What this means for Metro Vancouver strata councils
This guide covers electrical planning report for bc strata — the complete 2026 guide for strata corporations across Metro Vancouver. 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.
Metro Vancouver carries the largest concentration of strata corporations in British Columbia — concrete highrises through Vancouver, Burnaby Metrotown, Coquitlam Burquitlam, and the New Westminster waterfront; townhouse-dominant stock through Surrey, Langley, Maple Ridge, and Delta; and 1980s wood-frame walk-ups still common across the older neighbourhoods. The region's deadline pressure (December 31, 2026 for EPRs and July 1, 2026 for Depreciation Reports) puts most councils in active planning mode.
- Electrical Planning Report (EPR): due December 31, 2026 for Metro Vancouver stratas of five or more lots, under the Strata Property Act.
- Depreciation Report: due July 1, 2026 if the strata has never had a report or its most recent report predates December 31, 2020.
The full guide
If your strata corporation has five or more lots in British Columbia, an Electrical Planning Report (EPR) is mandatory — and the deadline for most Metro Vancouver, Fraser Valley, and Victoria-area stratas is December 31, 2026. This guide answers every question strata councils typically have before commissioning one.
What is an Electrical Planning Report?
An Electrical Planning Report is a statutory document required by the Strata Property Act for every BC strata corporation of five or more lots. It is not a routine inspection and it is not the same as an electrical safety check. The EPR is a rigorous analysis of your building's electrical infrastructure — what capacity it has, how much is being used, what the building will need as electrification accelerates, and what specific upgrades would increase available capacity.
The report gives your council a fact-based answer to a hard question: can this building support what owners are going to demand — EV charging, heat pumps, electric domestic hot water — and if not, what does it take to get there? The Strata Property Act does not allow that question to be answered with guesswork, and the EPR becomes a permanent part of the strata's record, disclosed to every buyer, lender, and insurer for as long as the strata exists.
Who is required to get an EPR?
Any strata corporation in British Columbia with five or more strata lots. The requirement makes no distinction by strata type: residential condos, townhouses, bare land stratas, commercial, industrial, and mixed-use stratas all have the same obligation. New strata corporations have five years from the deposit of the strata plan to obtain their first report. The only size-based exemption is for existing stratas that had fewer than five lots on December 31, 2023.
EPR deadlines by region
BC splits strata corporations into two deadline groups under section 94.1 of the Strata Property Act:
- December 31, 2026 — strata corporations in the Metro Vancouver Regional District, the Fraser Valley Regional District, and the Capital Regional District (Victoria, Saanich, and the CRD), excluding islands accessible only by air or water (such as Bowen Island and the Southern Gulf Islands, which have the 2028 deadline).
- December 31, 2028 — all other BC strata corporations, including those on islands accessible only by air or water, Vancouver Island outside the CRD, the Sea-to-Sky corridor, Sunshine Coast, Okanagan, Kootenays, Cariboo–Thompson, and Northern BC.
The deadline is set by the strata's regional district — not the city. A strata in Hope is in the Fraser Valley Regional District and faces the 2026 deadline. A strata in Abbotsford is also in the Fraser Valley RD — same 2026 deadline. A strata in Salmon Arm (Columbia Shuswap RD) faces the 2028 deadline. When in doubt, look up which regional district your municipality belongs to, not just the city name.
For the full deadline breakdown by region and what happens if a strata misses its date, see our guide to BC EPR deadlines by region.
What must be in a compliant EPR
BC strata law specifies the required content. A compliant Electrical Planning Report must include all of the following:
- Physical on-site inspection of all electrical and mechanical infrastructure — electrical rooms, switchgear, transformers, and panels, visited in person. No desktop-only reviews.
- Electrical drawings and strata plan retrieved from the municipality — the legal as-built configuration of the building's electrical systems.
- BC Hydro or FortisBC 12-month consumption-data analysis — real demand figures from the utility, not code-based estimates that can overstate available capacity.
- Peak demand, spare capacity, and load-diversity calculations modelled to electrical-code standards.
- Future-electrification scenarios — modelled capacity demand for EV charging, heat-pump conversions, and electric domestic hot water heating.
- Gas-to-electric conversion estimates — capacity required to convert gas-fired systems (furnaces, boilers, domestic hot water) to electric.
- Demand-management and load-reduction recommendations — strategies to free capacity without a utility service upgrade.
- Upgrade recommendations with estimated capacity freed — specific actions and the amount of capacity each would unlock.
A report missing any item from this list is non-compliant. A non-compliant EPR is visible to everyone who ever reviews the strata's records: buyers, mortgage lenders, title insurers, future councils. The time to get a complete report is now, not after a real-estate transaction uncovers the gap.
One narrow variant: a short-form EPR is permitted where every strata lot receives electricity directly from the utility and the strata owns no shared electrical infrastructure. Very few stratas qualify, and an on-site assessment is still required to establish eligibility.
Who is qualified to prepare and seal an EPR
BC strata law names the Qualified Person by building type, not by firm or trade name. The key split is between Part 3 (complex) buildings — multi-storey concrete or steel, mixed-use, and buildings requiring complex engineering review under the BC Building Code — and Part 9 (simple) buildings — wood-frame construction up to four storeys.
- Part 3 buildings: a Professional Engineer (P.Eng, EGBC), a Professional Licensee Engineering (P.L.Eng., EGBC), an Applied Science Technologist (AScT), or a Certified Technician (ASTTBC).
- Part 9 buildings: all of the above, plus a Journeyperson Electrician (in the construction or industrial electrician trade, as defined in the Skilled Trades BC Act).
The Qualified Person list was expanded on October 27, 2025, to add Professional Licensee Engineering and Certified Technician — both are full Qualified Persons for Part 3 EPRs. The P.L.Eng. category is distinct from P.Eng. and reflects engineers licensed for a specific scope of practice under EGBC.
CF Electrical Services covers every BC strata building type — concrete highrises and mid-rises through wood-frame walk-ups and townhouse complexes — and signs and seals each report with the credential the regulation calls for. For a full walkthrough of the Part 3 / Part 9 distinction, see who can sign and seal a BC strata EPR.
How long an EPR takes — and why 2026-deadline stratas should not wait
A typical EPR takes six to ten weeks from intake to sealed delivery. The main variable is the BC Hydro or FortisBC consumption-data request: the utility supplies 12 months of interval data, and processing times vary. A firm that tells you an EPR takes two weeks is either skipping the utility data or skipping the site visit — both are non-compliant shortcuts.
For Metro Vancouver stratas facing the December 31, 2026 deadline, the timing implications are:
- Commission by mid-July 2026 → sealed report by September/October → 3–4 months to act on findings before the deadline.
- Commission in September 2026 → sealed report by November/December → 1–2 months of margin.
- Commission in late October 2026 → a 10-week engagement ends right at December 31 with no margin for delays.
- Commission after November 2026 → a 10-week engagement misses the deadline entirely.
Provider capacity across BC tightens well ahead of the deadline, not at it. Strata councils should commission now rather than assume Q4 slots will be available. See the full EPR timeline and 2026 deadline breakdown.
The EPR + EV Ready Plan combination
Many strata councils commission an EV Ready Plan (EVRP) alongside their EPR. There are two reasons to bundle them:
Efficiency. The two reports share data inputs — BC Hydro consumption data, load calculations, and future-demand modelling. Commissioning them separately duplicates work and costs more. Combined, one engagement handles both and the outputs are internally consistent.
The July 15, 2026 rebate change. From July 15, 2026, BC Hydro requires a qualifying planning document — an EV Ready Plan, an Electrical Planning Report, or a CleanBC Opportunity Assessment — on file before a strata can apply for standalone EV charger rebates. An EPR alone now opens the door to charger funding. But if your goal is a building-wide EV-ready retrofit (with the wiring, conduit, and panels behind the stalls), the larger infrastructure rebate still requires a full EV Ready Plan — an EPR alone does not unlock it.
For stratas aiming for the plan rebate (up to 75% of the plan's cost, to a $3,000 maximum), the pre-approval step that became mandatory on July 15, 2026 means the paperwork must start earlier than under the old six-months-after-invoice window. See our full breakdown of the July 2026 EV rebate changes.
What does an EPR cost?
Published market guidance places a typical EPR between roughly $5,000 and $12,000, with the price driven by building size, complexity, and scope. A concrete high-rise with multiple switchgear rooms and hundreds of units will cost more than a wood-frame walk-up with a single panel. A combined EPR + EV Ready Plan engagement costs more than an EPR alone but less than commissioning the two reports separately.
Very low quotes — under $3,000 — typically reflect a reduced scope: no on-site inspection, no utility consumption data, or an incomplete electrification analysis. A report that skips any of the mandated content items is non-compliant, regardless of price. For a full breakdown of why EPR prices vary and what different scope choices mean for compliance and quality, see why EPR prices vary so widely.
CF Electrical Services quotes a fixed price per proposal, not an hourly rate. We respond within one business day of receiving your building details.
How to choose an EPR provider
With dozens of firms now offering EPRs across BC, the differences are less about credentials (the regulation defines who qualifies) and more about process, scope, and what you get after the report is sealed. Five questions to ask any provider before signing:
- Is the firm consulting-only, with no electrical installation work? A firm that also bids on installation has a financial interest in recommending upgrades. A consulting-only firm, like CF Electrical Services, has none.
- Does it hold the right credential for your building type? Confirm the Qualified Person who will sign and seal the report is credentialled for your building (Part 3 requires P.Eng, P.L.Eng., AScT, or Certified Technician; Part 9 also allows a Journeyperson Electrician).
- Does it quote a fixed price? Hourly estimates leave you exposed to scope creep. A fixed-price proposal is fairer and makes budget planning easier.
- Will it show a sample report and provide references from comparable stratas? The quality of how findings are communicated varies enormously. A plain-language report your council can act on is more useful than a technically correct but impenetrable document.
- Does it handle BC Hydro data requests, municipal drawing pulls, and the council presentation? These steps take time; a firm that leaves them to you is not managing the process end-to-end.
For the full checklist, see how to choose an EPR provider.
CF Electrical Services — BC strata EPR consulting
CF Electrical Services is an independent strata electrical consulting firm based in Vancouver, serving strata corporations across all of British Columbia. We are consulting and report-writing only — we do not perform electrical installation, which means our upgrade recommendations carry no financial conflict of interest.
We cover every BC strata building type — from concrete highrises and mid-rises requiring a P.Eng or P.L.Eng. seal to wood-frame walk-ups and townhouse complexes where a Journeyperson Electrician holds the Part 9 qualified-person credential. We have been in the BC electrical industry since 2014 (11 years in electrical work), now focused exclusively on strata consulting: Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and Depreciation Reports.
Every engagement includes the BC Hydro or FortisBC consumption-data request, municipal drawing retrieval, the on-site inspection, load calculations, electrification modelling, the sealed report, and a council presentation. Pricing is fixed: the number in the proposal is the number you pay. We respond to every enquiry with a fixed-price proposal within one business day.
Request a fixed-price EPR proposal or email [email protected].
Next steps for Metro Vancouver councils
When your council is ready to act, CF Electrical Services prepares Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and Depreciation Reports for stratas across Metro Vancouver — each signed and sealed by the credential the regulation calls for, and each written in plain language for the council and owners who have to use it.
- Electrical Planning Reports in Vancouver
- Electrical Planning Reports in Burnaby
- Electrical Planning Reports in Surrey
- Electrical Planning Reports in Richmond
- Electrical Planning Reports in Coquitlam
- Electrical Planning Reports in North Vancouver
- Electrical Planning Reports in West Vancouver
- Electrical Planning Reports in Langley
See all Metro Vancouver strata services, or browse the full guide library.
Written by CF Electrical Services — BC strata electrical consulting (Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and Depreciation Reports). Published June 19, 2026.