Summary
- B.C. is leading Canada in bringing rent costs down, with the largest declines of any province
- Average asking rent in Vancouver and Burnaby is more than $650 lower than the 2023 peak
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Renters in B.C. are seeing significant cost-of-living improvements as British Columbia leads Canada in bringing rent costs down with the largest year-over-year declines in asking rents of any province.
Construction on rentals continue as BC Builds breaks ground on nearly 820 new homes in Burnaby.
“In the face of a national out-of-control housing crisis, here in B.C. we are taking on wealthy speculators, protecting renters from eviction and turning vacant units back into homes for people,” said Premier David Eby. “Our plan is leading the country in results. Rent prices are down, rental home construction is up, and we’re building faster by removing roadblocks to construction. There’s more to do. Keeping this momentum and delivering even more is our priority.”
If government did not take action on housing, rents would be hundreds of dollars more per month in B.C. than they are today. People are paying less and have more choice and ability to negotiate rent.
Since 2017, B.C. has been taking strong action to crack down on speculation and deliver more homes for people, turning the page on decades of underinvestment from previous provincial and federal governments.
In 2023, as housing costs were rising around the world, government doubled down on actions to deliver housing affordability through the Homes for People action plan, introducing new tools to respond to market challenges, such as short-term rentals, outdated zoning restrictions and red tape.
The results of this work are now contributing to significant cost of living savings for British Columbians, highlighted by the asking price for rent in B.C. to fall by 12.5% from August 2023 ($2,671) to April 2026 ($2,338), a $333-a-month reduction B.C.-wide, saving renters an average of $4,000 per year.
Other housing-related progress includes:
- Asking rents in Vancouver and Burnaby have fallen on a year-over-year basis for 29 consecutive months.
- The average asking rent for apartments and condos is approximately 20% lower than its 2023 peak, a reduction of more than $650 per month, or nearly $8,000 per year for renters.
- Only two provinces have seen asking rent declines over the past three years, B.C. and Ontario, and the most significant declines were seen in B.C.
- The vacancy rate for Metro Vancouver has increased. In October 2023, it was 0.9%, now it’s 3.7%.
- B.C. is seeing record levels of rental housing construction, with 2025 rental housing starts triple what they were in 2015.
- New registrations of purpose-built rentals are also at record levels year over year, hitting more than 26,000 in 2025. The average number of yearly purpose-built registrations from 2007 until 2016 was just 2,500.
- Action to rein in the short-term rental market and B.C.’s speculation and vacancy tax on vacant homes are returning thousands of units to the long-term rental market and easing pressure in high-demand communities.
- The Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters (SAFER) program is now helping more than 27,000 low-income seniors annually with the cost of rent.
- Renter protections are keeping costs stable. The annual allowable rent increase is tied to inflation, eliminating the previous automatic extra 2% rent increase on top of inflation.
“It takes sustained action on all fronts, year after year, to actually take on a challenge as big as the housing crisis,” said Christine Boyle, Minister of Housing and Municipal Affairs. “Rents are still too high for too many people, but the direction is changing in B.C. – asking rents are going down – and we’re going to keep lowering costs for people and increasing housing options by reducing costs to deliver housing. We are making life and housing more affordable for renters, not somewhere down the line, but now.”
Since 2017, through provincial investment and key policy decisions, more new rental and affordable homes are opening in communities throughout B.C. than ever before, and more than 99,000 homes have been delivered or are underway.
Learn More:
- To learn how B.C. is working to deliver more homes for people, visit: https://gov.bc.ca/homesforpeople
- To learn more about BC Builds, visit: https://www.bchousing.org/bcbuilds
- To read the latest Rentals.ca report, visit: https://rentals.ca/national-rent-report
- For rental construction data, visit: https://www03.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/hmip-pimh/en#TableMapChart/59/2/British%20Columbia
- For the new homes registry report, visit: https://www.bchousing.org/research-centre/housing-data/new-homes-data
- For the vacancy rate report, visit: https://www.cmhc-schl.gc.ca/professionals/housing-markets-data-and-research/market-reports/rental-market-reports-major-centres
A backgrounder follows.