BC Strata 3/4 Vote Rule — Bylaws Require a 3/4 Owner Vote to Change

Claim: In BC, amending a strata bylaw requires a 3/4 vote of all eligible voters at a general meeting AND registration at the Land Title Office. This two-step requirement means bylaw changes are deliberately difficult to make — and difficult to reverse.

Mechanism

The Strata Property Act s.1281 sets the amendment threshold:

  • A resolution to amend a bylaw passes only if at least 75% of votes cast at the general meeting are in favour.
  • The amendment has no legal force until it is filed at the Land Title Office under the strata plan number.
  • Once filed, it binds every owner, tenant, and visitor immediately.

Contrast this with a rule (governing only common property): the strata council can adopt a rule unilaterally, and it applies until the next general meeting, where it must be ratified by a simple majority or it expires.1

Conditions (when the rule changes or fails)

  • The 3/4 threshold applies to votes cast — abstentions and absent owners do not count against the resolution. A meeting with low attendance can pass a bylaw change on a small fraction of total lot votes.
  • The first AGM after a strata plan is filed may have different rules (developer-era bylaws); the 3/4 threshold is firmly established by the second AGM.
  • Rental restriction bylaws (short-term or long-term) use the same 3/4 threshold but have additional rules about grandfathering existing tenancies.

Scope (when this does NOT apply)

  • Budget approval and election of council members require only a majority vote.
  • Terminating the strata corporation requires an 80% vote of all eligible voters (not just those present).
  • Changing unit entitlements requires unanimous consent.
  • This rule is strata-specific — detached homeowners have no equivalent; municipal zoning changes follow a different (and slower) process.

Trade-offs

  • Upside: the high threshold protects minority owners. A vocal majority cannot ram through a rental ban or pet prohibition without broad support.
  • Downside: a bad bylaw (poorly worded, unintentionally broad, or discriminatory) is also hard to fix. An owner who wants to challenge an existing bylaw must gather 3/4 support to remove it.
  • The attendance trap: low AGM participation means a small bloc of engaged owners can pass a bylaw change on a 3/4 vote of those present, even if a majority of all lot owners would have opposed it. This is the structural reason to attend or proxy.

So what

If you receive an AGM notice with a bylaw change on the ballot, the only moment to stop it is before the vote — at the meeting or via proxy. Once a 3/4 majority passes it and it’s filed at the LTO, your legal remedy is the CRT or BC Supreme Court for a claim of unfairness under SPA s.164, not a simple reversal.

Scope (of this note)

BC strata corporations only. The mechanism also governs bylaw changes at the section level (a section within a strata that manages its own affairs under SPA Part 11).

Sources

Idea Compass

North: Where this comes from

East: Tensions / failure

  • low AGM attendance — the mechanism by which a small bloc can pass a bylaw change on a 3/4 vote of those present
  • rental-restriction bylaws — the most consequential bylaw change category for investment property owners

South: Where this leads

West: What’s similar

  • corporate supermajority requirements — the 3/4 threshold functions like a supermajority clause protecting minority shareholders
  • constitutional amendment procedures — the same logic: fundamental rules require more than a bare majority to change

Footnotes

  1. Strata Property Act [SBC 1998] c.43, ss.119–128 (bylaw creation and amendment), s.45 (rule adoption by council, ratification at general meeting), s.45(3) (rule lapses if not ratified) — https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca/civix/document/id/complete/statreg/98043_00_multi 2