

“The city won’t sit on the sidelines while over 20,000 empty and underoccup­ied properties hold back homes from renters.” GREGOR ROBERTSON VANCOUVER MAYOR

The city of Vancouver has focused its efforts on the rental market, where vacancies can get scooped up within hours while bidding wars drive up leasing costs.

Robertson estimated that more than 10,800 homes are empty and 10,000 more are not fully used.

The city expects that institutin­g the tax will boost the supply of homes available for lease to the point that the vacancy rate increases to about 3.5 per cent from 0.6 per cent currently.

The city will allow certain exemptions to ensure that most homeowners who are Vancouver residents, including those who spend their winters at nearby ski resorts, won’t be affected. Principal homes, as well as properties that are rented for at least six months of the year on 30-day minimum leases, won’t be taxed.

Homeowners will self-declare whether their property is a principal residence or a secondary investment.

People who pay the new tax late will face a 5-per-cent penalty, while those who don’t declare will automatica­lly be taxed.

Falsely declaring that a home is occupied or that it’s a principal residence could lead to a maximum fine of $10,000 a day for as long as the offence continues, according to the mayor’s office.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Vancouver’s empty-home tax, to take effect by Jan. 1, is among efforts to make housing more accessible and affordable in a city known for sky-high prices.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Vancouver’s empty-home tax, to take effect by Jan. 1, is among efforts to make housing more accessible and affordable in a city known for sky-high prices.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada