What this means for Kootenays strata councils
This guide covers bc epr deadlines for strata corporations across Kootenays. The requirements are province-wide, but two things are local to your council — the deadline you are working toward and the kind of building you manage.
The Kootenays — Cranbrook, Nelson, Castlegar, Trail, and Revelstoke — carry a smaller strata footprint than the Lower Mainland but a building stock with significant heritage and 1970s–1980s wood-frame inventory. Revelstoke's resort condo complexes around the mountain are an active capacity-planning area.
- Electrical Planning Report (EPR): due December 31, 2028 for Kootenays stratas of five or more lots, under the Strata Property Act.
- Depreciation Report: due July 1, 2027 if the strata has never had a report or its most recent report predates December 31, 2020.
The full guide
British Columbia's Electrical Planning Report requirement applies to every strata corporation of five or more lots — but the deadline depends on where the strata is. Critically, the date is set by the regional district, not the city.
The two deadline groups
- December 31, 2026 — stratas in the Metro Vancouver Regional District, the Fraser Valley Regional District, and the Capital Regional District (Greater Victoria).
- December 31, 2028 — stratas everywhere else in BC: Vancouver Island outside the CRD, the Sea-to-Sky corridor and Sunshine Coast, the Okanagan, the Kootenays, the Cariboo–Thompson, and Northern BC.
Because the deadline follows the regional district, a strata in Hope (Fraser Valley Regional District) shares the 2026 deadline with one in Vancouver, while a strata in Salmon Arm (Columbia Shuswap Regional District) has until 2028.
Don't confuse it with the Depreciation Report deadline
The Depreciation Report mandate runs on a parallel but separate schedule: July 1, 2026 for Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, and the Capital Regional District (a deadline that has now passed), and July 1, 2027 for the rest of BC — applying to stratas that have never had a report or whose most recent report predates December 31, 2020.
What happens if a strata misses its EPR deadline?
The Strata Property Act attaches no fine to a missed EPR deadline, but the consequences are real: the missing report becomes a written disclosure on every Form B Information Certificate, an owner can ask the Civil Resolution Tribunal to order compliance with section 94.1, and owner EV-charging requests under sections 90.1–90.3 proceed whether or not council has the capacity analysis an EPR provides. There is also no deferral, waiver, or opt-out to wait for. We cover the full picture — including what a late strata should do first — in our guide to what happens if a strata misses the EPR deadline.
Why starting early matters
An EPR takes six to ten weeks to do properly, and the queue tightens as a deadline approaches. The work also depends on utility consumption data, whose turnaround a strata cannot fully control. Councils that begin a year out avoid the crunch and have time to act on the report's recommendations before they become urgent.
Next steps for Kootenays councils
When your council is ready to act, CF Electrical Services prepares Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and Depreciation Reports for stratas across Kootenays — the statutory reports signed and sealed by the credential the regulation calls for, and everything written in plain language for the council and owners who have to use it. When the plan becomes a project, we can manage that too.
- Electrical Planning Reports in Cranbrook
- Electrical Planning Reports in Nelson
- Electrical Planning Reports in Castlegar
- Electrical Planning Reports in Trail
- Electrical Planning Reports in Revelstoke
- Electrical Planning Reports in Golden
- Electrical Planning Reports in Kimberley
- Electrical Planning Reports in Fernie
See all Kootenays strata services, or browse the full guide library.
Written by CF Electrical Services — BC strata electrical consulting: Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and electrification project management, plus Depreciation Reports. Published May 27, 2026.