Strata building stock in Capital Regional District
The Capital Regional District covers Greater Victoria — from the urban cores of Victoria, Saanich, Esquimalt, and Oak Bay out through Sidney, Sooke, Langford, Colwood, and View Royal. Building stock spans 1960s–1970s concrete highrises through James Bay and Fairfield, 1980s–1990s wood-frame walk-ups in Fernwood and Vic West, plus a fast-growing inventory of post-2005 townhouses and mid-rises in the Western Communities.
The deadlines that apply here
- Electrical Planning Report (EPR): December 31, 2026 — under the Strata Property Act. Required for every strata of five or more lots.
- Depreciation Report: July 1, 2026 — under the Strata Property Act. Required if the strata has never had a report or its most recent report predates December 31, 2020.
- EV Ready Plan (EVRP): Voluntary, but the route to the BC Hydro plan rebate (up to 75% of the plan's cost, to a $3,000 maximum) and the prerequisite for the program's installation rebates, which fund work by the strata's own contractor. From July 15, 2026, an EVRP, EPR, or Opportunity Assessment Report is also required for standalone EV charger rebates.
What CF Electrical Services delivers
Three reports for Capital Regional District strata corporations:
Every BC strata building type is covered under BC strata law — concrete highrises, mid-rises, wood-frame walk-ups, and townhouse complexes alike. Each report is signed and sealed by the credential the regulation calls for: a Professional Engineer (P.Eng), Professional Licensee Engineering (P.L.Eng.), Applied Science Technologist (AScT), or Certified Technician for Part 3 (complex) buildings, or a Journeyperson Electrician for Part 9 (simple) buildings — so councils don't need to verify scope or seek different providers for different building types.
Cities we serve in Capital Regional District
- Victoria Capital Regional District
- Saanich Capital Regional District
- Esquimalt Capital Regional District
- Oak Bay Capital Regional District
- Sidney Capital Regional District
- Sooke Capital Regional District
- Langford Capital Regional District
- Colwood Capital Regional District
- View Royal Capital Regional District
- Central Saanich Capital Regional District
- North Saanich Capital Regional District
- Metchosin Capital Regional District
- Highlands Capital Regional District
- Salt Spring Island Capital Regional District
- Galiano Island Capital Regional District
- Mayne Island Capital Regional District
- Pender Island Capital Regional District
- Saturna Island Capital Regional District
Each city link goes to its EPR page. EV Ready Plan and Depreciation Report pages are also available for every city — see the service hubs: EPR, EVRP, Depreciation Report.
Capital Regional District EPR knowledge base
Electrical Planning Reports in Capital Regional District, explained
Plain-language answers to the questions Capital Regional District strata councils ask most — written by CF Electrical Services.
Electrical Planning Reports in the Capital Regional District: the December 31, 2026 deadline
Greater Victoria carries some of the oldest strata stock outside Vancouver — mid-century Saanich and James Bay buildings on original service — alongside a wave of post-2005 Western Communities towers now reaching their first capacity-planning cycle.
Under the Strata Property Act, every strata corporation in the Capital Regional District of five or more lots must have a current Electrical Planning Report (EPR) on file by December 31, 2026. The deadline is set by the strata’s regional district, not its city — the Capital Regional District covers the Capital Regional District. The report is not a one-time formality: it is referenced on the strata’s permanent record and disclosed to prospective buyers, lenders, and insurers for as long as the corporation exists. CF Electrical Services delivers EPRs to Victoria, Saanich, Esquimalt, Oak Bay, and Sidney councils — and every other community in the region — from our Vancouver office.
What an EPR examines in the Capital Regional District
An EPR is a physical assessment, not a desktop exercise. For Capital Regional District stratas it documents the existing service capacity, models how much headroom remains, and identifies what would have to change to support modern demand. BC strata law sets the mandatory scope: an on-site inspection of every electrical room, switchgear lineup, transformer, and distribution panel; peak-demand, spare-capacity, and load-diversity calculations to electrical-code standards; and modelled future-electrification scenarios for EV charging, heat-pump conversion, and gas-to-electric appliance changes.
The Capital Regional District covers Greater Victoria — from the urban cores of Victoria, Saanich, Esquimalt, and Oak Bay out through Sidney, Sooke, Langford, Colwood, and View Royal. Building stock spans 1960s–1970s concrete highrises through James Bay and Fairfield, 1980s–1990s wood-frame walk-ups in Fernwood and Vic West, plus a fast-growing inventory of post-2005 townhouses and mid-rises in the Western Communities. That building stock is exactly what shapes an EPR’s findings here — older concrete and wood-frame services frequently sit far closer to their limit than owners realise, while townhouse complexes raise the question of where capacity should be added. The report ends with specific upgrade recommendations and the amount of capacity each one would free, so council can sequence work instead of guessing.
BC Hydro data and EV charging capacity in the Capital Regional District
Across the Capital Regional District, the distribution utility is BC Hydro, and a compliant EPR analyses 12 months of BC Hydro interval consumption data to establish real peak demand rather than relying on code-based estimates that overstate available capacity.
That consumption analysis is what makes the EV-charging conversation real. An EV Ready Plan — the voluntary companion to the EPR — qualifies a strata for the CleanBC EV Ready Plan rebate of up to 75% of the plan's cost, to a $3,000 maximum, delivered in this region by BC Hydro. The program's later infrastructure and charger rebates apply to installation work performed by a licensed contractor the strata hires separately. From July 15, 2026, an EV Ready Plan, an EPR, or an Opportunity Assessment Report becomes a prerequisite for standalone EV charger rebates. For Capital Regional District councils, the practical sequence is to establish true spare capacity through the EPR first, then size a charging program the building can actually support.
EPR vs Depreciation Report: what Capital Regional District councils need
Two different statutory reports come due around the same time, and Capital Regional District councils routinely confuse them. The Electrical Planning Report answers an electrical-capacity question — how much load the building can carry and what electrification will require — and is due by December 31, 2026. The Depreciation Report answers a financial question — what it will cost to repair and replace common property over 30 years — and is due by July 1, 2026 for stratas that have never had one or whose most recent report predates December 31, 2020.
Both must be prepared by a Qualified Person under BC strata law — for an EPR, a Professional Engineer (P.Eng), Professional Licensee Engineering (P.L.Eng.), Applied Science Technologist (AScT), or Certified Technician for Part 3 (complex) buildings, or a Journeyperson Electrician for Part 9 (simple) buildings — and the two reports share inputs: the electrical service condition and capital-renewal picture an EPR surfaces feed directly into a credible Depreciation Report. CF Electrical Services prepares both, signed and sealed by the credential the regulation calls for, and many Capital Regional District stratas commission them together to keep the building’s electrical and financial planning consistent.
Capital Regional District guides
Plain-language guides for Capital Regional District councils
Each guide written for your region — with Capital Regional District deadlines and local context.
- What an Electrical Planning Report Is EPR basics
- BC EPR Deadlines Deadlines
- Who Can Sign and Seal an EPR Credentials
- EPR vs Depreciation Report EPR basics
- Why EPR Quality Varies Report quality
- Understanding and Acting on Your EPR Council guide
- Bundling Your EPR and Depreciation Report Bundling reports
- Why EPR Prices Vary So Widely EPR pricing
- How to Vet a Strata Report Provider Choosing a provider
- The Short-Form Electrical Planning Report Short-form EPR
- How to Choose an EPR Provider Choosing a provider
- EPR Timeline: December 31, 2026 Deadline Deadlines
- The EV Ready Plan Rebate EV Ready Plans
- BC's 2026 Building Electrification Roadmap Industry
- BC's July 2026 EV Rebate Changes EV Ready Plans
- Commercial & Industrial Strata EPRs Commercial & industrial
- Electrical Planning Report for BC Strata — The Complete 2026 Guide Electrical Planning Reports