Short-term rentals have fundamentally reshaped mountain town economics in British Columbia. What started as people renting out a spare room on Airbnb has become a multi-billion dollar industry that touches every aspect of mountain town life β from housing availability to local employment to community identity.
Whether you're a homeowner exploring STR income, an investor analyzing a purchase, or a community member trying to understand the debate, this guide covers what you actually need to know. Real numbers. Real regulations. No spin.
The STR Landscape in 2025β2026
BC mountain towns are ground zero for Canada's short-term rental revolution β and its backlash. The numbers tell the story:
- Whistler has approximately 4,000β5,000 active STR listings at any given time, making it one of the densest STR markets in Canada relative to population
- Revelstoke had roughly 800β1,000 active listings before provincial regulations tightened β in a town of about 8,500 permanent residents
- Fernie, Nelson, and Golden each have several hundred listings, representing significant portions of their housing stock
- Across BC mountain communities, STRs account for an estimated 5β15% of total residential units
The goldmine days of buying a mountain condo and listing it full-time on Airbnb are ending. BC's provincial legislation, combined with municipal bylaws, has created a new regulatory environment that fundamentally changes the STR business model. If you're still operating under 2019 assumptions, you're going to get burned.
Important: STR regulations are changing rapidly. This guide reflects the regulatory landscape as of early 2026. Always verify current rules with your local municipality before making investment decisions. The provincial government's STR registry and municipal bylaws continue to evolve.
BC's Bill 35: The Provincial STR Legislation
The Short-Term Rental Accommodations Act (Bill 35), passed in late 2023 and phased in through 2024β2025, is the most significant regulatory change to hit BC's STR market. Here's what it actually does:
Principal Residence Requirement
This is the big one. In most BC communities, you can now only operate an STR on your principal residence β the home where you actually live. You can rent out your whole home while you're away, or rent a secondary suite or accessory dwelling unit on the same property. But you cannot buy a second property purely to operate as an STR.
This single rule eliminates the "investor STR" business model in affected communities. If you bought a condo in Revelstoke as an investment STR and you don't live there, you'll need to either move in, convert to a long-term rental, or sell.
Provincial STR Registry
All STR operators in BC must register with the provincial registry and display their registration number on all platform listings. Platforms like Airbnb and VRBO are required to verify registration numbers and remove non-compliant listings.
Resort Municipality Exemptions
Here's the critical nuance: resort municipalities can opt out of the principal residence requirement. This is huge for towns like Whistler, which has been designated as a resort municipality. These communities can set their own rules, which may be more permissive for investment STRs β particularly in designated tourist accommodation zones.
Penalties
- Fines up to $3,000 per day for non-compliant operators
- Fines up to $10,000 per day for platforms hosting non-compliant listings
- Municipal enforcement powers to issue business licence revocations
What Bill 35 Doesn't Do
It doesn't ban STRs. It doesn't prevent you from renting your principal residence on Airbnb. It doesn't apply equally everywhere. And it doesn't solve the housing crisis on its own β but it's the most aggressive attempt yet.
Regulations by Town
Every mountain town handles STRs differently. Here's the current landscape:
Revelstoke
Revelstoke was one of the hardest-hit towns by the STR boom. At its peak, roughly 10% of the town's housing stock was operating as short-term rentals, contributing directly to the brutal rental market for locals.
- Business licence required: Yes β all STR operators must hold a valid City of Revelstoke business licence
- Principal residence rule: Applies under Bill 35. Non-principal-residence STRs in residential zones must cease or convert
- Tourist accommodation zones: Properties in designated tourist accommodation zones (primarily near the resort base) may continue operating as investment STRs
- Licence fee: Approximately $150β$300/year depending on property type
- Enforcement: The city has actively pursued unlicensed operators, with fines starting at $500 per infraction
Whistler
Whistler is unique among BC mountain towns because of its resort municipality status. STRs are deeply embedded in the local economy β the town was literally built around tourism accommodation.
- Resort municipality exemption: Whistler has opted out of the provincial principal residence requirement for properties in tourist accommodation zones
- Zoning-based system: Properties in RA (Residential Accommodation) zones can operate as STRs. Properties in standard residential zones face tighter restrictions
- Business licence required: Yes β approximately $300β$500/year
- Phase 1 vs. Phase 2 areas: Whistler distinguishes between areas where STRs are permitted by right and areas where they require additional approval
- Platform accountability: Whistler works directly with Airbnb and VRBO to enforce compliance
Fernie
Fernie has taken a measured approach, trying to balance tourism revenue with housing pressures.
- Business licence required: Yes β STR-specific business licence
- Principal residence rule: Applies under Bill 35 in residential zones
- Tourist accommodation areas: The resort base area and certain commercial zones allow investment STRs
- Licence fee: Approximately $100β$250/year
- Community pushback: Fernie has seen significant community debate, with residents frustrated by the loss of long-term rental stock in neighbourhoods like the Annex
Nelson
Nelson has been relatively proactive on STR regulation, driven by its tight housing market and vocal community.
- Business licence required: Yes
- Principal residence rule: Strictly enforced. Nelson was ahead of the province on this
- Zoning restrictions: STRs are limited to specific zones and require compliance with the city's zoning bylaw
- Licence fee: Approximately $150β$200/year
- Cap or moratorium: Nelson has explored caps on total STR licences in certain neighbourhoods
Golden
Golden sits at the junction of five national parks, making it a natural STR market β but also a town that struggles with seasonal housing pressures.
- Business licence required: Yes
- Principal residence rule: Applies under Bill 35
- Kicking Horse Mountain Resort area: Properties in the resort base area have more flexibility for investment STRs
- Licence fee: Approximately $100β$200/year
- Enforcement: Historically lighter enforcement than Revelstoke or Whistler, though increasing
Rossland
Rossland is smaller and has fewer STR listings, but the impact on its tiny housing market is proportionally significant.
- Business licence required: Yes
- Principal residence rule: Applies under Bill 35
- Licence fee: Approximately $100β$150/year
- Community character: Rossland's tight-knit community has been vocal about wanting to preserve long-term housing stock. RED Mountain Resort area properties have more STR flexibility
Kimberley
Kimberley has a growing STR market, driven by the ski resort and the town's appeal to retirees and remote workers.
- Business licence required: Yes
- Principal residence rule: Applies under Bill 35
- Resort area: Trickle Creek and resort-adjacent properties may have more flexibility
- Licence fee: Approximately $100β$200/year
- Market note: Kimberley's lower property prices make the STR investment math different from pricier towns β see cost comparisons
Invermere
Invermere and the Columbia Valley have a strong vacation property market, with Lake Windermere driving summer tourism.
- Business licence required: Yes β District of Invermere business licence
- Principal residence rule: Applies under Bill 35. This hits Invermere hard, as many STR properties are second homes owned by Calgarians
- Licence fee: Approximately $100β$200/year
- Panorama Mountain Resort: Properties within the Panorama resort area operate under different rules, often allowing investment STRs
- Alberta connection: Many Alberta buyers purchased Invermere properties specifically for STR income β Bill 35 has significant implications for these owners
Canmore (Alberta)
Canmore is technically in Alberta, not BC, so Bill 35 doesn't apply. But it faces similar pressures and has its own aggressive STR regulations.
- Tourist home licence required: Yes β annual licence from the Town of Canmore
- Zoning-restricted: STRs (called "tourist homes") are only permitted in specific land-use districts. Most residential zones do not allow them
- Licence fee: Approximately $3,500β$5,200/year β among the most expensive in Western Canada
- Strict enforcement: Canmore has been one of the most aggressive municipalities in Canada on STR enforcement, using technology to identify unlicensed operators
- Limited licences: The number of tourist home licences is capped in many zones
Licence Requirements & Costs
Getting properly licenced is non-negotiable. Operating without a licence exposes you to fines, platform delisting, and potential legal action. Here's what the process typically involves:
Provincial Registration
- Register with BC's provincial STR registry
- Provide proof of principal residence (if applicable)
- Receive a provincial registration number
- Display this number on all platform listings
- Provincial registration fee: approximately $50β$100
Municipal Business Licence
- Apply through your local municipality
- Provide proof of ownership or authorization from property owner
- Demonstrate compliance with zoning bylaws
- May require fire safety inspection, occupancy limits, parking provisions
- Annual renewal required β don't let it lapse
Additional Requirements by Town
- Fire safety: Most municipalities require working smoke detectors and CO detectors on every level, fire extinguisher, and posted emergency exit plan
- Parking: Some towns require dedicated off-street parking for STR guests β a real issue in older neighbourhoods with narrow lots
- Occupancy limits: Typically 2 persons per bedroom, with maximum occupancy tied to sewage/septic capacity
- Noise bylaws: Quiet hours typically 10pmβ7am. Repeat complaints can trigger licence review
- Signage: Some municipalities require posted emergency contact information and house rules visible to guests
Zoning Restrictions
Zoning is where most STR dreams die. Even if you have a licence and meet the principal residence requirement, your property's zoning designation determines whether you can operate an STR at all.
Common Zoning Categories
- Tourist Accommodation / Resort zones: STRs permitted by right. These are typically near ski resort bases, in designated hotel/condo zones, or in purpose-built tourist accommodation areas
- Commercial mixed-use: STRs often permitted, sometimes requiring a development permit
- Residential single-family/multi-family: STRs increasingly restricted to principal residence only. Some zones prohibit them entirely
- Rural/agricultural: Varies widely. Some rural properties fall outside municipal STR bylaws
Before you buy: If you're purchasing a property with STR income in mind, verify the zoning before making an offer. Contact the municipal planning department directly. Don't rely on the seller's representation that "it's always been an Airbnb" β past practice doesn't equal legal compliance, and regulations have changed dramatically.
Strata Restrictions
Even if municipal zoning allows STRs, your strata corporation (condo association) may not. Many stratas in mountain towns have passed bylaws restricting or banning short-term rentals. Strata bylaws override your wishes as an individual owner. Check the strata minutes, bylaws, and any recent votes before purchasing. This is especially common in Whistler, Fernie, and Revelstoke condo developments.
Revenue Potential: Real Numbers
Here's what STR operators are actually seeing in BC mountain towns. These numbers are based on market data, property manager reports, and platform analytics. They represent realistic expectations β not cherry-picked peak-season screenshots.
Average Nightly Rates (2025β2026)
Occupancy Rates
Don't make the rookie mistake of multiplying your nightly rate by 365. Real occupancy rates in mountain towns:
- Whistler: 55β70% annual average (higher for well-located, well-reviewed properties)
- Revelstoke: 45β60% annual average
- Fernie: 40β55% annual average
- Golden: 35β50% annual average
- Nelson: 40β55% annual average (summer-weighted)
- Smaller towns (Rossland, Kimberley, Invermere): 30β50% annual average
- Canmore: 50β65% annual average
These are annual averages. You'll see 80%+ in peak season and potentially 15β25% in shoulder months (OctoberβNovember, AprilβMay). The shoulder months are what kill your annual numbers.
Estimated Annual Gross Revenue
Sample scenario β 2BR condo in Revelstoke:
Average nightly rate: $260
Annual occupancy: 52% (190 nights booked)
Gross revenue: ~$49,400/year
But that's gross. After platform fees, cleaning, management, maintenance, utilities, insurance, and taxes, your net is roughly 45β55% of gross. So: ~$22,000β$27,000 net before mortgage.
Airbnb
- Host-only fee model: 14β16% of the booking subtotal (most common for mountain town hosts)
- Split fee model: 3% from host + ~14% from guest (only available to some hosts)
- Service fees: Includes payment processing
- Cancellation policy options: Flexible, Moderate, Strict β your choice affects bookings and protection
- Market dominance: Airbnb is the dominant platform in most BC mountain towns, especially for younger travellers
VRBO (Vrbo)
- Host fee: 5% of the booking subtotal
- Guest fee: 6β12% service fee charged to guests
- Annual subscription option: ~$500/year flat fee instead of per-booking commission (better for high-volume properties)
- Market position: Stronger with families and groups booking larger properties. Better for 3BR+ homes
Direct Booking
- Platform fees: 0% (but you pay for website, booking software, payment processing)
- Typical costs: $50β$150/month for booking software + 2.9% payment processing
- Marketing required: You need to drive traffic yourself β Google, social media, repeat guests
- Best for: Established properties with a repeat guest base. Unrealistic for new listings
Multi-Platform Strategy
- List on both Airbnb and VRBO
- Use a channel manager (Guesty, Hostaway, Lodgify) to sync calendars
- Channel manager cost: $30β$100/month
- Reduces vacancy but adds complexity
The Review Game
- 4.8+ rating is the minimum for visibility
- Superhost status boosts bookings 10β20%
- First 3 reviews make or break a listing
- Responsive communication is non-negotiable
Property Management Companies
If you're not living near your STR property β or if you simply don't want to deal with guest communication, cleaning, and maintenance β you'll need a property manager. Mountain towns have a growing ecosystem of STR management companies.
What They Typically Charge
- Full-service management: 20β35% of gross booking revenue (covers everything from listing optimization to guest communication to cleaning coordination)
- Cleaning coordination only: $75β$200 per turnover depending on property size
- Listing management only: 10β15% of gross revenue
- Minimum guarantees: Some managers require a minimum monthly commitment regardless of bookings
Key Players by Region
- Whistler: Whistler Premier, Allseason Rentals, Whistler Platinum, numerous boutique managers
- Revelstoke: Revelstoke Vacations, Stoke Property Management, Pioneer Property Management
- Fernie: Fernie Lodging Company, Fernie Central Reservations
- Kootenay region (Nelson, Rossland, Kimberley): Smaller operations β often individual property managers rather than large companies
- Columbia Valley (Invermere, Panorama): Panorama Vacation Retreats, local property managers
- Canmore: Spring Creek Vacations, Canmore Vacations, numerous operators
Due diligence matters: Ask for references from current clients. Check their response time to inquiries. Look at their existing listings' review scores. A mediocre property manager will cost you far more in lost revenue and bad reviews than their fee saves you.
Tax Obligations: PST, GST & MRDT
This is where many STR operators get into trouble. The tax obligations for short-term rentals in BC are more complex than most people realize, and the CRA is paying increasing attention.
GST (5%)
- If your STR revenue exceeds $30,000 in four consecutive quarters, you must register for and collect GST
- Even below $30,000, you can voluntarily register to claim input tax credits on expenses
- GST applies to the full booking amount including cleaning fees
- If using Airbnb, the platform may collect and remit GST on your behalf in some situations β verify your specific case
BC PST (8%)
- PST applies to accommodation of less than 27 consecutive days β i.e., all typical STR bookings
- You must register with the BC Ministry of Finance and collect PST
- This applies regardless of your revenue level β there's no small supplier exemption for PST on accommodation
- Airbnb collects and remits BC PST on behalf of hosts for bookings facilitated through the platform
MRDT (Municipal & Regional District Tax)
- An additional 2β3% tax on accommodation, collected on behalf of the municipality or regional district
- Revenue goes to local tourism marketing and infrastructure
- Rates vary by community: Whistler 3%, Revelstoke 3%, Fernie 2%, Golden 2%, Nelson 2%, Canmore has its own tourism levy
- Airbnb collects and remits MRDT in participating jurisdictions
Income Tax
- All STR income must be reported on your Canadian tax return
- You can deduct eligible expenses: mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, cleaning, supplies, platform fees, management fees, maintenance, a proportional share of utilities
- Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) is available but claiming it may affect your principal residence exemption β consult a tax professional
- If you're operating an STR as a business (not just casually renting your home), you may need to report on the T2125 form
Get professional advice: STR tax obligations intersect with GST registration, provincial sales tax, municipal levies, and income tax in complex ways. A tax professional who understands STR operations will almost certainly save you more than they cost. This is especially true if you own multiple properties or earn over $30,000 in STR revenue.
Total Tax Burden Example
A guest pays $300/night in Revelstoke. Here's the tax breakdown:
Base rate: $300.00
GST (5%): $15.00
PST (8%): $24.00
MRDT (3%): $9.00
Guest pays: $348.00
Total tax collected: $48.00 (16% of base rate)
If Airbnb collects PST and MRDT automatically, you're still responsible for GST registration and collection if you exceed the $30,000 threshold.
Insurance Requirements
Standard homeowner's insurance does not cover short-term rental activity. If you're operating an STR on your regular home insurance policy, you're uninsured. A single guest injury claim could be catastrophic. For a broader look at coverage, see our mountain town insurance guide.
Insurance Options
- STR endorsement on existing policy: Some insurers offer a rider or endorsement that adds STR coverage to your homeowner's policy. Cost: typically $300β$800/year additional premium
- Dedicated STR/commercial policy: A standalone policy designed for rental properties. More expensive ($1,500β$4,000/year) but more comprehensive
- Platform host protection: Airbnb's AirCover provides up to $3M in liability coverage and $3M in damage protection. But β it's not a substitute for your own insurance. It has exclusions, it's Airbnb's program (not yours), and it doesn't cover your building or contents against all risks
- Umbrella liability: Consider an umbrella policy ($1Mβ$5M) for additional liability protection, especially if you have significant assets to protect
Mountain-Specific Risks
Mountain town STRs face risks that urban rentals don't:
- Frozen pipes: If a guest doesn't maintain heat during a cold snap, burst pipes can cause tens of thousands in damage. Smart thermostats with low-temp alerts are essential
- Wildfire and smoke: Evacuation orders can wipe out your peak summer bookings. Insurance may not cover lost revenue
- Snow load: Roof collapses from excessive snow accumulation are a real risk in high-snowfall areas. See our winter maintenance guide
- Wildlife: Bears accessing garbage, birds nesting in vents β mountain-specific maintenance issues that guests may not handle properly
- Well water and septic: If your property uses well water or septic, guests overusing water or flushing inappropriate items can cause expensive problems
Investment Analysis: Does It Actually Make Sense?
Let's run the real numbers on an STR investment in a BC mountain town. No rose-tinted glasses.
Scenario: 2BR Condo in Revelstoke
Yes, you read that right. In this realistic scenario, the STR loses about $25,000 per year after mortgage payments. The investment thesis rests entirely on property appreciation and mortgage principal paydown β not cash flow.
The uncomfortable truth: Most STR investments in BC mountain towns are negative cash flow at 2025β2026 interest rates and property prices. The math only works if (a) you bought years ago at lower prices, (b) you own outright with no mortgage, (c) you self-manage to cut costs, or (d) you're banking on appreciation. Option (d) is speculation, not investment.
When the Math Does Work
- No mortgage: That $6,942 NOI becomes actual cash flow. A 1.3% cash-on-cash return on $550K isn't exciting, but it beats a savings account while your property (hopefully) appreciates
- Principal residence STR: Renting your home while you travel or during peak weeks can generate $5,000β$20,000/year in supplemental income with minimal additional costs
- Lower-cost markets: A $350,000 property in Kimberley or Rossland with lower strata fees changes the equation. Revenue is lower, but expenses scale more favourably
- Self-managed, high-performing: Cut the property manager (saving 25%), manage your own cleaning, optimize pricing β your NOI could double. But this is a part-time job, not passive income
- Dual-season properties: Properties near ski resorts and summer recreation (lakes, biking) achieve higher annual occupancy. See our guides to winter sports and summer activities
Scenario: Self-Managed 3BR House in Kimberley
Better. Still negative cash flow after mortgage, but only by ~$570/month. With mortgage principal paydown (~$8,500/year in the early years) and any property appreciation, the total return picture improves. And if you can push occupancy to 180+ nights through dynamic pricing and multi-platform listing, you might break even on cash flow.
The Housing Affordability Debate
You can't write honestly about STRs in mountain towns without addressing the elephant in the room: the direct impact on housing affordability and community livability.
The Case Against Unrestricted STRs
- Housing stock removal: Every unit operating as a full-time STR is a unit not available for a local worker or family. In Revelstoke, an estimated 400β600 units were converted from long-term housing to STRs between 2015β2023
- Rent inflation: STR profitability sets a floor for rental prices. Why would a landlord rent long-term at $1,800/month when Airbnb could generate $3,000+/month?
- Community hollowing: Neighbourhoods where most homes are STRs lose their community character. Schools lose enrollment. Local businesses lose year-round customers. The town becomes a theme park
- Worker displacement: The hospitality, ski resort, and service workers who make mountain towns function can't afford to live there. This creates a devastating irony: the tourism industry destroys the workforce it depends on
- Infrastructure strain: STR guests use roads, water, sewage, and emergency services but don't pay the same property taxes as commercial accommodation providers
The Case For (Regulated) STRs
- Tourism revenue: STRs bring visitors who spend money at local restaurants, shops, ski hills, and activity providers. This supports local employment
- Homeowner income: For people who actually live in mountain towns, renting a suite or their home during peak season can be the income supplement that makes mountain living affordable
- Accommodation capacity: Some towns don't have enough hotel rooms to meet peak demand. STRs fill a genuine gap, especially for groups and families who need multi-bedroom spaces
- Property tax revenue: STR properties generate property tax revenue and MRDT that supports municipal services
- Market response: Banning STRs doesn't automatically create affordable housing. Properties would be sold or held as vacation homes, not necessarily rented to locals at affordable rates
Where Most People Land
The honest middle ground: STRs aren't inherently good or bad β the problem is unregulated proliferation. Most mountain town residents support allowing people to rent their principal residence on Airbnb. Most oppose allowing investors to buy entire buildings and convert them to tourist accommodation in residential neighbourhoods. Bill 35 attempts to draw this line.
If you're an investor, understand that communities are not neutral about your business model. Expect regulation to tighten, not loosen. Factor that into your projections.
What's Coming Next
The STR landscape in BC mountain towns is still evolving. Here's what to watch:
Regulatory Trends
- Enforcement is ramping up: Municipalities are investing in enforcement technology and staff. The days of operating under the radar are ending
- Data sharing: Platforms are increasingly required to share host data with municipalities and the province. Anonymity is disappearing
- Additional restrictions likely: Some municipalities are exploring caps on total STR licences, neighbourhood density limits, and seasonal restrictions
- Strata crackdowns: More strata corporations are passing anti-STR bylaws as residents push back against nightly rental operations in their buildings
Market Trends
- Professionalization: The casual Airbnb host is being replaced by professional operators with optimized listings, dynamic pricing, and multi-platform strategies
- Supply reduction: Bill 35 is expected to reduce active STR listings by 10β30% in affected communities as non-principal-residence operators exit
- Rate pressure: Fewer listings could mean higher nightly rates for remaining operators β or it could mean more guests choose hotels and traditional accommodation
- Hybrid models: Month-long "slow travel" bookings, mid-term furnished rentals (1β6 months), and seasonal leases are growing alternatives to traditional nightly STRs
The Bottom Line for Investors
If you're considering an STR investment in a BC mountain town in 2026:
- Verify zoning and regulations before you make an offer. Not after
- Run conservative numbers β use 40% occupancy and mid-range rates, not best-case scenarios
- Budget for compliance β licences, taxes, insurance, fire safety upgrades
- Don't rely on STR income to cover your mortgage β if regulations change, you need to be able to pivot to long-term rental or hold the property
- Consider the community impact β operating ethically and within regulations isn't just good citizenship, it's risk management
The realistic take: Short-term rentals in BC mountain towns can work as a supplemental income strategy for principal residents, or as part of a larger investment portfolio for well-capitalized buyers. But the era of easy money β buy a condo, throw it on Airbnb, and watch the cash roll in β is over. The regulations caught up, and the math got harder. Plan accordingly.
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