B.C.'s Foreign Buyer Tax Scrapped For Those With Work Permits

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VANCOUVER — British Columbia's premier has announced her government is amending its tax on foreigners buying property in Metro Vancouver.

Premier Christy Clark says the levy will be lifted for those who have a work permit and pay taxes in B.C., in order to encourage more people to come to the province.

The 15 per cent foreign buyers tax was implemented last August in a bid to cool skyrocketing real estate prices.

christy clark
B.C. Premier Christy Clark has announced a loosening of the tax on home purchases by foreigners. (Photo: Scott Eells/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Government data released earlier this month shows there was a steep drop in real estate transactions in the Vancouver area last summer after the tax was introduced.

Tax revenues from property transfers in Metro Vancouver show there were about 15,000 transactions in an approximately seven-week period ending Aug. 1, but the number dropped to a low of about 4,700 for the month of October.

The data shows there were about 1,970 purchases involving foreign buyers in the period ending Aug. 1, compared to 60 in the rest of August and about 200 in November.

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