BC Property Transfer Tax Calculator
Calculate British Columbia Property Transfer Tax (PTT) for 2025, including first-time buyer exemptions and the 20% foreign buyer tax.
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How to use this calculator
- 1
Enter the purchase price of the BC property.
- 2
Select residential or non-residential — the first-time buyer exemption applies to residential properties only.
- 3
Select whether you are a first-time home buyer. Full exemption applies for properties up to $500,000; partial exemption up to $835,000.
- 4
If you are a foreign national or foreign corporation purchasing in a restricted area (Metro Vancouver, Capital Regional District, etc.), the 20% foreign buyer tax also applies.
Frequently asked questions
What is the BC Property Transfer Tax?
The BC Property Transfer Tax (PTT) is a provincial tax payable by the buyer whenever property changes hands in British Columbia. Rates are 1% on the first $200,000, 2% on $200,001–$3,000,000, and 3% on amounts above $3,000,000 for residential properties. A further 2% applies on the residential portion above $3,000,000 under the additional property transfer tax for luxury homes, bringing the effective top rate to 5%. The PTT is paid on closing through your notary or lawyer.
How does the BC first-time buyer PTT exemption work?
British Columbia offers a Property Transfer Tax exemption for first-time buyers purchasing a property priced at $835,000 or less. If the purchase price is $500,000 or under, the exemption is full — you pay no PTT at all. Between $500,001 and $835,000, the exemption is partial and phases out on a sliding scale. To qualify, you must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident, have lived in BC for 12 consecutive months immediately before the purchase or filed 2 income tax returns as a BC resident in the last 6 years, have never owned an interest in a principal residence anywhere in the world, and must move into the home within 92 days and live there for at least one year.
What is the foreign buyer tax in BC?
British Columbia levies an Additional Property Transfer Tax of 20% of the fair market value on residential property purchases by foreign nationals, foreign corporations, and taxable trustees in designated areas. The designated areas include Metro Vancouver, Capital Regional District (Victoria area), Fraser Valley, Central Okanagan, and Nanaimo Regional District. This tax was introduced in 2016 at 15% and raised to 20% in 2018. It applies on top of the standard PTT and is intended to address housing affordability concerns.
Is the BC PTT the same as Ontario land transfer tax?
Both are provincial taxes on property transfers, but they use different rate structures. BC PTT: 1% up to $200,000, 2% to $3M, 3% above. Ontario LTT: 0.5% up to $55,000, 1% to $250,000, 1.5% to $400,000, 2% to $2M, 2.5% above. Ontario also has a Toronto municipal LTT on top. For a typical $750,000 home, BC PTT is $13,000 while Ontario LTT is approximately $10,475 (with Toronto MLTT bringing it to $20,950 inside Toronto).
BC Property Transfer Tax Calculator 2025 — PTT, Foreign Buyer Tax & First-Time Buyer Exemption
Understanding BC property transfer tax rates and exemptions
British Columbia's Property Transfer Tax is one of the most significant closing costs for BC home buyers. On a $750,000 home, the PTT totals $13,000 — a meaningful addition to your down payment and legal fees. The tax uses a marginal structure: 1% on the first $200,000 and 2% on the remainder up to $3 million, with a 3% rate kicking in above $3 million. For most buyers in Metro Vancouver, the Okanagan, or Greater Victoria, the 2% rate applies to most of the purchase price. BC does not offer general buyer rebates like Ontario does, so the PTT is unavoidable unless you qualify for the first-time buyer exemption or a new-home exemption for newly built homes.
Foreign buyer tax and market impact
BC introduced its additional property transfer tax on foreign buyers in 2016, originally at 15% and raised to 20% in 2018. The tax applies to residential property purchases in designated regional districts, including Metro Vancouver, Capital Regional District, Fraser Valley, Nanaimo Regional District, and Central Okanagan. A foreign national buying a $1,000,000 home in Vancouver pays $10,000 in standard PTT plus $200,000 in foreign buyer tax — nearly tripling the tax burden. The policy was designed to cool speculative foreign investment in BC real estate markets, particularly Vancouver, where housing affordability had become a significant public concern. Canadian citizens and permanent residents are not affected, regardless of whether they live overseas.
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Results are estimates for informational purposes only and do not constitute professional financial, medical, legal, or technical advice. Read full disclaimer →