Vancouver is Canada’s most expensive housing market and one of the priciest in North America. Buying here requires careful neighbourhood selection, understanding BC-specific taxes, and budgeting for higher-than-average closing costs. This guide covers every aspect of buying in Metro Vancouver.
Metro Vancouver market overview
Metro Vancouver spans 21 municipalities with dramatically different price points:
| Area | Avg Detached | Avg Townhouse | Avg Condo | Character |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vancouver West | $3.2M+ | $1.5M+ | $850K–$1.2M | Established, UBC, Kitsilano, Kerrisdale, Point Grey |
| Vancouver East | $1.5M–$2.0M | $1.0M–$1.3M | $550K–$750K | Gentrifying, Commercial Drive, Main Street |
| Burnaby | $1.6M–$2.2M | $900K–$1.2M | $600K–$800K | SkyTrain connected, Metrotown, Brentwood |
| Richmond | $1.5M–$2.0M | $900K–$1.1M | $550K–$700K | Flat terrain, diverse community, farmland proximity |
| North Vancouver | $1.8M–$2.5M | $1.1M–$1.4M | $650K–$850K | Mountain access, outdoor lifestyle, SeaBus |
| West Vancouver | $2.8M+ | $1.5M+ | $800K+ | Luxury market, waterfront, British Properties |
| Coquitlam / Port Coquitlam | $1.3M–$1.8M | $800K–$1.0M | $550K–$700K | Evergreen SkyTrain extension, growing |
| New Westminster | $1.2M–$1.6M | $750K–$950K | $500K–$650K | Historic, SkyTrain hub, waterfront |
| Surrey | $1.2M–$1.7M | $700K–$900K | $450K–$600K | Fastest growing in Metro, new SkyTrain to Langley |
| Langley | $1.2M–$1.6M | $700K–$900K | $450K–$550K | Master-planned communities, more suburban |
| Maple Ridge / Pitt Meadows | $950K–$1.3M | $650K–$850K | $400K–$500K | Most affordable in Metro, longer commute |
BC Property Transfer Tax (PTT)
| Purchase Price | PTT Calculation | Total PTT |
|---|---|---|
| $500,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $300K | $8,000 |
| $600,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $400K | $10,000 |
| $750,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $550K | $13,000 |
| $1,000,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $800K | $18,000 |
| $1,500,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $1.3M | $28,000 |
| $2,000,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $1.8M | $38,000 |
| $2,500,000 | 1% × $200K + 2% × $1.8M + 3% × $500K | $53,000 |
PTT exemptions
| Exemption | Eligibility | Maximum Purchase Price |
|---|---|---|
| First-Time Home Buyer | Canadian citizen/PR, lived in BC 12+ months, never owned worldwide | Full exemption up to $500K (partial $500K–$525K) |
| Newly Built Home | Any buyer purchasing a new build | Full exemption up to $750K (partial $750K–$800K) |
| New FTB + New Build combo | First-time buyers purchasing new builds | Full exemption up to $750K |
Reality check: The $500,000 FTB exemption limit is effectively useless in most of Metro Vancouver where even condos exceed $500K. The newly built home exemption at $750K is more practical for condo buyers.
Leasehold vs freehold
Vancouver has a significant number of leasehold properties, particularly near UBC, in the West End, and on First Nations lands.
| Factor | Freehold (Fee Simple) | Leasehold |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | You own the building AND the land | You own the building, lease the land |
| Price | Market price | 20–40% less for similar location/size |
| Mortgage financing | All lenders | Limited — most A-lenders want 30–50+ years remaining; under 20 years is very difficult |
| Lease payments | None | $200–$1,500+/month to the landowner |
| Appreciation | Full market appreciation | Declines as lease shortens (depreciating asset) |
| Lease renewal | N/A | Depends on lease terms — NOT guaranteed in all cases |
| Risks | Standard market risk | Lease expiry, rising lease payments, financing issues on resale |
Leasehold red flags
- Fewer than 30 years remaining on the lease
- No clear lease renewal provisions
- Rapidly increasing annual lease payments
- Building maintenance deferred because owners expect lease to end
- Difficulty finding comparables for fair market value
Strata (condo) considerations in Vancouver
BC uses the term “strata” instead of “condominium corporation.” Understanding strata rules is essential:
Key strata documents to review
- Form B Information Certificate — financial snapshot, pending lawsuits, bylaw violations
- Form F Certificate of Payment — confirms the seller is current on strata fees
- Depreciation report — engineering assessment of building condition and future repair costs (required for buildings 5+ years old)
- Strata meeting minutes (last 2 years) — reveals disputes, upcoming costs, insurance claims
- Strata bylaws — rental restrictions, pet rules, renovation requirements, age restrictions
- Insurance certificate — confirms coverage; check the deductible amount (some buildings have $250K+ water damage deductibles)
Strata insurance crisis
Many Vancouver-area strata buildings have seen massive insurance premium increases since 2020. High deductibles (sometimes $100K–$500K for water damage) mean individual owners must carry substantial personal strata lot insurance. Always verify the building’s master policy deductible before buying.
Income needed to buy in Metro Vancouver
| Property | Price | Down Payment | Mortgage | Rate (5-yr fixed) | Min Household Income |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-bed condo (Vancouver) | $650,000 | $40,000 (6.2%) | $610,000 | 4.89% | $125,000 |
| 2-bed condo (Burnaby) | $750,000 | $50,000 (6.7%) | $700,000 | 4.89% | $145,000 |
| Townhouse (Surrey) | $850,000 | $60,000 (7.1%) | $790,000 | 4.89% | $165,000 |
| Townhouse (Coquitlam) | $950,000 | $70,000 (7.4%) | $880,000 | 4.89% | $180,000 |
| Detached (Surrey) | $1,400,000 | $280,000 (20%) | $1,120,000 | 4.99% | $230,000 |
| Detached (Vancouver East) | $1,800,000 | $360,000 (20%) | $1,440,000 | 4.99% | $295,000 |
Assumes 25-year amortization, stress test at contract rate + 2%, TDS ratio of 42%.
Total cost to buy in Vancouver
Complete budget: $750,000 condo (first-time buyer, 10% down)
| Category | Amount |
|---|---|
| Down payment | $75,000 |
| Closing costs | |
| BC Property Transfer Tax | $13,000 |
| FTB PTT exemption | –$0 (price exceeds $525K) |
| Legal/notary fees | $1,800 |
| Title insurance | $400 |
| Home inspection | $500 |
| PST on CMHC premium (7%) | $1,382 |
| Strata Form B | $300 |
| Property tax adjustment | $1,200 |
| Home/strata lot insurance | $800 |
| Moving | $2,000 |
| Total closing costs | $21,382 |
| Total cash needed | $96,382 |
Key difference from Ontario: In Vancouver, most transactions use a notary public ($1,200–$1,800) rather than a lawyer ($1,500–$2,500), though complex transactions may still warrant a lawyer.
Foreign buyer and speculation taxes
| Tax | Who Pays | Rate | Where |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foreign Buyer Ban | Non-Canadian citizens/PRs (with exceptions) | Cannot purchase residential property | Nationwide (federal, until 2027) |
| BC Speculation & Vacancy Tax | Owners who don’t declare principal residence or rent to a tenant | 0.5% (BC residents) to 2% (foreign/satellite families) | Metro Vancouver, Victoria, Kelowna, and other specified areas |
| Vancouver Empty Homes Tax | Homes vacant 6+ months per year in City of Vancouver | 5% of assessed value | City of Vancouver only |
Neighbourhood tiers for buyers
Tier 1: Entry points (most affordable in Metro)
- Surrey (Whalley, Newton) — most affordable condos/townhomes, SkyTrain connected
- Maple Ridge / Pitt Meadows — detached homes under $1M, longer commute
- Langley (Willoughby, Walnut Grove) — new master-planned communities, family-focused
Tier 2: Established and connected
- East Vancouver (Hastings-Sunrise, Renfrew) — character homes, rapid transit, diverse
- New Westminster — SkyTrain hub, waterfront revitalization, historic downtown
- Coquitlam / Port Moody — Evergreen Line, Inlet views, growing amenities
Tier 3: Premium markets
- Kitsilano / Point Grey — beaches, UBC proximity, established
- Mount Pleasant / Main Street — breweries, restaurants, top walkability
- North Vancouver (Lower Lonsdale) — SeaBus, waterfront, mountain access