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Buying a Home in Vancouver — Complete Guide (2026)

Updated

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:

AreaAvg DetachedAvg TownhouseAvg CondoCharacter
Vancouver West$3.2M+$1.5M+$850K–$1.2MEstablished, UBC, Kitsilano, Kerrisdale, Point Grey
Vancouver East$1.5M–$2.0M$1.0M–$1.3M$550K–$750KGentrifying, Commercial Drive, Main Street
Burnaby$1.6M–$2.2M$900K–$1.2M$600K–$800KSkyTrain connected, Metrotown, Brentwood
Richmond$1.5M–$2.0M$900K–$1.1M$550K–$700KFlat terrain, diverse community, farmland proximity
North Vancouver$1.8M–$2.5M$1.1M–$1.4M$650K–$850KMountain 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–$700KEvergreen SkyTrain extension, growing
New Westminster$1.2M–$1.6M$750K–$950K$500K–$650KHistoric, SkyTrain hub, waterfront
Surrey$1.2M–$1.7M$700K–$900K$450K–$600KFastest growing in Metro, new SkyTrain to Langley
Langley$1.2M–$1.6M$700K–$900K$450K–$550KMaster-planned communities, more suburban
Maple Ridge / Pitt Meadows$950K–$1.3M$650K–$850K$400K–$500KMost affordable in Metro, longer commute

BC Property Transfer Tax (PTT)

Purchase PricePTT CalculationTotal PTT
$500,0001% × $200K + 2% × $300K$8,000
$600,0001% × $200K + 2% × $400K$10,000
$750,0001% × $200K + 2% × $550K$13,000
$1,000,0001% × $200K + 2% × $800K$18,000
$1,500,0001% × $200K + 2% × $1.3M$28,000
$2,000,0001% × $200K + 2% × $1.8M$38,000
$2,500,0001% × $200K + 2% × $1.8M + 3% × $500K$53,000

PTT exemptions

ExemptionEligibilityMaximum Purchase Price
First-Time Home BuyerCanadian citizen/PR, lived in BC 12+ months, never owned worldwideFull exemption up to $500K (partial $500K–$525K)
Newly Built HomeAny buyer purchasing a new buildFull exemption up to $750K (partial $750K–$800K)
New FTB + New Build comboFirst-time buyers purchasing new buildsFull 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.

FactorFreehold (Fee Simple)Leasehold
OwnershipYou own the building AND the landYou own the building, lease the land
PriceMarket price20–40% less for similar location/size
Mortgage financingAll lendersLimited — most A-lenders want 30–50+ years remaining; under 20 years is very difficult
Lease paymentsNone$200–$1,500+/month to the landowner
AppreciationFull market appreciationDeclines as lease shortens (depreciating asset)
Lease renewalN/ADepends on lease terms — NOT guaranteed in all cases
RisksStandard market riskLease 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

PropertyPriceDown PaymentMortgageRate (5-yr fixed)Min Household Income
1-bed condo (Vancouver)$650,000$40,000 (6.2%)$610,0004.89%$125,000
2-bed condo (Burnaby)$750,000$50,000 (6.7%)$700,0004.89%$145,000
Townhouse (Surrey)$850,000$60,000 (7.1%)$790,0004.89%$165,000
Townhouse (Coquitlam)$950,000$70,000 (7.4%)$880,0004.89%$180,000
Detached (Surrey)$1,400,000$280,000 (20%)$1,120,0004.99%$230,000
Detached (Vancouver East)$1,800,000$360,000 (20%)$1,440,0004.99%$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)

CategoryAmount
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

TaxWho PaysRateWhere
Foreign Buyer BanNon-Canadian citizens/PRs (with exceptions)Cannot purchase residential propertyNationwide (federal, until 2027)
BC Speculation & Vacancy TaxOwners who don’t declare principal residence or rent to a tenant0.5% (BC residents) to 2% (foreign/satellite families)Metro Vancouver, Victoria, Kelowna, and other specified areas
Vancouver Empty Homes TaxHomes vacant 6+ months per year in City of Vancouver5% of assessed valueCity 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
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