Strata corporation, strata owners, residents and strata council members may use the Civil Resolution Tribunal (CRT) to resolve many strata disputes and for small claims up to $5,000.
Learn more on this page:
Overview of the Civil Resolution Tribunal
The CRT and strata disputes
The CRT and other types of disputes
CRT fees for strata disputes
The Civil Resolution Tribunal (CRT) is Canada’s first online tribunal for resolving strata and other types of disputes including small claims disputes up to $5,000.
The CRT offers new ways to resolve your disputes and legal issues in a timely and cost-effective manner. The CRT:
Your direct and active participation will help you reach a resolution with the other participant(s). The CRT will make a decision for you only if you and the other participants can’t agree on your own solution.
Learn more about the Civil Resolution Tribunal at the CRT website.
The CRT can resolve a wide variety of disputes between strata owners and strata corporations, such as:
The event triggering the dispute must have occurred within BC in order for the CRT to be able to hear it.
Learn more about how the CRT works at the CRT website.
The CRT is not able to decide some types of strata disputes. Some strata disputes will need to be filed in the B.C. Supreme Court. And some strata disputes may not be valid legal claims at any court or tribunal.
The CRT cannot decide matters that affect land, such as:
The CRT cannot decide the following matters relating to significant issues in a strata complex:
In addition the CRT cannot:
The CRT handles other types of disputes including small claims, motor vehicle accidents and injuries, societies and co-operatives.
Learn more at the CRT website about the types of disputes the CRT can handle.
Learn more about CRT fees for resolving strata disputes.
There are fee waivers for people with low incomes.
Find it fast: a handy site map listing all the strata housing pages.
The information on this website about strata housing is provided for the user’s convenience as a basic starting point; it is not a substitute for getting legal advice. Learn more about the site’s purpose and limits. The content on this website is periodically reviewed and updated by the Province of British Columbia as per the date noted on each page: May 18, 2022.