BC Siding Material Decision — Fibre Cement vs Vinyl for Detached Homes

decision-rule

Claim: For detached homes in Metro Vancouver re-cladding with the most common two materials, the decision splits on one axis: if you are willing to repaint every 10–15 years and want premium aesthetics and fire resistance, choose fibre cement (James Hardie or equivalent). If you want zero paint maintenance and the lowest installed cost, choose vinyl. Both perform adequately in Metro Vancouver’s climate when correctly installed with a rain screen; the cost differential is real and significant.

Mechanism

Fibre cement (James Hardie, Allura, etc.):

  • Lifespan: 50+ years with maintained paint
  • Installed cost (Metro Vancouver): 20/sq ft, or approximately 45,000 for a typical 1,500–2,000 sq ft wall area
  • Maintenance: repaint every 10–15 years (~8,000 per repaint cycle); inspect and re-caulk penetrations every 3–5 years
  • Paint requirement is not optional: unpainted or poorly maintained fibre cement absorbs moisture, swells, and delaminate — the 30-year Hardie warranty requires paint maintenance
  • Fire resistance: Class A (non-combustible surface layer); can reduce home insurance premiums in some cases
  • Aesthetics: can be finished to look like wood clapboard; higher perceived value

Vinyl:

  • Lifespan: 25–40 years
  • Installed cost (Metro Vancouver): 10/sq ft, or approximately 28,000 for a typical 1,500–2,000 sq ft wall area
  • Maintenance: annual soft-wash; no painting ever — colour is permanent through the material
  • Limitation: cannot be repainted if colour change is desired; dark colours fade noticeably in Metro Vancouver UV conditions; expands and contracts with temperature so installation gaps must be correct (improper install leads to buckling)
  • Fire resistance: lower than fibre cement; check with insurer

Cedar:

  • Included for completeness; installed cost 30/sq ft; requires staining or painting every 5–7 years; beautiful but highest maintenance and cost. A premium choice if the aesthetic is essential; otherwise dominated by fibre cement on durability-to-maintenance ratio.

The decision frame

FactorFibre Cement WinsVinyl Wins
Budget (installed cost)Vinyl is 30–50% cheaper per sq ft
Long-run maintenance costFibre cement if you never repaint — but you mustVinyl if paint maintenance is a burden
LongevityFibre cement at 50+ years vs 25–40 for vinyl
Fire resistanceFibre cement — Class A rated
Zero-paint commitmentVinyl — no painting, ever
Resale / aestheticsFibre cement — more buyers value the look
Climate performanceBoth perform well with correct rain screen

Decision rule:

  • If the home will be owned long-term (10+ years) and you are comfortable with a repaint cycle: fibre cement gives better long-run value per year of service.
  • If budget is the primary constraint or paint maintenance is not acceptable: vinyl is the correct choice and performs adequately.
  • If the home is in a high wildfire-risk zone or where insurers discount for fire-resistant cladding: fibre cement’s Class A rating matters.

This is an irreversible, high-cost decision (stripping and re-cladding cannot be undone, and full re-clad exceeds 5–$10/sq ft in practice, which narrows the total cost gap on a smaller home.

Scope

This note covers the two dominant Metro Vancouver residential cladding materials for like-for-like re-cladding on an existing detached home. It does not cover:

  • Stucco-to-cladding conversion (a more complex scope involving assessment, framing inspection, and possibly structural work)
  • Metal/Longboard panels (commercial aesthetic, higher cost, different decision frame)
  • Brick or stone veneer (different structural requirements, much higher cost)
  • New construction material selection (different budget context; builder-driven decision)

Idea Compass

North: Where this comes from

  • siding (Home Systems) — the parent context for this material decision
  • The Decision Lifecycle — the framework for an irreversible, high-cost decision
  • BC Building Code s.9.27 — both materials require a rain screen; code compliance is equal for both

East: Tensions / failure

  • The paint-maintenance requirement of fibre cement — the commitment that makes vinyl the correct choice for owners who will not maintain it; unpainted fibre cement fails
  • Vinyl colour fading and buckling — the failure mode that makes fibre cement the correct choice for owners who care about aesthetics over 25+ years

South: Where this leads

West: What’s similar

  • The Decision Lifecycle — the same reversibility × cost frame applies to water heater replacement, roofing material selection, and any other irreversible home-system decision

Sources