Wildfire and earthquake riders, strata insurance gaps, and how to find the best home insurance rates in BC
Home Insurance in BC: A Unique Risk Environment
British Columbia homeowners face a distinct set of insurance risks that differ significantly from other Canadian provinces. Earthquake risk along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, escalating wildfire seasons affecting Interior and northern communities, volatile strata insurance markets, and some of Canada's highest property values combine to create a complex insurance landscape.
Average home insurance premiums in BC range from $1,200–$2,200 per year in 2026, with Metro Vancouver homeowners at the higher end and Interior/rural homeowners at the lower end. Strata (condo) owners face their own separate challenges detailed below.
BC's Three Critical Insurance Risks
1. Earthquake Insurance
British Columbia sits atop the Cascadia Subduction Zone — one of the most seismically active regions in North America. Scientists consider a major Cascadia earthquake (magnitude 8.0–9.0) a matter of when, not if. Despite this, earthquake coverage is NOT included in standard BC home insurance policies. It must be added as a separate rider or purchased as a standalone policy.
Earthquake coverage typically includes:
Damage to the dwelling structure from ground shaking, fire following earthquake, and earth movement
Contents damaged by earthquake
Additional living expenses while your home is repaired
Earthquake coverage costs $150–$600/year depending on your location, home construction type, and deductible. Deductibles for earthquake are typically expressed as a percentage of insured value (5–10%), meaning on a $900,000 home you could face a $45,000–$90,000 deductible before the insurer pays anything. This is important to understand before purchasing.
2. Wildfire Coverage
Wildfire damage to homes is covered under standard BC home insurance policies as a named peril (fire). However, there are nuances:
If your municipality calls an evacuation and your home is not damaged, your additional living expenses coverage kicks in — but only if a mandatory evacuation order has been issued for your specific area
Homes in high-risk wildfire interface zones may face higher premiums, coverage restrictions, or non-renewal
FireSmart landscaping (clearing combustible vegetation 1.5–10m from your home) may qualify for discounts with some insurers and reduces actual risk
Wildfire Non-Renewal Risk: As BC wildfire seasons intensify, some insurers have exited high-risk interface communities or dramatically raised premiums. If you live in a wildfire-prone area, work with an independent broker who has access to specialty insurers including Lloyd's of London syndicates that serve these markets.
3. Overland Flooding
While BC's primary water risk concern has historically been earthquakes, flooding from atmospheric rivers, snowmelt, and river systems is increasingly damaging. The November 2021 flooding in the Fraser Valley caused over $675 million in insured losses. Standard policies exclude overland flooding; the add-on costs $150–$400/year depending on your location's flood risk.
BC Home Insurance Estimator
Estimated Annual Premium:
BC Strata Insurance: Critical Gaps for Condo Owners
BC strata (condo) owners face insurance challenges unique in Canada. The strata corporation's master policy covers the building structure and common areas — but BC's strata insurance market has experienced dramatic disruptions:
Skyrocketing deductibles: Many BC strata master policies now carry per-claim deductibles of $100,000–$500,000 or more — up from $5,000–$25,000 just a few years ago. When a single unit water leak triggers a claim, the strata corporation can assess this deductible against unit owners (you).
Premium increases: Some BC stratas saw premiums increase 40–300% at renewal between 2019 and 2024, driven by claims experience and reduced insurer appetite for BC condo risk.
Coverage gaps: Some strata master policies have started excluding certain perils (like wildfire in high-risk areas) that were previously standard inclusions.
As a BC strata unit owner, you need:
Personal condo insurance with loss assessment coverage of at least $100,000–$500,000 to protect against strata deductible assessments
Coverage for your unit's improvements and betterments (renovations you've done)
Personal contents and liability coverage
Request Your Strata's Current Master Policy Details: Ask your strata council for the current master policy deductible, coverage limit, and any notable exclusions. Your personal coverage should be calibrated to this information. BC's Strata Property Act requires strata corporations to provide this information upon request.
Average BC Home Insurance Rates by Region (2026)
Region
Annual Premium Range
Key Risk Factors
Metro Vancouver
$1,600–$2,400
High values, earthquake, theft, strata risks
Victoria / CRD
$1,300–$2,000
Earthquake, older homes, coastal moisture
Kelowna / Okanagan
$1,200–$1,900
Wildfire (high risk), drought conditions
Kamloops / Interior
$1,000–$1,600
Wildfire, flooding
Fraser Valley
$1,200–$1,800
Flooding (2021 event), earthquake risk
Prince George / North
$900–$1,500
Wildfire, cold weather risks
How to Save on BC Home Insurance
Compare at renewal: BC's competitive broker market means significant rate variation. An independent broker shopping 10+ insurers can often find savings of $300–$600.
FireSmart your property: Reducing combustible materials within 1.5–10m of your home lowers actual risk and may qualify for insurer discounts. Some BC municipalities offer FireSmart incentive programs.
Increase earthquake deductible: A higher earthquake deductible (10% vs 5% of insured value) reduces premiums, but ensure you can fund the deductible from savings if needed.
Install water leak sensors: Water damage is BC's most frequent home claim. Sensors often qualify for premium reductions.
Bundle with ICBC optional coverage: While ICBC handles mandatory auto insurance, you can bundle home insurance through your auto insurer for multi-policy discounts.
BC's Smart Banking Alternative
KOHO helps British Columbians save on banking fees and earn cash back — redirect those savings toward essential earthquake and wildfire coverage.