
How much does long-term care cost in BC?
How long-term care is priced in BC
Two systems exist side by side in BC, and they work very differently.
Publicly funded long-term care is managed by BC’s regional Health Authorities. You pay based on your after-tax income — up to 80% of it, within a provincial floor and cap. To access it, you need a Home and Community Care assessment through your health authority. Once you’re assessed and approved, you join the regional waitlist. The provincial average for a publicly funded long-term care bed in BC is approximately 277 days — nearly 10 months. Actual waits vary by region and facility; popular homes in some cities can run 18 to 24 months.
Private-pay long-term care operates outside the Health Authority system. Operators set their own rates, typically ranging from $6,000 to $12,000 per month in BC. No health authority assessment is required to move in. If a bed is available and you can afford the rate, placement can happen within days to weeks.
Most families navigate both systems simultaneously — tracking the publicly funded waitlist while arranging private-pay care in the meantime. Understanding what each option costs helps you plan that bridge period realistically.
What you actually pay each month
The publicly funded rate isn’t a fixed price. It’s calculated as up to 80% of your after-tax monthly income, subject to two limits:
- Provincial floor: $1,507.70/month (single, 2026). Even at very low income, this is the minimum.
- Provincial cap: $4,142.60/month (single, 2026). No matter how high your income, you won’t pay more than this.
- Personal comfort allowance: You keep at least $325/month for personal expenses, regardless of income.
“After-tax income” includes all income sources minus taxes: OAS, CPP, GIS, pensions, RRIF withdrawals, and investment income. The Health Authority uses income from two years prior, pulled from your CRA Notice of Assessment (Line 23600).
Three worked examples:
| Annual after-tax income | Monthly after-tax | 80% formula | Monthly rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| $25,000/year | $2,083/month | $1,667 | ~$1,667/month |
| $50,000/year | $4,167/month | $3,333 | ~$3,333/month |
| $80,000/year | $6,667/month | $5,333 (over cap) | $4,143/month (capped) |
Most families are surprised to find their parent pays well below the cap. Seniors living primarily on OAS and CPP typically fall in the $1,500–$2,500/month range. The cap applies mainly to higher-income earners with substantial pension or RRIF income.
Rates are re-assessed annually. If income drops 10% or more from two years ago, your parent can request an Income Review from their Health Authority at any time — this can meaningfully reduce the assessed rate.
Worried about long-term care costs? See public and private options that fit your budget.
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Regional variation across the 5 Health Authorities
All five BC Health Authorities use the same provincial rate formula, so what you pay is consistent province-wide. What differs is wait time, bed availability, and access logistics.
- Fraser Health (Abbotsford, Surrey, Burnaby, Langley, Chilliwack, Delta, Coquitlam): BC’s most populous health region. High demand across the Fraser Valley means waits at popular facilities can be among the longest in the province. Families often register at multiple facilities to improve their chances. See Surrey LTC options or Abbotsford LTC options.
- Vancouver Coastal Health (Vancouver, Richmond, North Shore, Sea-to-Sky): High demand concentrated in Vancouver proper. Waits at preferred urban facilities can stretch 12–24 months. Private-pay LTC is proportionally more common here, and rates tend to sit at the top of the provincial range. See Vancouver LTC options.
- Interior Health (Kelowna, Kamloops, Vernon, Penticton, Trail, Williams Lake): Kelowna’s retiree population growth has pushed wait times to some of the longest in BC. Smaller Interior communities often have shorter waits but fewer facility choices. See Kelowna LTC options.
- Island Health (Victoria, Nanaimo, Campbell River, Comox Valley, Gulf Islands): Victoria consistently records some of the longest LTC waits in BC. Gulf Island residents face an additional complication: ferry access. A placement on the mainland or in Victoria may be offered first — families should discuss location preferences early in the assessment process. See Victoria LTC options or Nanaimo LTC options.
- Northern Health (Prince George, Fort St. John, Terrace, Prince Rupert, Dawson Creek): The least competition for beds, but fewer facilities overall. Distance is the main challenge — placements may be far from family. Private-pay LTC options are limited outside Prince George. Call 8-1-1 to reach Northern Health Home and Community Care.
What’s included — and what isn’t
Knowing what the monthly rate covers prevents surprises after move-in.
Included in publicly funded long-term care:
- Private or semi-private room (depending on facility and availability)
- Three meals per day plus snacks
- Basic personal care (bathing, dressing, grooming)
- 24/7 on-site nursing and personal care staff
- Medications on the BC PharmaCare formulary
- Basic activities and recreation programming
- Housekeeping and laundry
Not included (charged separately):
- Phone and cable TV
- Premium recreation, outings, and specialized programs
- Hairdressing and personal grooming services
- Personal-care items (toiletries, incontinence products beyond the basic allowance)
- Ambulance transportation
- Medications outside the BC PharmaCare formulary
- Dental care and dentures
- Hearing aids and glasses
- Transportation to appointments outside the facility
For private-pay facilities, what’s included vs. extra is set entirely by the operator. A higher monthly rate doesn’t always mean more is covered. Always request the full pricing schedule — including the complete list of add-on fees — before signing any contract.
If you can’t wait — your other options
The publicly funded waitlist is real. Here are the three paths families most commonly use while they wait, or when the wait is simply too long.
- Private-pay long-term care — available now, no assessment required. Most private-pay LTC facilities in BC have some beds available within weeks. At $6,000–$12,000/month, it’s not inexpensive — but for families who need 24/7 nursing care immediately, it’s often the only path. You can stay on the publicly funded waitlist while in private-pay care and transfer to a subsidized bed when one becomes available. See local facilities near you: Vancouver, Victoria, Kelowna.
- Enhanced assisted living — for parents who need more support than standard AL but aren’t yet at the clinical threshold for long-term care. Enhanced AL bridges the gap. The subsidized rate structure is similar to standard AL (70% of after-tax income, floor $1,253.80/month). Private-pay enhanced AL is available without a waitlist. If your parent’s needs are moderate but growing, this is worth exploring with a case manager.
- Home care with private respite — for parents who can still be managed at home temporarily. Private home care in BC costs $35–$75/hour depending on care type. Public home support through BC Health Authorities is available at no or low cost for eligible seniors — call 8-1-1 to apply. Publicly funded home support may take some time to arrange; private agencies can often start within a week. This combination — public home support plus private top-up — is how most families bridge the gap on the LTC waitlist. See our LTC waitlist guide for a full breakdown of bridge care strategies.
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