British Columbia

Foreign buyers' tax and other measures under review, B.C. housing minister says

In 2016, the previous Liberal government had implemented a 15 per cent tax on foreign nationals buying property in Metro Vancouver.

Previous Liberal government implemented 15 per cent tax on foreign nationals buying property 1 year ago

The NDP government says it will be reviewing the tax on foreign buyers implemented by the previous Liberal government to see if it improved housing affordability in Metro Vancouver. (CBC)

British Columbia's new housing minister says she is reviewing the tax on foreign buyers of Vancouver real estate and the province's interest-free loan program to first-time homebuyers.

In an interview, Selina Robinson says she and provincial Finance Minister Carole James are analyzing whether those measures brought in by the previous Liberal government were effective in stabilizing Vancouver's housing market and improving affordability.

Before it signed a co-operation agreement with the Green Party to form government, the NDP promised to bring in an annual two per cent tax on vacant properties, but Robinson says that too is under review.

A year ago, the Liberal government implemented a 15 per cent tax on foreign nationals purchasing property in Metro Vancouver in an effort to cool skyrocketing house prices.

From June 10 until Aug. 1, 2016 — one day before the tax took effect — 13.2 per cent of all property transfer transactions in Metro Vancouver involved foreign buyers, according to data from the B.C. Finance Ministry.

From Aug. 2, 2016, until the end of last year, that figure fell to 2.6 per cent.

The Multiple Listing Service composite benchmark price for all properties in Metro Vancouver was $998,700 in June, an increase of 7.9 per cent from the same month last year.