In British Columbia, the process of probating a will is called obtaining a "Grant of Probate" (or "Grant of Administration" if there is no will). Probate fees in BC are calculated on the gross value of estate assets in the province. Given BC's high real estate values, probate fees can be significant — understanding them and knowing how to reduce them legally is an important part of BC estate planning.
Under the Probate Fee Act of BC, the fee structure is:
For a practical example, consider an estate worth $1,200,000 (roughly average for Metro Vancouver given property values):
For a $2,000,000 estate: approximately $27,400. These numbers can be significant, especially given that BC real estate commonly pushes estate values well above $1 million even for middle-income families.
BC probate fees apply to assets situated in BC that form part of the estate. This generally includes:
Out-of-province or foreign assets may be subject to probate in those other jurisdictions separately.
Holding your principal residence in joint tenancy with your spouse is the most common way to bypass probate on BC real estate. When one spouse dies, the property passes automatically to the survivor by right of survivorship — no probate required. On a $1.5 million home, this saves approximately $20,860 in probate fees.
Name beneficiaries on all RRSPs, RRIFs, and TFSAs. For a married person, naming your spouse as beneficiary on a $400,000 RRSP saves approximately $5,460 in probate fees in addition to deferring income tax.
Life insurance with a named beneficiary (not "estate") bypasses probate and is available immediately to the beneficiary without waiting for the estate administration process.
Assets transferred to a trust during your lifetime (an "inter vivos trust") are not part of your estate at death and avoid probate. Alter ego trusts and joint partner trusts (for individuals over 65) are particularly useful for BC residents with large real estate holdings or investment portfolios.
BC courts have accepted the concept of multiple wills in some circumstances. Private company shares and other assets that do not require a probated will to transfer can be governed by a secondary will that is not presented for probate.
To obtain a Grant of Probate in BC, the executor must file the original will and supporting documents with the BC Supreme Court. Since 2014, BC uses the Wills, Estates and Succession Act (WESA) which modernized the province's estate administration rules. The application requires a complete inventory of estate assets and liabilities. Processing times vary but commonly take two to six months.
Unlike Ontario, BC calculates probate fees on gross estate value — debts and mortgages are not deducted. This means the probate fee on a $900,000 property with a $400,000 mortgage is based on the $900,000 value, not the $500,000 equity. This makes probate planning particularly important for heavily mortgaged estates.
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