Stronger protections coming for people affected by intimate-image abuse (flickr.com)

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Backgrounders

What to know about amendments to the act

The proposed amendments to the Intimate Images Protection Act (IIPA) include:

  • substantially increase the maximum value of damages that can be awarded by the Civil Resolution Tribunal (CRT) from $5,000 to a higher amount that is yet to be determined by cabinet;
  • remove the requirement that the CRT publish decisions about damages to protect privacy for victims;
  • clarify the information that may be included in a protection order and allow the CRT to change an intimate-image protection order if needed;
  • clarify timelines for penalties’ applications under the IIPA for people who fail to comply with a protection order; and
  • establish the authority of the Intimate Images Protection Service (IIPS) to continue to collect specific personal information that helps provide services.

These amendments will give victims stronger legal protections and shore up the IIPA by making protection orders more precise, flexible and enforceable. They will also ensure that cases are dealt with promptly, while still protecting the privacy and dignity of victims and reinforcing the message that sharing intimate images without consent has serious consequences.

Since the IIPA came into force in January 2024 and September 2025, the CRT has resolved 316 of the 381 submissions it received, with the rest still in progress. A victim can also seek up to $35,000 in damages at provincial courts and any amount in B.C. Supreme Court.

On average, disputes were resolved in 64 days. Additionally, the IIPS supported more than 500 case files and received 50 removal confirmations from platforms and four from named respondents.