If you've ever tried to find a rental in South Surrey or White Rock with a dog or cat, you already know the drill — "no pets" is practically the default. That might be about to change.
Two major BC charities — First United and the BC SPCA — are calling on the provincial government to make good on a 2024 election promise and ban no-pet clauses in purpose-built rental buildings with five or more units.
What's Being Proposed
The two organizations want the province to amend the Residential Tenancy Act to prohibit landlords in larger rental buildings from refusing tenants based solely on pet ownership. The proposal targets buildings with five or more units — recognizing that a basement suite landlord operates very differently than a purpose-built rental tower.
During the 2024 BC provincial election, the NDP included a specific pledge: "ending the bias against pet owners by getting rid of no pet clauses in purpose-built rental apartment buildings." As of April 2026, that promise hasn't been acted on — but advocacy is ramping up.
The Data Behind the Push
The argument for keeping pets out has always been about damage. First United reviewed actual Residential Tenancy Branch decisions on pet-related disputes going back eight years.
The result: in over 82% of cases, the pet damage was fully covered by the pet deposit already permitted under the RTA. The average portion retained by landlords for repairs was just over 71%.
Since 2014, the BC SPCA has taken in more than 12,400 pets whose owners were struggling with housing — and that's only what was reported to the SPCA.
Who It Affects Most
Pet bans hit some groups harder than others. First United has documented cases where the inability to find pet-friendly housing contributed to displacement and homelessness — particularly for women escaping violence, seniors, and people in the 2SLGBTQAI+ community. Service dog owners have also reported being turned away despite legal protections.
For landlords, there's also a financial argument. As First United put it: "For a landlord that owns a large building, or even a few units, it's illogical to forego hundreds of thousands of dollars in rental revenue based on speculations about pet damage."
Where Things Stand in BC (vs. Other Provinces)
Ontario banned no-pet clauses in rental agreements almost 30 years ago. BC hasn't gone that far yet. Under BC's Residential Tenancy Act, landlords and tenants can negotiate the pet question — but landlords can still refuse entirely.
A spokesperson for BC's Ministry of Housing and Municipal Affairs said the province is "exploring options for pet policies in purpose-built rental buildings." No timeline given. In 2020, Vancouver City Council passed a motion calling for an end to no-pet restrictions. The Union of BC Municipalities and the provincial Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Services made similar calls in 2023.
What This Means for the South Surrey & White Rock Market
If pet-friendly rental restrictions are loosened, you'd likely see stronger rental demand in buildings that currently ban pets. That could put upward pressure on rents and may push some renters who've been forced to buy just to house their pet back into the rental market.
For buyers and sellers of condos and strata properties — keep in mind this proposal targets purpose-built rentals, not stratas. Strata pet bylaws are governed separately under the Strata Property Act. If you're buying into a strata that restricts pets, that bylaw doesn't go away under this proposal.
Thinking about buying instead of renting? I work with buyers across South Surrey, White Rock, and Langley. If housing your pet has been part of the decision, let's talk.
BC SPCA's Pet-Friendly Housing Toolkit
The BC SPCA recently published a Pet-Friendly Housing Toolkit for non-profit housing providers — but they're encouraging market rental owners and strata councils to use it too. It covers pet agreements, damage risk management, and tenant resources.
Have questions about buying in South Surrey, White Rock, or Langley? Call or text Jared at 604-928-1361 or visit jaredgibbons.ca.





































