Buying land in British Columbia involves unique considerations — from the Agricultural Land Reserve to bare land strata to the province’s complex geography. Here is what you need to know.
Buying land in BC requires understanding Agricultural Land Reserve restrictions and zoning. See our property types guide and compare to Alberta land purchase rules.
Types of land in BC
| Type | Description | Price Range | Key Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serviced residential lot | Municipal water/sewer, paved road | $150K–$1.5M+ | Zoning, building permits, development permits |
| Bare land strata lot | Strata-titled lot with shared infrastructure | $100K–$800K+ | Monthly strata fees, bylaws, depreciation report |
| Rural residential | Some servicing, may need well/septic | $100K–$500K | Check road access, water availability |
| ALR land | Within the Agricultural Land Reserve | $500K–$3M+ (for farms) | Strict use restrictions, very limited subdivision |
| Waterfront land | Ocean, lake, or river frontage | $200K–$2M+ | Foreshore lease, environmental setbacks, erosion |
| Island land | Gulf Islands, Vancouver Island interior | $100K–$1M+ | Water supply, access, ferry dependence |
| Crown land | Provincial government-owned | Lease or purchase programs | Limited availability, complex application process |
| First Nations lease land | Leasehold on reserve land | $50K–$500K+ | Leasehold — not freehold; financing challenges |
The Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR)
ALR basics
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Coverage | ~4.6 million hectares across BC |
| Purpose | Protect farmland from development |
| Governing body | Agricultural Land Commission (ALC) |
| Can you build a house? | One principal residence permitted; limited footprint |
| Subdivision | Very restricted — ALC approval required |
| Non-farm use | Requires ALC approval; often denied |
| Impact on value | Land within ALR is typically cheaper than comparable non-ALR land |
What you can and cannot do on ALR land
| Allowed | Restricted / Requires ALC Approval |
|---|---|
| Farm activities | Subdivision |
| One principal residence | Additional residences (beyond farm worker housing) |
| Farm buildings | Non-farm commercial use |
| Limited agri-tourism | Fill deposit (more than 200 cubic metres) |
| Home-based business (small scale) | Exclusion from ALR |
| Secondary suite in principal residence | Short-term vacation rental |
Buying ALR land for residential use
| Consideration | Details |
|---|---|
| Residence footprint | Must stay within 1,000 sq m total (house, driveway, outbuildings, landscaping) |
| Size of parcel | Typically 2–8 hectares minimum in ALR |
| Financing | Banks will mortgage ALR land if you meet residential lending criteria |
| Resale | Smaller buyer pool — limited to those wanting agricultural or rural lifestyle |
| Property tax | May qualify for BC Farm Tax Exemption (significant reduction) if actively farming |
Bare land strata
How it works
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Ownership | You own your strata lot (freehold within the strata plan) |
| Common property | Roads, green spaces, amenities shared by all owners |
| Strata corporation | Manages common property, collects fees, enforces bylaws |
| Monthly fees | $100–$500/month (road maintenance, water system, common areas) |
| Bylaws | May restrict building size, style, fencing, animals, short-term rental |
| Depreciation report | Required for strata with 5+ lots — shows future maintenance costs |
Bare land strata vs standard lot
| Feature | Bare Land Strata | Standard Freehold Lot |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | Strata lot + share of common property | Full freehold |
| Monthly fees | Yes (strata fees) | No (all costs are yours) |
| Rules | Subject to strata bylaws | Subject to municipal zoning only |
| Shared infrastructure | Roads, water, common areas | Municipal responsibility |
| Financing | Some lenders have restrictions | Standard mortgage |
| Common in | Rural subdivisions, resort communities, island developments | Urban and suburban lots |
Due diligence for bare land strata
| Document | What to Review |
|---|---|
| Strata bylaws | Building restrictions, pet rules, rental restrictions |
| Depreciation report | Planned infrastructure spending over 30 years |
| Financial statements | Reserve fund balance, operating budget, any deficits |
| Minutes (2 years) | Issues, disputes, planned projects |
| Water system | Community well or municipal? Water quality and volume |
| Road maintenance | Who is responsible? Strata maintained or municipal? |
Financing vacant land in BC
| Option | Down Payment | Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank mortgage (serviced lot) | 20%–25% | Mortgage rate + premium | Major banks offer this for buildable lots |
| Bank mortgage (rural/unserviced) | 25%–50% | Higher | Fewer lender options |
| Credit union | 20%–35% | Competitive | BC credit unions (Vancity, Island Savings, etc.) are often more flexible |
| Combined lot + construction | 20%–25% of total | Construction rate | Best if building immediately |
| Private lender | 25%–40% | 8%–14% | Short-term bridge financing |
| Seller financing (VTB) | Varies | Negotiated | Some rural sellers will carry financing |
| HELOC | N/A | Prime + 0.5%–1% | Use equity in your existing home |
BC-specific regulations
Development permits
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| When required | Within Development Permit Areas (DPAs) — designated by the municipality’s Official Community Plan |
| What they control | Form and character of development, environmental protection, hazard land protection |
| Common DPAs | Steep slope, wildfire interface, waterfront, environmentally sensitive areas |
| Cost | $500–$5,000 (varies by municipality) |
| Timeline | 2–8 weeks additional beyond building permit |
Riparian areas and waterfront setbacks
| Regulation | Details |
|---|---|
| Riparian Areas Protection Regulation (RAPR) | Requires a Qualified Environmental Professional assessment within 30m of streams, lakes, or wetlands |
| Setbacks | Typically 15–30 metres from high water mark — varies by assessment |
| Foreshore lease | For docks or structures below the high water mark; requires Crown lease |
| Flood Construction Level (FCL) | Minimum building elevation in flood-prone areas |
Wildfire interface
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| FireSmart BC | Properties in wildfire interface zones may need to meet FireSmart standards |
| Building requirements | Fire-resistant roofing, siding, setbacks from forest |
| Insurance | Increasingly difficult/expensive in high-risk wildfire zones |
| Property maintenance | May need to maintain defensible space (clear vegetation around buildings) |
Regional land market overview
| Region | Serviced Lot | Rural Acreage | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metro Vancouver | $500K–$1.5M+ | ALR (limited residential) | Extremely limited supply |
| Fraser Valley | $300K–$800K | $200K–$500K+ | Some ALR, some rural residential |
| Vancouver Island (Victoria area) | $250K–$600K | $200K–$500K | Strong demand, limited water in some areas |
| Vancouver Island (up-island) | $100K–$300K | $100K–$300K | More affordable; well/septic common |
| Gulf Islands | $150K–$600K+ | $100K–$500K+ | Ferry access, water supply challenges |
| Okanagan (Kelowna/Penticton) | $200K–$600K | $150K–$500K | Vineyard/agricultural potential; wildfire risk |
| Kamloops | $100K–$250K | $75K–$200K | Affordable; wildfire interface considerations |
| Prince George / Northern BC | $50K–$150K | $50K–$200K | Most affordable; remote locations |
| Kootenays (Nelson/Revelstoke) | $100K–$300K | $100K–$400K | Mountain lifestyle; limited services in some areas |
Due diligence checklist for buying land in BC
- Confirm zoning and permitted uses with the municipality
- Check if the property is within the ALR (BC ALR mapping tool)
- Verify Development Permit Area requirements
- Check for environmental constraints (riparian areas, species at risk, wetlands)
- Confirm water availability (municipal, community well, or private well feasibility)
- Check wildfire interface zone status and insurance availability
- Review bare land strata documents (if applicable): bylaws, depreciation report, financials
- Order or review a survey (BC Land Surveyor)
- Confirm road access is legal and maintained (municipal or strata?)
- Check for easements, rights-of-way, or restrictive covenants (title search)
- Perform a soil test if septic is required
- Confirm hydro connection availability and cost (BC Hydro or local utility)
- Calculate total project cost: land + servicing + construction + GST + PTT