Gulf News

British Columbia’s 15% tax to rein in overseas investors

Measure seeks to increase affordabil­ity in Vancouver’s red-hot housing market

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British Columbia introduced a new 15 per cent property transfer tax on foreign real estate buyers in Vancouver on Monday, one of new measures geared at increasing affordabil­ity in the city’s red-hot housing market.

The new tax will drive up costs for foreign investors, mostly from mainland China, who have helped make Vancouver Canada’s most expensive property market. It takes effect on August 2.

The new law comes weeks after the province released preliminar­y data showing that foreigners invested some C$1 billion (Dh2.78 billion; $756.7 million) in British Columbia housing from June 10 to July 14, with about 86 per cent of that in Vancouver.

Vancouver real estate agent Tom Gradecak, who specialise­s in neighbourh­oods popular with Chinese buyers, said he been flooded with calls from clients worried about sales that could fall through now because of the new tax.

“I don’t know if [foreign buyers] will walk away. But one thing it will certainly lead to is less flipping, less speculatio­n,” he said.

Other agents said the dramatic new tax, introduced with little notice, could affect chains of property deals.

The cost of a typical home in the Vancouver area jumped 32 per cent over one year to hit C$917,800 in June. Foreign buyers have taken the brunt of the blame for the runaway market, though factors like low interest rates also play a role.

The province’s property transfer tax rates currently range from 1 per cent to 3 per cent, depending on the value of the home. Foreign buyers will now pay an additional 15 per cent, with the province set to hire extra auditors to help enforce the new tax.

The tax echoes measures taken by cities like Hong Kong, Singapore and Melbourne, which have all introduced some sort of additional stamp duty on foreign buyers.

Critics said savvy buyers could find loopholes to avoid the tax, noting it would not capture foreign money flowing into the Vancouver market via newcomers with resident status.

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