Last updated: June 10, 2026
A short-form Electrical Planning Report is a reduced-content EPR permitted only in narrow circumstances under section 5.11(3) of BC's Strata Property Regulation. Where a strata genuinely qualifies, the report does not need the capacity calculations, electrification scenarios, and upgrade recommendations a full EPR must contain — it need only confirm the one fact that makes the strata eligible, and identify the person who prepared the report and their qualifications. Everything about the short form turns on that single eligibility question, and on how the answer is established.
New to EPRs? Start with our complete guide, What Is an Electrical Planning Report? — this page covers the narrow short-form variant of the same requirement.
Key facts — the short-form EPR
- What it is: a reduced-content Electrical Planning Report permitted by Strata Property Regulation 5.11(3) — a smaller report, not a different obligation.
- The single condition: every strata lot receives electricity directly from the utility, independently of every other lot, and the strata owns no shared electrical infrastructure.
- Not an exemption: every BC strata of five or more lots must still obtain an EPR by its deadline. The short form reduces the report's content, never the requirement.
- Site visit: always required. Eligibility is a physical fact about how the property is metered and serviced, and only an on-site assessment by a Qualified Person can confirm and document it.
- Most stratas don't qualify — including most bare-land stratas. The large majority of BC stratas need the full report.
The one condition that qualifies a strata — Regulation 5.11(3)
The test is short and strict. The short form is available only when every strata lot receives its electricity directly from the utility, independently of every other strata lot — the utility's own distribution system serves each lot on its own, without passing through anything the strata corporation owns. The Province's guidance on Electrical Planning Reports pairs that wording with its practical corollary: the strata has no electrical infrastructure of its own. No common service entrance, no house meter, no strata-owned distribution, panels, or outdoor circuits of any kind.
When — and only when — both halves of that picture are true, the regulation lets the EPR be brief. Instead of the full content list, the report need only contain a statement confirming the independent utility supply, plus the identity and qualifications of the person who prepared it. That is the entire short form.
Why few stratas qualify — including most bare-land stratas
In the typical BC strata, the utility delivers power to a central or common point — a main service entrance, a transformer, a metering room — and the building's or complex's own distribution carries it onward to each unit. Everything downstream of that point is shared electrical infrastructure, owned and maintained by the strata. Those stratas do not qualify for the short form; they need the full EPR under Regulation 5.11.
The surprise for many councils is how far that logic reaches. Even a bare-land strata of detached homes, where every household pays its own hydro bill, usually owns some electrical infrastructure: street lighting along an internal road, a gate or entry sign, an irrigation or sewage pump, a clubhouse or RV compound on a common meter. Any one of those is shared electrical infrastructure, and it puts the strata back into the full report. The Vancouver Island Strata Owners Association's EPR overview and the Province's guidance both describe genuinely independent supply as the exception — found mainly in some bare-land stratas of single-family homes — rather than the rule.
Set your expectations accordingly: most councils who look into the short form will find their strata needs the full report. That is not bad news so much as early clarity — the full EPR is also the document that actually helps a council plan for EV charging, heat pumps, and the building's electrical future.
A short-form EPR is not an EPR exemption
Councils often reach this page searching for an "EPR exemption." Strictly speaking, there isn't one. Every strata corporation in British Columbia with five or more lots must obtain an Electrical Planning Report by its deadline — December 31, 2026 for stratas in Metro Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, and the Capital Regional District, and December 31, 2028 everywhere else in BC (see our deadline guide). There is no mechanism to defer the report, no waiver to apply for, and no resolution a strata can pass to opt out.
The short form changes what the report contains, not whether one is required. A qualifying strata still commissions the report, still has it prepared and signed by a Qualified Person, still receives it by the same deadline, and still keeps it in the strata's records, where it is disclosed like any other record. A strata that obtains nothing because it believes itself "exempt" is simply non-compliant.
Why a site visit is always required — even for a short-form EPR
This is the part councils most need to hear. Eligibility under Regulation 5.11(3) is a physical fact about the property — how each lot is metered, where the utility's service ends, and what equipment, if any, the strata owns in between. A short-form EPR is, in substance, a professional certifying the absence of shared electrical infrastructure. No one can responsibly certify an absence from a desk.
Drawings and documents cannot settle it either. Original electrical drawings show what was designed, not what was built or modified in the decades since; a common-area circuit added after construction appears on no drawing a council is likely to hold. The Province's guidance makes the same point about billing: separate household utility bills are not evidence of independent supply — plenty of stratas whose owners are billed individually still take their power through strata-owned infrastructure. The only way to establish that every lot is served independently, and that nothing shared exists, is for a Qualified Person to walk the property and confirm it.
Getting this wrong is expensive in the way that matters most to a council. If a strata assumes it qualifies, obtains a short-form report, and is mistaken — there is a house meter behind the clubhouse, a shared amenity load, a common-area panel — then the report does not satisfy the regulation. The strata's permanent record is defective, and that defect can surface at the worst possible time: on the Form B and the records buyers, lenders, and insurers review on resale, years after anyone remembers why the short form was chosen. The strata then pays again for the full report it needed all along.
That is why the site visit is not an add-on to a short-form EPR — it is the step that establishes, and creates the documented evidence for, whether the short form legitimately applies. CF Electrical Services never skips it. Treat the visit as the council's protection: it is the difference between a report you can defend and one you have to hope nobody questions.
Full EPR vs short-form EPR at a glance
| Report | When it applies | What it contains | Site visit required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full EPR | The strata owns or shares any electrical infrastructure — the situation for the large majority of BC stratas. | On-site inspection findings, twelve months of utility consumption data, peak-demand and spare-capacity calculations, future-electrification scenarios, demand-management options, and upgrade recommendations. | Yes |
| Short-form EPR | Every lot has independent utility supply and the strata owns no electrical infrastructure — Regulation 5.11(3). | A statement confirming the independent supply, plus the identity and qualifications of the person who prepared the report. | Yes — the visit is what establishes eligibility. |
Notice the last column. The two reports differ in content, not in diligence: the short form earns its brevity from what the site visit proves is absent.
How CF Electrical Services handles the short form
CF Electrical Services prepares short-form EPRs where a strata genuinely qualifies, and full EPRs where it does not — and determining which report your strata needs is itself part of the work. Every engagement begins the same way: an on-site assessment by a Qualified Person, who confirms how each lot is serviced and whether any strata-owned electrical infrastructure exists. If the property qualifies, you receive a short-form report with the eligibility properly documented; if it does not, the same visit becomes the foundation of your full EPR, with nothing wasted. Either way, the report is signed and sealed by a Qualified Person from the regulation's designated list, and written so your council can read it.
If your council suspects its strata may qualify — or simply wants a straight answer on which report the regulation requires — get in touch, call 778-910-4772, or email [email protected]. You can also see how our Electrical Planning Reports work from intake to sealed delivery.
Written by CF Electrical Services — BC strata electrical consulting (Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and Depreciation Reports).