What changes when you move from Calgary or Edmonton to the Tri-Cities — the price step-up, the property transfer tax Alberta doesn’t have, and how to budget for it.
Alberta-to-BC is a popular move for lifestyle and weather, but it comes with the biggest financial adjustment of any common corridor into the Tri-Cities: homes simply cost more here, and BC charges a land transfer tax that Alberta doesn’t. Going in clear-eyed about both is the whole game. Here’s what to budget.
The short answer
Moving from Alberta to the Tri-Cities means a significant price step-up — Tri-Cities detached homes generally cost well more than Calgary or Edmonton equivalents — plus a brand-new closing cost: BC’s Property Transfer Tax (roughly $22,000 on a $1.2M home), which Alberta does not levy. Budget for both the higher purchase price and that one-time tax, and check whether the BC speculation and vacancy tax applies (it doesn’t, if the home is your principal residence).
96–99%
Tri-Cities Sale-to-List Ratio
$1.7M
Typical Detached (Tri-Cities)
2,119
Homes Active Right Now
Live figures from current Tri-Cities MLS® data, refreshed weekly. Sale-to-list ratio reflects how close homes are selling to asking — under 100% is a buyer's-market signal.
| Calgary / Edmonton | Tri-Cities, BC | |
|---|---|---|
| Detached benchmark (approx) | ~$600K–$800K | ~$1.25M PoCo → $1.9M+ Port Moody |
| Land transfer tax | None (only small title registration fees) | BC PTT ≈ $22,000 on $1.2M |
| Provincial sales tax on resale homes | No PST | No PST on resale homes (GST applies to new builds) |
| Speculation/vacancy tax | None | Applies in Metro Van — but exempt if principal residence |
| Winters | Cold, dry, long | Mild, rainy, short |
| Commute rail | CTrain / limited | SkyTrain + West Coast Express |
Benchmarks are approximate — use the live market strip on each city page for current Tri-Cities figures.
| Cost | Where you are now | In BC (Tri-Cities) |
|---|---|---|
| Land transfer / property transfer tax | None — Alberta charges only small land title registration fees (a few hundred dollars) | BC Property Transfer Tax ≈ $22,000 on a $1.2M home This is the cost Alberta buyers most often forget — budget it as cash to close. |
| Typical purchase price | Calgary/Edmonton detached ~$600K–$800K | Tri-Cities detached ~$1.25M–$1.9M+ Expect a meaningful step up in both price and mortgage size. |
| Speculation & vacancy tax | None | 0.5% of assessed value for BC residents — but exempt if it’s your principal residence A simple annual declaration keeps you exempt; it mainly catches empty second homes. |
| Who closes the deal | Lawyer | Notary or lawyer BC notaries handle most straightforward residential closings. |
Tax figures are current general information — confirm exact amounts with a BC notary or lawyer. Run your own numbers with the property transfer tax calculator and the closing-cost calculator.
There’s no softening it: detached homes in the Tri-Cities generally cost roughly double a comparable Calgary or Edmonton home, and the gap is wider against Edmonton. The flip side is what you’re buying — ocean-influenced climate, mountains and inlet at the door, and SkyTrain/West Coast Express transit. Many Alberta movers downshift one housing type (detached to townhome, or a smaller lot) to land in the neighbourhood they want.
Use the live market strips on the Coquitlam, Port Moody, and Port Coquitlam guides to see current medians, and the mortgage calculator to size the larger loan.
Alberta is one of the few provinces with no land transfer tax — buyers there pay only small land-title registration fees. BC charges a Property Transfer Tax at completion: 1% on the first $200,000, 2% up to $2,000,000, and 3% above that (plus a further 2% on residential value over $3,000,000). On a $1.2M home that’s about $22,000 — real money you need as cash to close, separate from your down payment.
First-time buyers and newly-built-home buyers have exemptions; most Alberta movers won’t qualify as first-time buyers, but a new Burke Mountain build could qualify for the newly-built exemption up to $1.1M. See the PTT explainer and the calculator.
The speculation and vacancy tax sounds alarming but doesn’t affect owner-occupiers — it’s an annual tax aimed at empty homes, and your principal residence is exempt with a simple yearly declaration. There’s no PST on a resale home (GST applies only to new construction). And BC’s milder, wetter climate is the lifestyle trade most Alberta buyers are actually moving for.
The full BC-specific cost and rule set is in the out-of-province buyer guide.
How much more does a house cost in the Tri-Cities than in Calgary?
Generally roughly double for a comparable detached home — Tri-Cities detached typically runs $1.25M–$1.9M+ versus roughly $600K–$800K in Calgary. Many Alberta movers adjust by choosing Port Coquitlam (the most affordable Tri-City) or shifting from detached to a townhome.
Does BC have a land transfer tax like Alberta doesn’t?
Yes. Alberta has no land transfer tax — only small title registration fees. BC charges a Property Transfer Tax at closing, about $22,000 on a $1.2M home. It’s the cost Alberta buyers most often overlook; budget it as cash to close.
What is the BC speculation and vacancy tax — will I owe it?
It’s an annual tax in designated areas (including Metro Vancouver) aimed at empty and under-used homes. If the Tri-Cities home is your principal residence, you’re exempt — you just file a short annual declaration. It mainly catches vacant second properties.
Is there PST when I buy a home in BC?
Not on a resale home. GST (5%) applies to newly built homes, with rebates for lower-priced new builds, but resale homes carry no sales tax.
Will my Alberta down payment go as far in BC?
Your equity is welcome, but expect a larger mortgage because prices are higher — and remember to set aside roughly $20,000+ for the property transfer tax on top of your down payment. The mortgage calculator helps size the new payment.
Do I need a lawyer to buy in BC?
Not necessarily — BC allows a notary public or a lawyer to close a purchase. For a straightforward residential deal a notary is common and often cheaper than a lawyer.
What’s the weather trade-off moving from Alberta to the Tri-Cities?
Milder, shorter winters with rain instead of deep cold and snow, and cooler summers — but a wetter, greyer stretch from late fall through spring. For most Alberta movers the milder winter is the point.
Relocating from out of province or across Metro Vancouver? Map out timing, neighbourhoods, and budget with Sebastian — owner-operated, no team handoffs.
Contact SebastianSelling to fund the move? Get a current valuation based on real Tri-Cities sold data.
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View Homes for SaleThis page is general information for people relocating to the Tri-Cities, not legal, tax, financial, or immigration advice, and figures are current as of June 2026 and subject to change. Property transfer tax, the foreign-buyer ban, and provincial taxes have specific rules and exemptions — confirm your situation with a BC real estate lawyer or notary, an accountant, or the relevant authority (BC Government) before acting. Sebastian Czarkowski is a licensed REALTOR® (BCFSA). MLS® figures sourced from current Tri-Cities board data.