in sales
sqft of residential and commercial sold
families and business served
5 star online reviews
Websites advertising reach
Stats as of Dec 2025

$ 750,000,000 +
in sales
1,850,000 +
sqft of residential and commercial sold
1,000 +
families and businesses served
100's
5 star online reviews
26,000 +
Websites advertising reach
*Stats as of Dec 2025
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Burnaby Seller's Legal Obligations and Disclosure Requirements: What You Must Reveal, Timeline Rules, and Penalties for Non-Compliance in 2026

June 05, 2026

Burnaby Seller's Legal Obligations and Disclosure Requirements: What You Must Reveal, Timeline Rules, and Penalties for Non-Compliance in 2026

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group | Published: July 15, 2026 | Geography: Burnaby, BC | Scope: Residential sellers — detached, condo, and strata properties

Burnaby sellers face a disclosure landscape that has become less forgiving over the past several years. Buyers are more educated, home inspectors are more thorough, and legal action following non-disclosure is no longer rare. If you are preparing to list a Burnaby property in 2026, understanding exactly what BC law requires you to reveal — and when — is one of the most important steps you will take before signing a listing agreement.

This guide covers the BC Property Disclosure Statement requirements, strata document timelines, what counts as a material defect, and what happens when sellers withhold information they were legally obligated to share.

Short Answer

In BC, sellers must complete a Property Disclosure Statement and provide it to buyers before or within seven days of an accepted offer. Sellers must disclose all known material defects — water damage, pest history, unpermitted work, foundation issues — and strata sellers must deliver required documents within ten days. Withholding known information can result in rescission of the sale, damages claims, or post-closing litigation.

Key Takeaways

  • The BC Property Disclosure Statement must be delivered before or within seven days of offer acceptance — not after closing.
  • Sellers must disclose all known material defects, including water intrusion history even when the problem appears resolved.
  • Burnaby strata sellers must provide depreciation reports, Form B, and strata minutes within ten days of an accepted offer.
  • Unpermitted renovations are a material fact in BC; sellers who hide them risk deal collapse, litigation, or post-closing damages claims.
  • Proactive, documented disclosure typically produces faster closings and fewer legal complications than strategic omission.

Who This Applies To

  • Burnaby homeowners listing a detached, semi-detached, or townhouse property
  • Burnaby condo and strata unit sellers managing document and form delivery
  • Estate executors or trustees selling a Burnaby property with incomplete knowledge of the property's condition history
  • Sellers who completed renovations — permitted or unpermitted — in the past ten years
  • Owners of Burnaby properties with basement suites, older drainage systems, or known moisture history

When This Advice May Not Apply

Commercial property sales and bare land transactions follow different rules. Sellers who have never occupied the property — such as estate executors with no direct knowledge of its condition — may answer some PDS questions as "unknown" rather than "yes" or "no," though legal counsel is advised before doing so. Always consult a BC real estate lawyer for your specific situation.

Key Terms Defined

Property Disclosure Statement (PDS): A BC-mandated form in which sellers declare known facts about a property's condition, systems, legal status, and history. Required in all residential sales.

Material Defect: Any fact about a property that would likely affect a reasonable buyer's decision to purchase or the price they would pay. Includes latent defects not visible on inspection.

Latent Defect: A defect not visible on reasonable inspection that the seller knows about. Sellers have a legal duty to disclose latent defects.

Form B (Information Certificate): A strata document prepared by the strata corporation listing outstanding levies, bylaws, and financial standing of the unit. Required in all strata sales in BC.

Depreciation Report: A strata document estimating future repair costs for common property over a 30-year period. Buyers and their lenders often rely on this to assess special levy risk.

Data Used in This Article

  • BC Government — Property Disclosure Statement requirements under the Real Estate Services Act (official, current)
  • BC Strata Property Act, Section 35 and Schedule of Standard Bylaws — strata document disclosure obligations (official legislation)
  • Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver (GVR) — standard contract of purchase and sale, 2026 edition (industry standard)
  • Burnaby City Hall — permit and work order records, publicly searchable (official municipal records)

What BC Law Actually Requires Sellers to Disclose

The BC Property Disclosure Statement covers the full range of material facts a buyer needs to evaluate a property. According to the BC Government's guidelines under the Real Estate Services Act, sellers must answer questions covering structural integrity, roof condition, moisture or water damage history, drainage and flooding, pest infestations, renovation and permit history, any outstanding work orders or municipal violations, and the property's legal status including easements, covenants, and encroachments.

The key legal standard is known material defects. Sellers are not expected to be home inspectors. But if you know about a problem — even if it was repaired years ago — you are expected to disclose it. A basement that flooded in 2019 and was remediated in 2020 still needs to be disclosed. A foundation crack that was sealed still needs to be disclosed. In Burnaby's Lower Mainland context, moisture and drainage history are among the highest-scrutiny disclosures because of the region's rainfall patterns and the age of many properties, particularly in neighbourhoods like The Heights and Capitol Hill where homes may date from the 1950s through the 1980s.

Sellers who owned a property as an investment and never lived in it can sometimes mark certain questions as "unknown," but this applies only to facts genuinely outside their knowledge. Investors who received strata meeting minutes describing roof issues, or landlords who received plumber invoices for recurring drain problems, cannot claim ignorance of those facts.

Timeline Rules: When Each Document Must Be Delivered

Timing matters as much as content in BC disclosure law. The Property Disclosure Statement must be provided to the buyer before they make an offer, or within seven days of the seller accepting an offer — whichever comes first in practice. In most Burnaby transactions handled by experienced agents, the PDS is prepared before listing and attached to the MLS listing so buyers and their agents can review it before submitting any offer. This is the cleaner approach and reduces the risk of a buyer rescinding the deal after reviewing a disclosure they find concerning.

For strata properties — which make up a large share of Burnaby's housing stock, particularly in Brentwood, Metrotown, and Lougheed — sellers must deliver the full strata document package within ten days of an accepted offer. This package includes the Form B Information Certificate, the most recent depreciation report, current strata bylaws and rules, two years of strata meeting minutes, the current budget and financial statements, and any notice of pending special levies. Buyers use these documents to evaluate financial risk. Their mortgage lenders often require them as part of the approval process. A seller who delays or provides incomplete strata documents risks losing the buyer entirely, particularly in a market where condo inventory has risen and buyers have alternatives.

Outstanding city work orders or building code violations also need to be disclosed. Sellers can search the City of Burnaby's permit and work order database directly — and buyers' agents increasingly do the same. If a violation appears in city records but not in the seller's disclosure, it raises immediate questions about what else may have been withheld.

Unpermitted Renovations: A High-Risk Disclosure Category

Unpermitted renovations are one of the most common and most misunderstood disclosure obligations for Burnaby sellers. Under BC law, unpermitted work is a material fact. This includes basement suite conversions done without a permit, electrical panel upgrades, structural wall removals, secondary suite additions, and any plumbing or gas work completed outside the permit process. Sellers who list a home with an unpermitted suite — and particularly those who market it as a legal suite without verifying permit status — face serious exposure.

Buyers who discover unpermitted work after closing have pursued damages claims and rescission applications in BC courts. In several documented cases, sellers were required to compensate buyers for the cost of bringing work up to code or obtaining retroactive permits. The City of Burnaby maintains searchable permit records; buyers and inspectors use them routinely. Sellers are better served by disclosing known unpermitted work upfront, pricing accordingly, and allowing buyers to make informed decisions rather than discovering problems after the fact. For sellers unsure about their renovation history, pulling permit records from Burnaby City Hall before listing is a practical first step.

What Happens When Sellers Don't Comply

Non-disclosure in BC residential real estate carries real legal consequences. At the transactional level, a buyer who receives an inadequate or late PDS may have grounds to rescind the contract before closing. Post-closing, a buyer who discovers a known defect that the seller failed to disclose can pursue a civil claim for damages, rescission, or misrepresentation under BC law. These claims can be filed years after closing if the defect was not reasonably discoverable at the time of purchase.

In a Burnaby market where buyers are more cautious and bring in experienced inspectors and strata document reviewers as standard practice, the probability of post-closing discovery is higher than it was a decade ago. Sellers who attempt to hide problems do not typically succeed — they delay discovery. The financial and legal cost of defending a misrepresentation claim almost always exceeds the cost of disclosing the issue and adjusting the price accordingly. For a more detailed picture of how current market conditions affect seller strategy, the Burnaby Real Estate Market Report 2026 provides relevant context on buyer scrutiny and negotiating leverage.

How We Evaluate This

At Mansour Real Estate Group, our process for listing a Burnaby property begins with a disclosure review before the property goes to market. We ask sellers to walk through the PDS with us in detail — not as a legal exercise, but as a risk management conversation. The goal is to surface anything that could become a deal-breaker mid-transaction or a legal problem post-closing, while there is still time to address, disclose, or price around it.

For strata sellers, we coordinate the document package request immediately upon listing, not after an offer arrives. A ten-day window is tight if the strata management company is slow to respond, and surprises in the minutes — unannounced special levies, unresolved building envelope issues, pending litigation — are far better addressed before negotiation than during it. We also routinely cross-reference Burnaby City Hall permit records against what sellers tell us about their renovation history. When gaps appear, we work with the seller to resolve them before listing, not after.

Seller Disclosure Checklist

  • Complete the BC Property Disclosure Statement in full before listing — not after an offer arrives
  • Pull your Burnaby permit history from City Hall and reconcile it against all renovations completed since purchase
  • Disclose all water intrusion, mold, flooding, or drainage incidents — including those that were remediated
  • For strata properties, request Form B, depreciation report, minutes, bylaws, and financial statements immediately upon listing
  • Confirm there are no outstanding city work orders, bylaw infractions, or unresolved strata violations
  • Disclose any pest infestations — active or historical — including treatment records if available
  • Review your disclosure statement with your real estate agent and a BC real estate lawyer before signing
  • If you are an executor or non-occupying owner, seek legal guidance before answering disclosure questions as "unknown"

What We Commonly See

Water damage disclosed as resolved but not documented. In our experience, sellers who disclose past water intrusion but cannot provide remediation reports or contractor invoices create unnecessary buyer anxiety. Documentation transforms a potential red flag into a straightforward disclosure. Sellers who have records — even basic receipts — should organize and provide them alongside the PDS.

Strata documents requested too late. A common mistake is waiting until an offer is accepted before requesting strata documents. What often happens is that the document package arrives on day nine of a ten-day window, buyers' lawyers scramble to review it, and the transaction stalls or collapses. Requesting documents at the time of listing eliminates this entirely.

Unpermitted suites listed as "mortgage helpers" without disclosure. We have seen transactions fall apart because a seller marketed a basement suite as income-generating without disclosing that it was constructed without permits. Buyers' inspectors and lenders routinely check permit status. When the gap is discovered during subject removal, it almost always results in a price renegotiation or deal collapse. Disclosing upfront and pricing to reflect it is a more reliable path to a completed sale. See our guide to selling a detached home in Burnaby for more on pre-listing preparation.

Questions and Answers

Do I have to disclose a defect I fixed ten years ago?

Yes. In BC, the disclosure obligation applies to known history, not just current conditions. A resolved problem — repaired foundation crack, treated mold, fixed drainage — must still be disclosed. Failing to disclose it because it is "no longer an issue" is the most common misunderstanding of BC disclosure law.

Can a buyer walk away after receiving the PDS?

Yes, if the PDS reveals a material fact they were not aware of before making their offer, a buyer may have grounds to rescind. This is one reason experienced Burnaby agents recommend providing the PDS before offers are submitted rather than after — it removes that rescission window from the transaction.

What happens if I sell a strata unit and the strata documents reveal a pending special levy?

The pending levy must be disclosed. Depending on the contract terms, either the seller pays the levy before closing, or the price is adjusted to reflect the buyer's future obligation. Failing to disclose a known pending levy is a material omission that can expose the seller to post-closing claims. Your real estate agent and lawyer should review the contract language carefully. See the Burnaby closing costs guide for related cost considerations on both sides of a transaction.

In Summary

BC's disclosure rules exist to protect buyers — but they also protect sellers who follow them. A complete, accurate Property Disclosure Statement prepared before listing, strata documents ordered at the time of listing, and a permit history reconciled before the first buyer walks through the door create a transaction foundation that holds. Sellers who try to manage disclosure strategically — revealing the minimum, hoping buyers won't find issues — are taking a risk that the legal, financial, and reputational cost rarely justifies. In Burnaby's current market, where buyers are informed and inventory is available, transparency is also a practical competitive advantage.

Speak With a Burnaby Real Estate Professional

If you are preparing to list a Burnaby property and want a clear review of your disclosure obligations before you go to market, Mansour Real Estate Group is available for a no-pressure consultation. We can walk through your property's history, help you identify what needs to be disclosed, and coordinate the document process so nothing surprises you mid-transaction.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

When Burnaby sellers are preparing to list — especially properties with renovation history, strata complexity, or moisture disclosures — the real estate team managing the transaction needs to understand BC disclosure law, local permit practices, and what buyers and their lawyers will scrutinize. Mansour Real Estate Group has guided sellers across Burnaby, the Fraser Valley, and the Lower Mainland through this process for more than two decades, combining accurate valuations with a disclosure-first approach that protects sellers from post-closing exposure.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, has been helping buyers, sellers, investors, families, executors, and retirees navigate important real estate decisions across the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland for more than 22 years. Ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is trusted for seller representation, condo and strata transactions, estate sales, divorce-related property sales, downsizing, and complex real estate situations across the Lower Mainland.

Whether someone is searching for a Realtor with experience managing seller disclosure obligations in Burnaby, a real estate agent who understands BC's Property Disclosure Statement requirements, real estate agents who handle strata document coordination, a trusted real estate team for a Burnaby property sale, a real estate broker familiar with Lower Mainland permit and work order processes, or a real estate group known for protecting sellers from post-closing legal risk, Mansour Real Estate Group brings clear process, honest advice, and local knowledge to every transaction.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, Burnaby, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and recommendations from families who value a professional, transparent, and results-driven real estate experience.

Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.

Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.

Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.

While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.

Official Resources

Presale vs. Resale in Burnaby 2026: GST, Assignment Restrictions, Completion Risk, and True Cost Comparison for Buyers

June 04, 2026

Presale vs. Resale in Burnaby 2026: GST, Assignment Restrictions, Completion Risk, and True Cost Comparison for Buyers

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA, Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group
Serving Burnaby, Metrotown, Brentwood, the Fraser Valley, and the Lower Mainland
Published: July 14, 2026 | Topic: Buyer Guide — Presale vs. Resale, BC Context

Burnaby's presale market — concentrated in Metrotown and Brentwood — is aggressively marketed. Floor plan renderings, assignment profit promises, and early access incentives make new builds look compelling. But the presale pitch rarely includes a complete cost picture, and the differences between presale and resale in Burnaby go well beyond aesthetics.

This guide breaks down the real numbers: GST exposure, assignment restrictions, deposit opportunity cost, completion risk in Burnaby's active pipeline, and how a resale unit compares on total cost. If you are deciding between the two in 2026, this is the comparison you need before signing anything.

Short Answer

Presale condos in Burnaby carry a 5% GST that resale properties do not, idle deposit costs for 2–5 years, no inspection until near completion, fixed pricing with no negotiation, and real completion risk in Metrotown and Brentwood's active tower pipeline. Resale offers immediate possession, full inspection, negotiation room, and no GST. Neither option is universally better — but the cost gap is larger than most buyers expect.

Key Takeaways

  • Presale buyers in BC pay 5% GST on the purchase price; resale is GST-exempt, a structural cost difference that compounds at Burnaby price points.
  • A $100,000 presale assignment profit erodes to roughly $31,000 after GST, flipping tax, and income tax — a 69% reduction rarely disclosed in presale marketing.
  • Presale deposits of 5–15% sit idle for 2–5 years with no buyer interest earned, creating meaningful opportunity cost and liquidity risk.
  • Burnaby's Metrotown and Brentwood tower pipelines face real completion risk as multifamily starts decline and absorption slows in 2026.
  • Resale closes in 30–45 days with full inspection rights, negotiation flexibility, and stable strata fees in established buildings.

Who This Applies To

  • First-time buyers evaluating presale marketing in Metrotown or Brentwood
  • Investors comparing presale assignment strategy to resale rental acquisition
  • Move-up buyers deciding between a new tower unit and an established resale condo
  • Buyers with a 2–5 year timeline who can tolerate completion uncertainty
  • Buyers who need certainty on possession date, budget, and monthly costs

When This Advice May Not Apply

If a buyer qualifies for the GST/HST New Housing Rebate (available on primary residences under specific price thresholds), the GST impact is partially reduced — consult the CRA directly. Assignment rules and deposit structures also vary by developer contract, so individual presale agreements require independent legal review.

Data Used in This Article

  • REBGV Monthly Market Report, April 2026 — official regional sales and price data, Metro Vancouver context (rebgv.org)
  • NAHB 2026 Housing Outlook, February 2026 — multifamily start forecasts, North American construction trend data (nahb.org)
  • Rain City Properties — Presale Assignment Analysis, 2026 — third-party breakdown of assignment profit erosion after taxes (raincityproperties.com)
  • CRA — GST/HST on New Housing — federal tax rules for new residential construction (canada.ca)

The GST Gap: Why Presale Costs More Than the Sticker Price

The most consequential cost difference between presale and resale in Burnaby is federal GST. Under CRA rules, new residential construction is subject to 5% GST on the purchase price. Resale properties — previously occupied homes and condos — are exempt. At Burnaby condo prices, that gap is not trivial.

On an $800,000 presale unit in Metrotown, GST adds $40,000 to the purchase price. On a $1.1 million unit in a Brentwood tower, it adds $55,000. These amounts typically cannot be financed through a standard mortgage — they are due on closing, compounding the cash requirement at an already demanding price point.

A partial GST/HST New Housing Rebate is available for buyers who occupy the unit as their primary residence, but it is income-threshold limited and phases out entirely for properties priced above $450,000 for the full rebate. Most Burnaby presale units exceed that threshold. The net rebate, if any, is often small relative to the full GST exposure. Buyers should verify their specific eligibility with the CRA before budgeting.

Resale buyers avoid this cost entirely. A comparable resale condo in the same Burnaby neighbourhood closes without any GST exposure. That $40,000–$55,000 difference does not show up in the list price comparison — but it shows up immediately in the closing cost calculation. Our article on Burnaby closing costs covers the full breakdown of what buyers pay on both sides.

Assignment Restrictions and the Real Math on Presale Profits

Presale marketing frequently leads with assignment profit potential — the ability to sell your contract before completion and capture appreciation. In theory, this works. In practice, the math is more complicated than the pitch.

According to Rain City Properties' 2026 presale assignment analysis, a $100,000 gross profit on an assignment shrinks to approximately $31,000 after applying the 5% GST on the assignment gain, the flipping tax (50% income inclusion rate for contracts assigned within 12 months under BC's Residential Property Flipping Tax rules effective January 2023), and federal and provincial income tax at a typical marginal rate. That is a 69% erosion of the headline profit — and it does not include legal fees, assignment administration costs, or the opportunity cost of the deposit being locked up during the holding period.

Assignment restrictions add another layer. Many Burnaby developers — particularly in active pipelines at Metrotown and Brentwood — include no-assignment or limited-assignment clauses in their contracts. Some allow assignment only with developer consent and a fee (often 1–2% of purchase price). Others prohibit it entirely until a defined point in the construction cycle. A buyer who signs a presale contract expecting exit flexibility may find they have none.

Resale sellers face none of these structural exit constraints. A resale owner can list, negotiate, and close without developer permission, flipping tax exposure on an assignment, or restricted liquidity windows.

Deposit Opportunity Cost and Completion Risk in Burnaby's 2026 Pipeline

Presale buyers in Burnaby typically commit staged deposits of 5–15% of the purchase price, paid in instalments over the development timeline. These funds are held in trust and earn no interest for the buyer under standard developer contracts. On a $900,000 presale unit with a 15% deposit requirement, that is $135,000 locked away — earning nothing — for potentially 3–5 years while construction proceeds.

The opportunity cost is real. That capital, if deployed elsewhere, could generate returns. More importantly, the buyer carries the liquidity risk of having a significant sum unavailable for other purposes — including a change in personal circumstance, job loss, or a shift in mortgage qualification rules by the time completion arrives.

Completion risk is also not theoretical in 2026. According to the NAHB's February 2026 Housing Outlook, multifamily starts are forecast to decline approximately 5% after a period of pandemic-era oversupply. Absorption is slowing. In Burnaby's density-heavy zones — particularly the Lougheed and SFU corridors as well as Metrotown — several towers remain in active planning or mid-construction phases. Developer financial stress, municipal permitting delays, and shifting presale absorption can all push completion dates. A buyer expecting to take possession in 2027 may not do so until 2028 or later, with limited legal remedy under standard disclosure statements.

The REBGV's April 2026 market data shows the attached and apartment segments diverging from detached strength in Metro Vancouver — a signal that the softness in Burnaby's condo resale market is also present in the segment where presale supply is most concentrated. For investment buyers evaluating the investment case for Burnaby condos, that context matters for underwriting assumptions.

How We Evaluate This

When a buyer comes to Mansour Real Estate Group evaluating a presale, we start with the complete cost picture: sticker price plus GST, full deposit schedule, estimated strata fees at completion (typically higher than comparable resale buildings due to new amenity costs), and a realistic completion timeline. We then model the same purchase as a resale scenario — same neighbourhood, comparable unit — and compare total cash outlay, closing date certainty, inspection rights, and strata fee stability.

For most buyers who need certainty on possession, monthly costs, and budget, resale comes out ahead on a total-cost basis once GST and deposit opportunity cost are factored in. Presale makes more sense for buyers with a long horizon, no immediate occupancy need, and a specific unit type or building not available in resale inventory. We do not steer buyers one way as a default — we model both so the decision is based on real numbers, not marketing.

Buyer Checklist: Presale vs. Resale Decision

  • Calculate total presale cost including 5% GST and confirm partial rebate eligibility with CRA based on your specific price and occupancy intent.
  • Review the full deposit schedule; model the opportunity cost of each tranche over the full estimated construction timeline.
  • Read the developer's disclosure statement in full, specifically assignment clauses, change-order rights, and completion date provisions.
  • Request estimated strata fees and operating budgets from comparable completed buildings by the same developer before signing.
  • On resale, confirm inspection rights, review Form B, depreciation report, strata minutes, and special levy history before removing subjects.
  • If investing, model the presale assignment profit using real post-tax numbers — not gross appreciation — and confirm assignment is permitted under the contract.

What We Commonly See

Buyers undercount total presale cost. In our experience, the most common mistake is treating the presale list price as comparable to a resale list price. Once GST, deposit schedule, and higher initial strata fees are added, the presale often costs meaningfully more than a comparable resale unit, even before accounting for the wait.

Assignment profits are modelled at gross, not net. What often happens is a buyer hears "$100,000 in appreciation" and models their investment accordingly. After BC's residential property flipping tax, income tax on the gain, and any applicable GST on the assignment itself, the actual return is a fraction of the headline number. This is not a niche scenario — it is the standard tax treatment.

Completion timeline assumptions are optimistic. A common mistake is accepting a developer's projected completion date as a planning date. Construction timelines in Metro Vancouver have consistently run longer than original estimates, and presale contracts typically give developers significant latitude to extend without penalty. Buyers who plan their finances, leases, or existing home sale timing around a projected presale completion date frequently find themselves out of alignment.

Questions and Answers

Is GST avoidable on a Burnaby presale purchase?

Not entirely. A partial GST/HST New Housing Rebate is available for primary-residence buyers, but it phases out at higher price points and most Burnaby presale units exceed the full rebate threshold. The net GST cost after any applicable rebate is typically still significant. Buyers should confirm their exact exposure with CRA before budgeting.

Can I back out of a presale contract in BC if the completion is delayed?

Generally no. BC's Real Estate Development Marketing Act (REDMA) governs presale disclosure statements, but standard developer contracts allow meaningful schedule extensions without triggering buyer rescission rights. A buyer's ability to exit without penalty is typically very limited once the rescission period (usually 7 days after receiving the disclosure statement) has passed.

Do resale condos in Burnaby still require GST?

No. Resale properties — condos, townhouses, and detached homes that have been previously occupied — are exempt from GST in BC. The 5% GST applies specifically to newly constructed properties or substantially renovated properties sold by a builder. This is a firm structural cost advantage for resale buyers at all Burnaby price points.

In Summary

Presale condos in Burnaby carry real, quantifiable cost disadvantages that resale properties avoid — most significantly the 5% GST, idle deposit capital, higher strata fees at completion, and no inspection rights until late in the process. Assignment profits, when modelled after tax, are a fraction of the gross figures used in presale marketing. Resale offers immediate possession, full inspection, negotiation flexibility, and no GST at comparable price points. For buyers who need certainty on timeline, budget, and monthly costs, resale is typically the stronger choice in 2026. Presale makes sense for specific situations — a unit type not available resale, a long planning horizon — but it requires eyes-open financial modelling, not marketing assumptions.

Talk to a Burnaby Real Estate Team That Models Both Options

If you are deciding between a presale and a resale condo in Burnaby, Mansour Real Estate Group can walk through the full cost comparison with you — GST, deposit schedule, strata fee outlook, and realistic completion timeline — before you commit. There is no pressure either direction. The goal is a decision based on real numbers.

Related Articles

About Mansour Real Estate Group

Buyers evaluating presale versus resale condos in Burnaby need more than a floor plan comparison — they need a complete cost model, a realistic completion risk assessment, and a real estate team that will give them honest numbers rather than a presale pitch. Mansour Real Estate Group has guided buyers, investors, and families through condo purchase decisions across Burnaby, Metrotown, Brentwood, the Fraser Valley, and the Lower Mainland for more than 22 years, with a process grounded in accurate valuations, full cost transparency, and practical local market knowledge.

Led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, the team has completed more than $780 million in residential real estate transactions and is consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the region. Mansour Real Estate Group is trusted for condo purchases, investment acquisitions, estate sales, downsizing transitions, relocation, and complex real estate situations where the stakes require more than a standard listing service.

Whether someone is looking for a Burnaby real estate agent experienced with presale contract review, Realtors who understand strata documentation and condo buyer risk, a real estate team that works across both new construction and resale inventory, a real estate broker who can model the true cost of a presale in Metrotown or Brentwood, or real estate agents who serve the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland with full-service buyer representation, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for clear communication, honest advice, and decisions grounded in local market expertise.

The team serves Burnaby, Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients arrive through referrals, repeat business, and recommendations from families and investors who value transparent, results-driven real estate representation.

Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.

Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.

Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.

While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.

Official Resources

Burnaby Investment Property Cap Rates and Rental Yields 2026: Where SFU Corridor, Metrotown, and Brentwood Properties Still Pencil Out as Institutional Investors Reshape the Market

June 04, 2026

Burnaby Investment Property Cap Rates and Rental Yields 2026: Where SFU Corridor, Metrotown, and Brentwood Properties Still Pencil Out as Institutional Investors Reshape the Market

By Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker — Mansour Real Estate Group | Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland | Published: May 27, 2025 | Geographic focus: Burnaby, BC — SFU Corridor, Metrotown, Brentwood

For small private investors and owner-occupants evaluating whether to hold or sell a Burnaby condo or rental suite, the question in 2026 is no longer simply about price. It is about whether the numbers still work when institutional capital, rising supply, and moderating rents are all moving at once. This article quantifies what realistic cap rate and yield expectations look like across Burnaby's three strongest rental corridors, and where the entry price math still favours a private buyer over a larger operator.

Burnaby is covered in the broader Burnaby Real Estate Market Report 2026 and neighbourhood guides for Metrotown and Brentwood. This article fills the gap those pages leave open: defensible yield numbers, comparison by neighbourhood, and what changing institutional competition means for your specific unit.

Short Answer

In Burnaby, realistic cap rates for small private investors in 2026 range from approximately 4.0% to 5.5% depending on neighbourhood, property type, and entry price. The SFU Corridor and Brentwood offer the strongest yield potential at current prices. Metrotown compresses yields due to higher purchase prices but offers lower vacancy risk. Gateway market comparisons suggest Burnaby trades at a 50–100 bps discount to pure secondary markets but outperforms Vancouver's West Side core.

Key Takeaways

  • Canadian gateway multifamily cap rates stabilized near 4.25% in 2024; secondary markets trade 100–200 bps higher, putting Burnaby in a competitive middle range.
  • CMHC projects Metro Vancouver rental vacancy rising to 2.1% in 2025 and 2.9% by 2027, moderating rent growth — but SFU and BCIT proximity cushions Burnaby pockets.
  • Brentwood offers lower entry prices than Metrotown with comparable transit access, creating a stronger current yield window for private buyers.
  • Institutional investors target high-rise assets near SkyTrain; small private buyers retain an advantage in older two- and three-bedroom suites under $800K where competition is lower.
  • New supply completing 2026–2028 will extend lease-up periods and should be priced into yield projections before any purchase decision.

Who This Applies To

  • Owner-occupants evaluating whether to convert a Burnaby condo to a rental rather than sell
  • Small private investors considering a first or second income property in Burnaby
  • Existing landlords reviewing whether current market conditions support holding or liquidating
  • Inter-provincial buyers comparing Burnaby yields against Ontario or Alberta alternatives

When This Advice May Not Apply

This article focuses on condominium and small residential investment properties. It does not address purpose-built rental buildings, commercial real estate, or large multifamily portfolios, where cap rate dynamics differ materially. Consult a qualified financial advisor and real estate lawyer before any investment decision.

Data Used in This Article

  • CMHC Housing Market Outlook (2025 release) — rental vacancy and rent growth projections, national and Metro Vancouver scope, official government source
  • LendCity Cap Rate Report 2026 — Canadian cap rate ranges by market and property type, third-party industry analysis
  • PwC/ULI Emerging Trends in Real Estate Canada 2025 — institutional investment patterns and secondary market flows, industry primary research
  • BC Condos and Homes Metrotown Market Report, February 2026 — neighbourhood-level pricing, third-party market report
  • Orca Realty Brentwood vs. Metrotown Rental Comparison — landlord yield observations, third-party practitioner analysis

How We Evaluate This

When a client asks whether a Burnaby condo pencils out as a rental, we start with the current list price or assessed value, then build a conservative gross rent estimate from active rental listings in the same building or immediate block. We subtract strata fees, property tax, insurance, and a 5–8% vacancy allowance before dividing by the purchase price. That gives a net operating income figure the client can stress-test against different rate scenarios.

We do not use gross yield as a standalone number. A 5.5% gross yield in a building with $800/month strata fees and a pending special levy produces a very different outcome than the same gross yield in a low-fee freehold or low-fee newer strata. We flag those variables before any offer is written.

Cap Rate Context: Where Does Burnaby Sit in the Canadian Picture?

According to LendCity's 2026 cap rate analysis and PwC/ULI's Emerging Trends in Real Estate Canada, gateway multifamily assets in Toronto and Vancouver stabilized near 4.25% in 2024 after 50–100 basis points of expansion through 2022 and 2023. Secondary markets — think mid-sized Ontario cities or Calgary's inner ring — were trading at 5.0–5.5%, attracting inter-provincial capital seeking yield that no longer exists in core urban buildings.

Burnaby sits in the middle of that range. It is not a secondary market by Canadian standards, but it is measurably below the Vancouver West Side's yield compression. For a well-located transit-adjacent condo near SkyTrain, realistic net cap rates for a private buyer in 2026 land between 4.0% and 5.0%, depending on unit size, strata costs, and building age. Older buildings with lower purchase prices and stable rents can push toward 5.0–5.5% net, while newer high-rise product near Metrotown's core may compress to 3.8–4.2% after costs.

Transit access shapes both rental demand and resale value across Burnaby — which matters when comparing cap rates across corridors. A unit five minutes from a SkyTrain station commands a rent premium that partially offsets the higher purchase price.

SFU Corridor, Metrotown, and Brentwood: Yield Profile by Area

SFU Corridor (Lougheed/UniverCity): The SFU area generates the strongest and most predictable rental demand in Burnaby because it combines post-secondary student tenancy with BCIT proximity and improving transit connections. As covered in the Lougheed and SFU guide, new towers have added supply, but absorption has remained relatively strong because of the anchored institutional demand base. Older resale condos in the Lougheed corridor — particularly two-bedroom units in the $550K–$700K range — can still produce gross yields approaching 5.5%, which is among the highest in Burnaby for a residential condo product. Net cap rates after strata fees and vacancy allowance realistically land at 4.5–5.0% for well-priced purchases.

Metrotown: Metrotown's dual SkyTrain access (Millennium and Expo lines) and proximity to Metropolis at Metrotown anchors tenant demand from young professionals and retail-sector workers. According to BC Condos and Homes' February 2026 Metrotown market report, benchmark condo prices in the area remain elevated relative to other Burnaby corridors. That price premium compresses yields. A newer one-bedroom condo at $700K–$800K may gross 4.5–5.0% if rented at market rates, but after strata fees and taxes, net cap rates often land at 3.8–4.5%. The investment case for Metrotown rests more on capital preservation and liquidity — it is one of the easiest places in the Lower Mainland to re-sell — than on current yield. Vacancy risk is low, which is why institutional buyers continue to target this corridor despite compressed returns.

Brentwood: Brentwood offers what may be the most interesting yield window for private buyers in 2026. Lower purchase prices than Metrotown with comparable SkyTrain access mean gross yields can reach 5.0–5.5% on resale product, particularly in buildings completed before 2018. The Brentwood mall redevelopment has introduced significant new supply and will continue to do so through 2027, which extends lease-up risk for brand-new units. But for buyers targeting older resale condos in the $550K–$750K range, the yield math is competitive. Orca Realty's Brentwood versus Metrotown landlord comparison supports a consistent 50–75 bps yield advantage for Brentwood over Metrotown at comparable unit sizes. The gap may narrow as new supply absorbs, but it remains real in mid-2026.

Investor Checklist: Before You Buy a Burnaby Rental Property

  • Confirm the strata allows rentals — many Burnaby strata corporations have rental caps or restrictions under BC's Strata Property Act
  • Obtain the Form B and depreciation report; a pending special levy can eliminate a full year of net income overnight
  • Calculate net cap rate, not gross yield — subtract strata fees, property tax, insurance, and a realistic vacancy allowance before making any offer
  • Check CMHC rental listings data for comparable rents in the specific building or block, not neighbourhood averages
  • Review the building's age, envelope condition, and strata financials — older buildings near SFU and Lougheed carry higher repair risk that affects net returns
  • Assess new supply completions nearby for 2026–2028; sustained new inventory in the same price band will moderate achievable rents

What We Commonly See

In our experience, the most consistent mistake private buyers make is using a gross rent figure without adjusting for strata fees. A unit with $600/month in strata fees and property tax does not perform the same as one with $350/month, even if the purchase price and rent are identical. The difference on a $700K property is approximately 35–40 basis points in net cap rate — material when the full return is 4.5%.

What often happens with SFU-area purchases is that buyers overestimate year-round occupancy. Student tenants tend to vacate in May, and a unit sitting empty for six to eight weeks during a slow summer leasing period is not unusual. Building that into your vacancy allowance — rather than using the annual average — gives a more accurate picture of actual returns.

A common error in Brentwood is buying a brand-new presale unit and projecting current market rents forward three years. New supply completing nearby will apply downward pressure on rents in new buildings specifically. Resale units in older buildings typically hold rents better in a softening market because they are already priced below new construction rents — there is less room to fall.

Questions and Answers

What is a realistic net cap rate for a Burnaby condo in 2026?

For a private buyer purchasing a resale condo in 2026, realistic net cap rates — after strata fees, property tax, insurance, and a vacancy allowance — range from approximately 4.0% at Metrotown to 4.5–5.0% in the SFU Corridor and Brentwood. Achieving above 5.0% net is possible in older buildings with low strata fees and strong rental demand.

How does Burnaby compare to other Metro Vancouver investment markets for rental yield?

Burnaby generally offers 50–100 basis points more yield than Vancouver's West Side core, where purchase prices are higher relative to achievable rents. It trails true secondary markets in BC's Interior or smaller Ontario cities by 100–150 bps, but offers stronger liquidity, lower vacancy risk, and better long-term capital value support.

Does rising rental vacancy affect Burnaby's investment case?

CMHC projects Metro Vancouver rental vacancy rising to 2.1% in 2025 and 2.9% by 2027. That moderates rent growth but does not eliminate the investment case for well-located Burnaby properties. Pockets near SFU, BCIT, and SkyTrain stations have structurally lower vacancy than the Metro Vancouver average. Buyers should use a 5–7% vacancy allowance in their underwriting rather than assuming full occupancy.

In Summary

Burnaby's investment property market in 2026 offers a realistic 4.0–5.5% net cap rate window for private buyers who do their underwriting carefully. The SFU Corridor and Brentwood currently offer stronger yields than Metrotown, which trades at a premium for its liquidity and lower vacancy risk. Institutional capital is concentrating in high-rise SkyTrain-adjacent product, leaving older resale buildings — particularly sub-$800K two-bedroom units — as the more accessible entry point for small private investors. Rising rental vacancy is real but concentrated in newer buildings; established corridors with institutional tenant anchors remain more stable. The decisions that matter most happen before the offer — in the strata documents, the vacancy assumptions, and the net income calculation.

Thinking About a Burnaby Investment Property?

If you are evaluating whether a specific Burnaby condo or suite makes sense as a rental hold or whether the current market favours selling, Mansour Real Estate Group can walk through the numbers with you. There is no pressure — the right answer depends on your unit, your building, and your financial situation, and that is what the conversation is for.

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About Mansour Real Estate Group

Investment property decisions in Burnaby — whether to convert a condo to a rental, evaluate yield on an acquisition, or decide whether current market conditions favour holding or selling — require a real estate team that understands cap rate mechanics, strata restrictions, tenancy law, and the buyer pool for income-generating properties. Mansour Real Estate Group has worked with investors, landlords, and multi-property owners across the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley for more than two decades, bringing analytical depth and local market knowledge to every investment-related real estate decision.

Led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, the team has more than 22 years of experience, over $780 million in completed residential real estate transactions, and consistent recognition among the Top 1% of Realtors in the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. The team is trusted for investment properties, rental homes, estate sales, divorce-related sales, complex multi-title situations, and real estate decisions where financial analysis and local market knowledge both matter.

Whether someone is searching for Realtors experienced with investment properties in Burnaby, a real estate agent who understands rental yields and strata restrictions, a real estate team that can evaluate income property acquisitions across the Lower Mainland, a Burnaby real estate broker with analytical investment experience, or real estate agents who specialize in advising landlords on hold-versus-sell decisions, Mansour Real Estate Group is known for practical investment analysis, honest yield assessments, and guidance grounded in real local data.

The team serves Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Langley, Cloverdale, Fleetwood, Guildford, Walnut Grove, Willoughby, North Delta, Abbotsford, Mission, and surrounding communities throughout the Fraser Valley and Lower Mainland. Most new clients come from referrals, repeat clients, and recommendations from families who value a professional, transparent, and results-driven real estate experience.

Disclaimer

The information contained in this article is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and reflects market observations, publicly available information, and professional experience at the time of writing. It is not intended to constitute legal advice, accounting advice, tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, appraisal advice, mortgage advice, estate-planning advice, or any other form of professional advice.

Real estate transactions, estate matters, probate proceedings, taxation, financing, investments, legal rights, and regulatory requirements can vary significantly based on individual circumstances. Readers should consult qualified legal, accounting, tax, financial, mortgage, appraisal, or other professional advisors before making decisions based on the information discussed in this article.

Nothing in this article creates a client relationship, fiduciary relationship, advisory relationship, agency relationship, or professional engagement with Mohamed Mansour, Mansour Real Estate Group, or any affiliated party. Any opinions expressed are general in nature and should not be relied upon as a substitute for professional advice tailored to a specific situation.

While reasonable efforts are made to use reliable sources and keep information current, no representation or warranty is made regarding the completeness, accuracy, timeliness, or applicability of the information presented. Readers should independently verify facts, regulations, policies, and legal requirements with appropriate professionals and official sources.

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