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EPR Provider Compliance: BC's 2026 Guidance: A Guide for Metro Vancouver Strata Councils

The rules are the same across British Columbia — but your deadline and building stock are local. Here is epr provider compliance: bc's 2026 guidance, written for Metro Vancouver strata councils.

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What this means for Metro Vancouver strata councils

This guide covers epr provider compliance: bc's 2026 guidance for strata corporations across Metro Vancouver. The requirements are province-wide, but two things are local to your council — the deadline you are working toward and the kind of building you manage.

Metro Vancouver carries the largest concentration of strata corporations in British Columbia — concrete highrises through Vancouver, Burnaby Metrotown, Coquitlam Burquitlam, and the New Westminster waterfront; townhouse-dominant stock through Surrey, Langley, Maple Ridge, and Delta; and 1980s wood-frame walk-ups still common across the older neighbourhoods. The region's December 31, 2026 EPR deadline puts most councils in active planning mode.

  • Electrical Planning Report (EPR): due December 31, 2026 for Metro Vancouver stratas of five or more lots, under the Strata Property Act.

The full guide

When a strata council goes to hire an Electrical Planning Report (EPR) provider, it faces a practical problem: the quality and completeness of BC strata EPRs vary considerably, and a proposal alone doesn't show which kind a strata will receive. In 2025 and 2026, the Province of BC — together with CHOA (the Condominium Home Owners Association of BC), BC Hydro, and VISOA — published and updated an official guidance document specifically for the preparation of Electrical Planning Reports: Guidance for the Preparation of Electrical Planning Reports for Strata Corporations in British Columbia (updated May 2026). This guidance is the clearest statement of what a compliant EPR must contain and how a qualified firm should produce one.

Councils are increasingly advised — by strata managers and industry associations alike — to confirm their provider works to this guidance. Here is how to use it as a practical hiring checklist, and how CF Electrical Services answers each question.

What the guidance is and why it matters

The Guidance for the Preparation of Electrical Planning Reports (Province of BC, updated May 2026) was developed collaboratively by the provincial government, CHOA, BC Hydro, and VISOA to translate the legal content requirements of the Strata Property Regulation into a practical preparation standard. It documents the on-site work, data, analysis, and documentation a compliant EPR must cover.

It matters for hiring because it is the shared reference point every qualified firm in BC is expected to follow. A report prepared to the guidance will meet the Strata Property Regulation's content requirements. A report prepared without it can be missing mandatory elements — a gap that surfaces later, when lenders, buyers, or future councils review the strata's records.

The 7-question checklist

Use these questions when evaluating any EPR provider — including us.

1. Does the engagement include a physical on-site inspection?

The guidance and the Strata Property Regulation both require a physical inspection of all electrical and mechanical infrastructure — electrical rooms, switchgear, transformers, main and sub-panels, visited in person. A desktop-only review is non-compliant. Ask directly: "Will someone from your firm visit the building?" and "Does the inspection cover every electrical room and service entrance?" The answer to both should be a clear yes.

2. Does the engagement include 12 months of BC Hydro or FortisBC consumption data?

A compliant EPR must include a BC Hydro (or FortisBC) 12-month interval consumption-data analysis — real utility demand figures, not code-based estimates that assume maximum capacity without measuring what the building actually draws. Ask: "Do you request the 12-month consumption data directly from BC Hydro on the strata's behalf, or do you estimate from the panel ratings?" Estimation alone is non-compliant.

3. Does the scope cover all required electrification scenarios?

The regulation specifies that the future-electrification scenarios must cover EV charging, heat-pump conversions, and electric domestic hot water — each modelled separately, not as a combined "everything" load. Ask: "Does your scope include separate models for EV, heat pumps, and electric hot water?" An EPR that models EV charging alone does not meet the requirement.

4. Does the report include demand-management recommendations?

A compliant EPR must include strategies to free electrical capacity without a utility service upgrade — load-management controls, scheduling, smart-panel options — not just upgrade recommendations. Ask: "Does the report include demand-management strategies that reduce load, not just recommendations to upgrade the service?" A thin report that only lists capital upgrades is missing mandatory content.

5. Does the firm have a financial stake in the upgrades it recommends?

This is not directly a guidance compliance question — but it is a fair one to add. An EPR recommends upgrades the strata will later pay for, so it is reasonable to know whether the firm preparing the report has any financial stake in those upgrades going ahead, and how it keeps its recommendations tied to the building's needs. Ask: "Does your firm have any financial interest in the upgrades this report will recommend?" A firm whose only product is the report itself has no such stake.

6. Will the provider show you a sample report before you commit?

The guidance sets a standard for how findings must be documented and communicated — but a sample report shows you whether the firm actually delivers that standard in practice. Ask for a redacted sample from a comparable building. Confirm the report includes plain-language upgrade recommendations with quantified capacity estimates, not just load tables. Ask whether it includes a council presentation after delivery. See why you should always ask for a sample report and references before committing.

How CF Electrical Services answers the checklist

CF Electrical Services prepares every Electrical Planning Report in accordance with the Province's preparation guidance (updated May 2026, developed with CHOA, BC Hydro, and VISOA). Here is how we answer each question:

  1. On-site inspection: Yes — every engagement includes a physical inspection of all electrical rooms, switchgear, transformers, and panels. No desktop-only reviews.
  2. BC Hydro consumption data: Yes — we request 12 months of interval data from BC Hydro or FortisBC at intake; the data request is included in the engagement, not an optional add-on.
  3. All electrification scenarios: Yes — we model EV charging, heat-pump conversions, and electric domestic hot water separately, as the regulation requires.
  4. Demand-management recommendations: Yes — every report includes load-management strategies that free capacity without requiring a utility service upgrade.
  5. Financial stake: No — our only product is the report itself, so we have no financial stake in the upgrades a report recommends.
  6. Sample report available: Yes — we will show you a redacted sample from a comparable building and connect you with references before you commit to anything.

We quote every EPR as a fixed price, scoped to your building, with a proposal within one business day of receiving your building details. See how our EPRs work or contact us directly.

Next steps for Metro Vancouver councils

When your council is ready to act, CF Electrical Services prepares Electrical Planning Reports and EV Ready Plans for stratas across Metro Vancouver — everything written in plain language for the council and owners who have to use it. When the plan becomes a project, we can manage that too.

See all Metro Vancouver strata services, or browse the full guide library.

Written by CF Electrical Services — BC strata electrical consulting: Electrical Planning Reports, EV Ready Plans, and electrification project management. Published June 26, 2026.

EPR Provider Compliance: BC's 2026 Guidance — Metro Vancouver FAQs

What is the EPR deadline for Metro Vancouver stratas?

Strata corporations across Metro Vancouver of five or more lots must have a current Electrical Planning Report by December 31, 2026 under the Strata Property Act.

What is BC's official guidance for Electrical Planning Reports?

The Province of BC, together with CHOA (the Condominium Home Owners Association of BC), BC Hydro, and VISOA, published the "Guidance for the Preparation of Electrical Planning Reports for Strata Corporations in British Columbia." It was updated in May 2026 and is the primary reference document for what a compliant EPR must contain and how a qualified provider should produce one. Strata councils are advised to confirm their EPR provider has read and works to this guidance.

How do I verify that an EPR provider follows the Province's guidance?

Ask six questions: (1) Does the engagement include a physical on-site inspection of all electrical rooms? (2) Does it include 12 months of BC Hydro or FortisBC consumption data, requested directly from the utility? (3) Does it model all three electrification scenarios — EV charging, heat pumps, and electric hot water — separately? (4) Does it include demand-management recommendations that free capacity without a service upgrade? (5) Does the firm have a financial stake in the upgrades it recommends? (6) Will the firm show you a sample report before you commit?

Does CF Electrical Services follow BC's EPR preparation guidance?

Yes. CF Electrical Services prepares every Electrical Planning Report in accordance with the Province's official preparation guidance (updated May 2026, developed with CHOA, BC Hydro, and VISOA). Every engagement includes a physical on-site inspection, 12 months of BC Hydro or FortisBC consumption data, all mandatory electrification scenarios, demand-management recommendations, and a sample report and references on request. CF has no financial stake in the upgrades its reports recommend.

What does the CHOA EPR guidance say about on-site inspections?

A compliant EPR requires a physical inspection of all electrical and mechanical infrastructure — electrical rooms, switchgear, transformers, and panels — visited in person. A desktop-only review does not satisfy the requirement. When evaluating a provider, ask explicitly whether the person preparing the report will visit the building, and whether every electrical room and service entrance will be included.

Why does it matter whether an EPR provider has a stake in the upgrades it recommends?

An EPR recommends specific upgrades to your building's electrical infrastructure, and those recommendations shape significant strata spending. A firm whose only product is the report itself has no financial stake in which upgrades the strata chooses — the council can read the recommendations as an assessment of the building's needs alone.

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Request your fixed-price proposal — Metro Vancouver

Give us the complete picture and we can return a comprehensive, fixed-price proposal — often the same business day.

Have these ready

  • Your name, email, and phone
  • Your role on the strata (council or manager)
  • Strata Plan number and full property address
  • Unit count (and building count, if more than one)
  • Your strata plan — optional, but it unlocks a same-day proposal

We ask for complete details so every proposal is accurate and to protect against fraudulent requests. Your information is used only to prepare your proposal — no spam, no resale.

Prefer to talk first? Call 778-910-4772 or email info@cfelectrical.ca.

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