You pay your property taxes to the office that sent your property tax notice.
In a rural area, your tax payment must be received on or before the due date to be considered on-time. If we receive your payment after the due date, late payment penalties will be charged.
If you qualify for the home owner grant, complete the home owner grant application online before your payment due date.
If you are not able to pay your taxes in full, still claim your home owner grant. You may also qualify to defer your taxes.
Pay your rural property taxes:
Note: Interac e-Transfers and credit cards are not accepted.
Your rural property taxes can also be estimated and paid in advance.
Pay your rural property taxes by using eTaxBC.
If you're already enrolled in eTaxBC for other taxes you pay, you need to enrol for a separate eTaxBC logon to pay your rural property taxes.
To enrol for access to eTaxBC, you need the following information:
You can find your property folio number and enrolment code on your current property tax notice or Statement of Account. Once you're enrolled, use the eTaxBC Help Guide for Rural Property Taxes to learn how to pay your property taxes using eTaxBC. Payments through eTaxBC can only be made in Canadian funds, from a Canadian bank account set up for online banking.
Enrol for access to eTaxBC or Login to eTaxBC
If you expect to be away in June or July, or wish to pay your property taxes before the due date, you can:
Send a post-dated payment through your online banking (allow 3-5 business days for the payment to reach us by the due date)
Pay online using eTaxBC. You can make a post-dated one-time payment or set up recurring pre-payments in eTaxBC. For help with eTaxBC, call the eTaxBC support line at Tel: 1-877-388-4440.
Mail us a post-dated cheque that is dated on or before the due date
You can pay your property taxes through your bank or other financial institution (including credit unions). When you make a payment through your bank or financial institution, confirm that the payment will be received by us on or before the due date. For example, banks will often process payments received in the afternoon with the date of the next business day.
There are three ways you can pay your property taxes through your bank or financial institution:
Note: You cannot make a payment at a financial institution you do not have an account with.
Most banks and financial institutions offer bill payment services. Bill payment services can generally be accessed through your online banking account, an automated teller machine (ATM), telephone banking or in-person with a teller.
Note: When you pay in-person, you need to set up a bill payment service for Rural Property Taxation before you pay with a teller.
To pay your property taxes using a bill payment service you need to add Rural Property Taxation as a payee to your bank account. To add a new payee to your bank account, you need:
For assistance, contact your bank or financial institution.
When you complete your payment, write down the confirmation number generated and keep it in your records in case you need to request a trace on the payment.
To successfully submit a payment through wire transfer, you must:
Ask your bank or financial institution if service charges apply.
Account information (wire transfer)
Provide your bank or financial institution the following account information:
Beneficiary Name: |
Province of British Columbia |
Beneficiary Address: |
1802 Douglas Street |
Bank Name: |
Bank of Montreal |
Bank Address: |
1225 Douglas Street |
Beneficiary Account No.: |
1150-128 |
Bank Number: |
001 |
Transit Number: |
00120 |
Bank Code: |
//CC 000100120 |
Swift: |
BOFMCAM2 |
Description or Reference Field |
Your folio number |
Validate your payment (wire transfer)
After you make a wire transfer payment, you must immediately validate your payment by sending us the following payment details:
You can send the payment details by:
or
If you do not validate your payment, we cannot match your payment to your account and may result in late payment penalties.
To successfully submit a payment through electronic funds transfer (EFT), you must:
If you do not have an EFT account, you can set one up with your bank or financial institution. You should set up your EFT account well before your payment is due. Ask your bank if service charges apply.
Provide your bank or financial institution the following account information:
Account Name: |
Province of British Columbia |
Bank/No.: |
Bank of Montreal (0001) |
Bank Transit/Address: |
00120 |
Account No.: |
1150-128 |
After you make an EFT payment, you must immediately validate your payment by sending us the following payment details:
You can send the payment details by:
or
When you sign your mortgage agreement, you can arrange for your annual property taxes to be paid on your behalf. When your mortgage company pays your property taxes for you, you are still responsible for:
To pay at a government office, you need the remittance advice found at the bottom of your property tax notice or Statement of Account. If you qualify for a home owner grant, complete the home owner grant application online.
You can make your payment at one of the following locations:
You can mail your cheque, bank draft or money order made payable to the Minister of Finance. Write your property folio number on your payment so your account can be easily identified when your payment is processed.
Mail your payment early to make sure your payment is received by us on or before the due date. You can mail us a post-dated cheque but make sure it's dated on or before the due date.
Note: Date of payment is the date we receive your payment, not the postmark date.
Put your payment and the remittance advice, located at the bottom of your property tax notice, into an envelope and mail to:
Surveyor of Taxes
PO Box 9446 Stn Prov Govt
Victoria BC V8W 9V6
If you pay your taxes after this date, late payment penalties will be charged.
Enrol for access to eTaxBC to:
You need the enrolment code from your property tax notice to enrol.
See our Help Guide for Rural Property Taxes for help with eTaxBC.
Already have eTaxBC access? Log on.
You can access quick online services to: