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EPR basics · Fraser Valley · 6 min read

What an Electrical Planning Report Is: A Guide for Fraser Valley Strata Councils

The rules are the same across British Columbia — but your deadline and building stock are local. Here is what an electrical planning report is, written for Fraser Valley strata councils.

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What this means for Fraser Valley strata councils

This guide covers what an electrical planning report is for strata corporations across Fraser Valley. 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 Fraser Valley Regional District covers Abbotsford, Chilliwack, Mission, Hope, and the surrounding rural communities. Strata stock here is townhouse-dominant with low-rise wood-frame condo developments through the urban cores, plus growing mid-rise concrete development around Highstreet and central Abbotsford.

  • Electrical Planning Report (EPR): due December 31, 2026 for Fraser Valley 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

An Electrical Planning Report (EPR) is a regulated document that every strata corporation in British Columbia with five or more lots must obtain under the Strata Property Act. It assesses a building's electrical infrastructure, calculates how much spare capacity is actually available, models the demand that electrification (EV charging, heat pumps, gas-to-electric conversion) will add, and recommends the specific upgrades needed to support it. The EPR becomes part of the strata's permanent record and is disclosed to buyers, lenders, and insurers.

Why the EPR exists

Most BC strata buildings were wired for a different era — gas heat, gas hot water, and one vehicle per household. As owners electrify, the same building service has to carry far more load. The EPR gives a council a clear, evidence-based answer to a hard question: how much electrical capacity does this building actually have, what is constraining it, and what specific work changes that? The Strata Property Act does not allow that question to be answered with guesswork.

What a compliant EPR must contain

BC strata law sets out mandatory content. A compliant EPR includes:

  • A physical, on-site inspection of every electrical room, switchgear lineup, transformer, and distribution panel — not a desktop review.
  • Twelve months of utility consumption data (from BC Hydro or FortisBC, depending on the community) to establish real peak demand.
  • Peak-demand, spare-capacity, and load-diversity calculations to electrical-code standards.
  • Modelled future-electrification scenarios for EV charging, heat pumps, and electric domestic hot water.
  • Demand-management and load-reduction strategies that can free capacity without a service upgrade.
  • Upgrade recommendations, each with the amount of capacity it would unlock.

A narrow short-form variant also exists: where every strata lot receives electricity directly from the utility and the strata owns no electrical infrastructure of its own, Regulation 5.11(3) lets the report simply confirm that fact. Few stratas qualify, and eligibility still has to be confirmed on site — see our guide to short-form Electrical Planning Reports.

Who prepares it

The Qualified Person depends on the building. For Part 3 (complex) buildings, an EPR is signed and sealed by a Professional Engineer (P.Eng, EGBC), a Professional Licensee Engineering (P.L.Eng., EGBC), an Applied Science Technologist (AScT), or a Certified Technician (ASTTBC). For Part 9 (simple) buildings, a Master Electrician is also a Qualified Person. CF Electrical Services signs and seals each report with the credential the regulation calls for the building.

How it differs from electrical work

The EPR is a planning and report-writing exercise, not a construction contract. A consulting firm delivers the report; the strata then hires a separate licensed electrical contractor for any installation that follows. Keeping the two roles independent removes any conflict of interest from the recommendations.

Next steps for Fraser Valley councils

When your council is ready to act, CF Electrical Services prepares Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and Depreciation Reports for stratas across Fraser Valley — 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.

See all Fraser Valley 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 May 20, 2026.

What an Electrical Planning Report Is — Fraser Valley FAQs

What are the EPR and Depreciation Report deadlines for Fraser Valley stratas?

Strata corporations across Fraser Valley of five or more lots must have a current Electrical Planning Report by December 31, 2026 under the Strata Property Act. The Depreciation Report deadline is July 1, 2026 for stratas that have never had one or whose most recent report predates December 31, 2020.

Is an Electrical Planning Report mandatory in BC?

Yes. Under the Strata Property Act, every strata corporation in British Columbia of five or more lots must obtain an Electrical Planning Report by its regional deadline.

How long does an EPR take?

Typically six to ten weeks from intake to sealed delivery. The main variable is utility consumption-data turnaround.

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