Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

City of Vancouver mulls property tax increase, cap for next year

At Wednesday night’s council meeting, councillors debated the potential property tax rate with some being for the seven per cent and some being for a more affordable rate of 5.5 per cent. Andrea Macpherson has the story – May 30, 2024

A City of Vancouver staff report says a seven per cent increase in property tax is needed for 2025 to finance running the city.

Story continues below advertisement

At Wednesday night’s council meeting, councillors debated the potential property tax rate with some of them being for the seven per cent and some being for a more affordable 5.5 per cent.

Councillors also debated a possible cap on property tax increases starting with next year, as a way to make the city more affordable.

In the staff report presented to council, it states, the seven per cent property tax is an annual figure needed to balance the budget every year.

That increase could be an additional $98 a year for a median strata property.

The council-majority ABC Party councillors felt that increase is too high despite and other councillors said the potential cap could leave city initiatives without funding.

The daily email you need for BC's top news stories.

“This is an opportunity for us to really take some leadership on this particular file and continue to do the tough work that we do every single day to make sure we can run this city without making it completely unaffordable,” councillor Rebecca Bligh said at the council meeting.

Story continues below advertisement

“Give me the information. Give me the different scenarios. I can’t tell you right now 5.5 per cent … what that means, what the impact might mean of going to 5.5 per cent when our staff have said they want to see seven per cent,” Vancouver councillor Adriane Carr said.

Council approved a 7.5 per cent increase for property taxes for 2024. City staff have been asked by council to crunch some additional number before reporting back to council at a future meeting.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article