Mountain View Manor
5800 Mountain View Boulevard
Delta, BC V4K3V6
Fraser Health
This facility accepts . Contact your local Health Authority to begin the assessment process.
Mountain View Manor is a 92-bed long-term care home in Delta, British Columbia, operated by Fraser Health. The home provides 24-hour nursing care in a single-storey setting, with translation and interpretation services available on site. Staff speak six languages, including English, Mandarin, Cantonese, Punjabi, and Tagalog. The home holds Accreditation Canada accreditation. Placement is managed through a Home and Community Care assessment — call 8-1-1 to start. Contact Mountain View Manor to ask about the residence itself.
Last verified May 12, 2026 · operator website
What families should know
Placement through Fraser Health — publicly funded placement
Placement at Mountain View Manor – Delta Hospital is managed by Fraser Health, so families start with a Home Health assessment and, if their loved one meets provincial eligibility, are added to the health authority’s placement list rather than applying directly to the home. This is a publicly funded long-term care home operated by Fraser Health on the Delta Hospital grounds, which means residents live in a care environment with on-site meal preparation and very close access to hospital and emergency services. The setting is in Ladner, a quieter part of Delta with nearby parks and a small-town feel, and visitors typically reach the site via local roads and bus routes that serve the hospital area. Inside, the home is designed for people who need 24-hour nursing and personal care support, and BCSA QuickFacts classifies it as long-term care under the Hospital Act, signalling a population with higher physical and often cognitive care needs. BCSA QuickFacts reports admission waits averaging about 223 days here, but families should ask Fraser Health how current waits compare and where their loved one would likely be placed in the region. Staff speak multiple languages including English and several commonly spoken in the Lower Mainland, which may help residents and families from diverse backgrounds feel more comfortable. Families should verify what daily life looks like—activities, meal routines, and how staff support residents with dementia or severe mobility issues—since needs can differ significantly from one person to another. It is also important to ask about up-to-date visiting rules, parking and transit access, and any recent inspection or complaint history so you understand how the home is performing today, not just in past reports.
Based on BC Seniors Advocate QuickFacts, Health Authority records, and publicly available facility information · Last reviewed May 14, 2026
Languages Spoken
Quality & Safety
Quality Indicators (CIHI — Canadian Institute for Health Information)
Reviews
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