Every BC strata corporation of five or more lots must obtain an Electrical Planning Report (EPR) by its regional deadline — December 31, 2026 in Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, and the Capital Regional District, or December 31, 2028 everywhere else in BC. As the first deadline approaches, one question comes up in council meetings across the province: what actually happens if we miss it?
The short answer: no fine — and that is exactly what makes the deadline easy to underestimate. The real consequences arrive through the strata's own records and obligations, and they compound quietly for as long as the report is missing.
There is no fine — and why that is misleading
The Strata Property Act attaches no monetary penalty to a missed EPR deadline. No inspector calls; no penalty cheque is written. Councils sometimes hear this and conclude the deadline is soft. It is not — because the mechanisms that enforce it are the ones a strata cannot avoid: disclosure, owner rights, and council's own duty of care.
What actually happens after the deadline
- Every Form B says so, in writing. An Electrical Planning Report is a permanent record of the strata corporation, disclosed on the Form B Information Certificate when an owner or prospective purchaser requests it. After the deadline, "the strata corporation does not have an Electrical Planning Report" becomes a written statement handed to every buyer — and read by the lenders and insurers reviewing the sale. A missing statutory report is exactly the kind of line item that prompts follow-up questions during a transaction.
- Any owner can compel compliance. Obtaining the report is a statutory duty under section 94.1 of the Strata Property Act. A single owner can apply to the Civil Resolution Tribunal for an order requiring the strata corporation to comply. At that point the strata commissions the same report anyway — on a tribunal's schedule rather than its own.
- EV-charging requests don't wait for the report. Under sections 90.1–90.3 of the Act, the framework for owner EV-charging requests applies whether or not the strata has its EPR. Council ends up making electrical-capacity decisions — approve, deny, attach conditions — without the capacity analysis the EPR exists to provide, and a denial made without evidence is harder to defend.
- Council's standard of care continues to apply. Council members must act in the best interests of the strata corporation and exercise the care of a reasonably prudent person. Leaving a statutory report unobtained sits poorly against that duty if an electrical decision later goes wrong.
None of this is dramatic on day one. The cost of a missed deadline compounds through resales, insurance renewals, and owner requests until the report is finally commissioned anyway — usually in a busier queue than the one the strata skipped.
There is no extension, exemption, or opt-out
The EPR requirement cannot be deferred by a resolution, waived by a vote, or avoided by any exemption process — there is nothing to apply for and no relief to wait out. The only reduced obligation in the regulation is the narrow short-form EPR, for stratas where every lot takes its electricity directly from the utility and the corporation owns no electrical infrastructure of its own — and that is still a report, prepared by a Qualified Person, delivered by the same deadline.
Running late but not past? The math still works — barely
A properly prepared EPR takes six to ten weeks from engagement to sealed delivery, driven mostly by the turnaround on twelve months of utility consumption data from BC Hydro or FortisBC. From midsummer 2026, roughly six months remain to the December 31, 2026 deadline — enough time for a well-run engagement, not enough to sit in a year-end queue. Provider capacity tightens as a statutory deadline approaches; the councils that engage now choose their timeline, and the ones that wait inherit whatever is left. Our EPR timeline guide walks through the schedule step by step.
If the deadline has already passed
Late is not a reason to stay late. The section 94.1 duty does not expire at the deadline — a strata that missed its date is simply non-compliant until the report is obtained, and the report is valid the moment it is sealed. The practical path back:
- Put it on the next council agenda and record the decision. A minuted resolution to commission the EPR is the first thing that shows diligence — to owners, to buyers reading the minutes, and to anyone asking why the report is late.
- Confirm which deadline actually applies. The date is set by regional district, not city — and stratas created after December 31, 2023 have five years from the deposit of the strata plan instead. Our deadline guide has the full regional breakdown.
- Commission the report and start the utility-data request immediately. The consumption-data request is the long pole in the schedule; a provider who files it at intake shortens the whole engagement.
- Disclose accurately in the meantime. A Form B answered "commissioned, in progress" reads very differently to a buyer's lender than one answered with silence.
CF Electrical Services prepares EPRs for strata corporations across all of BC, quotes every engagement as a fixed price, and files the utility-data request on day one. If your strata is late — or about to be — request a proposal and we will tell you exactly what your timeline looks like.
Written by CF Electrical Services — BC strata electrical consulting: Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and electrification project management, plus Depreciation Reports.