Eviction Process BC 2026

Complete BC landlord guide: RTB notices, dispute resolution, timelines, Direct Request process, and enforcement in British Columbia

The BC eviction process is governed by the Residential Tenancy Act (BC) and administered by the Residential Tenancy Branch (RTB). BC's process differs significantly from Ontario's LTB system — there are different notice forms, different timelines, and a distinct dispute resolution mechanism. Understanding BC's specific requirements is essential for any landlord operating in the province.

BC Eviction Notices — Forms and Timelines

Notice TypeReasonNotice PeriodRTB Filing Required?
10 Day Notice to End TenancyNon-payment of rent10 daysYes, if tenant disputes or doesn't vacate
One Month NoticeCause (repeated late payments, damage, disturbance)1 monthYes, if disputed
Two Month NoticeOwner/family member requires unit for personal use2 monthsYes, if disputed
Two Month NoticeProperty sold (buyer requires vacant possession)2 monthsYes, if disputed
Four Month NoticeMajor renovation or demolition4 monthsYes, if disputed

Non-Payment of Rent: The 10-Day Notice Process

When a BC tenant fails to pay rent, the landlord can serve a 10 Day Notice to End Tenancy for Unpaid Rent or Utilities (RTB-30). The process:

  1. Serve the 10-Day Notice: The notice can be served the day after rent is due. Service by leaving in the mail slot, handing to tenant, posting on tenant's door, or by registered mail (adds time).
  2. Tenant has 5 days to pay or dispute: Within 5 days of receiving the notice, the tenant can either pay all rent owed (which voids the notice) or file a dispute with the RTB.
  3. If no response after 10 days: Use the Direct Request process — file an Application for Dispute Resolution (Direct Request) with the RTB. No hearing is scheduled; the RTB issues an Order of Possession based on your application and evidence.
  4. Enforcement: Take the RTB Order of Possession to the BC Supreme Court Enforcement Services (Sheriff) to enforce. The Sheriff conducts the physical eviction.
BC Direct Request advantage: For non-payment cases where the tenant doesn't dispute, BC's Direct Request process allows landlords to get an Order of Possession without attending a hearing — often within 2–3 weeks of filing. This is faster than Ontario's L1 process in uncontested cases.

Two Month Notice — Owner's Own Use

BC landlords can serve a Two Month Notice to End Tenancy (RTB-32) when they or a close family member (spouse, child, parent, or the equivalent for the landlord's spouse) requires the unit for personal occupancy. Key requirements:

Bad faith eviction consequences in BC: If a landlord issues a Two Month Notice for personal use in bad faith (no genuine intention to occupy), the Residential Tenancy Act allows the former tenant to claim from the landlord: 12 months' rent as compensation, moving costs, and the difference between old and new rent for up to 12 months. The RTB actively investigates complaints.

BC Dispute Resolution Process

Unlike Ontario where all disputes go through the LTB tribunal, BC uses a telephone or written dispute resolution process for most residential tenancy disputes. The process is generally faster than Ontario for straightforward cases:

Monetary Claims at the RTB

In addition to eviction orders, landlords can claim monetary amounts at the RTB: unpaid rent, compensation for damage beyond normal wear and tear (supported by move-in/move-out condition inspection reports), and the return of utilities paid by the landlord that were the tenant's responsibility. The RTB can award up to $35,000 in monetary orders.

Key Differences: BC vs Ontario Eviction Process

FactorBC (RTB)Ontario (LTB)
Non-payment notice period10 days14 days
Personal use notice2 months + 1 month comp.60 days + 1 month comp.
Hearing formatPhone/video conferenceVideo or in-person
Uncontested timeline2–4 weeks (Direct Request)6–12 weeks
Contested timeline4–8 weeks3–6 months
Filing fee (landlord)$100$201
EnforcementBC SheriffOntario Sheriff

Tenant Remedies — What BC Tenants Can Claim Against Landlords

Canadian landlords in BC must understand that tenants have strong rights to file their own RTB applications. Tenants can claim compensation for: illegal entry (improper notice), harassment, failure to maintain the unit, illegal rent increases, wrongful eviction, and return of security deposits. A landlord facing a T application from a tenant must respond and attend the dispute resolution — failing to appear results in a default order against the landlord.

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