B.C.
will return to the PST on April 1, 2013, meeting the Province’s commitment to
return to the PST as quickly and responsibly as possible, while ensuring
businesses can plan their training and systems switch-over effectively to apply
the sales tax correctly.
Government
is announcing new relief measures that will benefit purchasers and builders of
new homes. The B.C. new housing rebate threshold will be increased to $850,000,
effective April 1, 2012, meaning more than 90 per cent of newly built homes
will now be eligible for a provincial HST rebate of up to $42,500.
It is important to note that the HST does not apply to resale housing.
In
addition, to help support workers and communities in B.C. that depend
on residential recreational development, purchasers of new secondary
vacation or recreational homes outside the Greater Vancouver and Capital
regional districts priced up to $850,000 will now be eligible to
claim a provincial grant of up to $42,500 effective April 1, 2012.
The
housing transition rules help ensure when people buy a newly constructed home
under the PST, whether built entirely under the HST, entirely under the PST, or
partly under HST and partly under the PST, they will all pay a consistent and
equitable amount of tax.
Specifically:
·
B.C.’s
portion of the HST will continue to apply before April 1, 2013. Purchasers will
be eligible for the new higher B.C. HST new housing rebate, of up to $42,500,
and builders will continue to claim input tax credits.
·
B.C.’s
portion of the HST will no longer apply to newly built homes where construction
begins on or after April 1, 2013. Builders will once again pay seven per cent
PST on their building materials. On average, about two per cent of the home’s
final price will again be embedded PST.
·
For
newly built homes where construction begins before April 1, 2013, but ownership
and possession occur after, purchasers will not pay the seven per cent
provincial portion of the HST. Instead, purchasers will pay a temporary,
transitional provincial tax of two per cent on the full house price. This
ensures equitable treatment among purchasers and will help mitigate distortive
market behaviour. Builders will receive temporary housing transition rebates to
offset PST on materials to help prevent double-taxation on homebuyers.
The
transition rules outlined today provide certainty for new-home construction and
sales, particularly during the transition period.
For
goods and services that will be subject to PST, PST will generally apply where
tax becomes payable on or after April 1, 2013. Detailed general transitional
rules for goods and services will be available with the full PST legislation
introduced in the legislature this spring.
The
provincial changes are subject to the approval of the legislature.
No comments:
Post a Comment