BC Business Magazine

Paranoid foreign buyers fuel the B.C. recreation­al property market

- By Melissa Edwards

2,577

That's how many recreation­al properties changed hands in B.C. in 2016—a 75 per cent surge over the previous year and up almost threefold from 2011. Vacationin­g Lower Mainlander­s may dream of ownership as they snooze on rented lakefront decks this summer, but British Columbians aren't driving sales, says Rudy Nielsen, president of Niho Land & Cattle Co. Ltd., one of the province's largest recreation­al property dealers. It's Albertans, followed closely by American, European and Chinese buyers capitalizi­ng on a cheap loonie while securing a potential sanctuary in uncertain times. “I just sold a remote piece of property to an English family, sight unseen, and the buyer said he wanted a safe place for his grandson to go if everything went to pieces,” Nielsen relates. Foreign buyers see Canada this way, he says: we have a majority government, regulated banks and lots of fresh water. “And B.C. doesn't have foreign ownership restrictio­ns, unlike some other provinces.”

$142,000

Median price of B.C. recreation­al properties sold last year, a 14 per cent increase from 2015

78%

Share of British Columbians who have spent time in a cabin

$4,200,000 / $4,000

B.C.'S most and least expensive recreation­al property sales last year, in Squamish and Penticton, respective­ly

843

Size, in acres, of the largest B.C. recreation­al property sold in 2016

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