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BC Property Tax Deferment Program

BC Property Tax Deferment Program

In Budget 2026, the Government of British Columbia proposed a significant change to the Property Tax Deferment Program—primarily affecting the interest rate structure on deferred taxes.

Here is a clear breakdown of what changed.


1. Higher Interest Rate on Deferred Property Taxes

Beginning with taxes deferred for the 2026 taxation year and onward, the interest rate on deferments will increase to:
Prime rate + 2%, compounded monthly.

This applies to both:

  • the Regular Program (typically for homeowners 55+, surviving spouses, or people with disabilities), and

  • the Families with Children Program.

Previously, the two programs had different interest structures and generally lower rates tied to government borrowing costs.


2. Interest Will Now Compound

Another important change:

  • Interest on new deferments will compound monthly, rather than being simple interest.

This means interest is charged not only on the original deferred tax amount but also on accumulated interest, increasing the long-term cost of deferment.


3. Existing Deferred Taxes Are Not Affected

Amounts already deferred before 2026 will remain under the previous interest terms and are not retroactively changed.

Only new deferrals starting in 2026 will use the updated rate and compounding method.


4. What the Program Still Does

The program itself remains the same structurally:

  • It allows eligible homeowners to delay paying annual property taxes.

  • The Province pays the tax to the municipality.

  • The deferred amount becomes a loan secured against the property title, typically repaid when the home is sold or transferred.


✅ In practical terms:

  • The program still provides liquidity for homeowners (especially seniors).

  • However, the cost of using the program will be noticeably higher going forward due to the higher rate and compounding interest.


Many seniors on the North Shore use this program to stay in their homes. The change effectively moves the deferment loan closer to market borrowing rates, which may influence whether homeowners defer taxes or pay them annually.

Credit Source: Ryan Bacchus, Certified Financial Planner (CFP) and Associate Financial Advisor & Reg Sangha, Financial Associate & Advisor at RGF Integrated Wealth Management

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